Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Tasmania Redistribution: Announcement Day Live Thread

Today could be a momentous day in the history of Tasmanian electoral boundaries!  Or it could be a nothing-ever-happens.  Around mid-morning today there will be a boundary announcement.  If the announcement is either the same as the draft boundaries or only slightly different then that's it and the new boundaries will be official for federal elections after 8 October.  It usually takes several months for them to then be adopted at state level via legislation, so an early state election before, say, mid-2027 would not necessarily be on the new boundaries.  

Alternatively the Augmented Electoral Commission could recommend substantively different boundaries, which would result in further rounds of consultation.  I have seen no variations from process that would suggest there is any intent to do this so far, but I am not sure if that should be taken as a sign that it's not happening.  

My previous articles are here:

Clark Must Expand But Where?

Draft Scraps The Franklin Divide

The Reaction

Once the announcement is up I will be posting details of what has been decided.  I'm not Ben Raue or William Bowe so please do not expect new margin calculations from this source.  However I will have summaries and comments about the decision, whatever it is.  

10:25 It's up!  The original decision has been endorsed except that the following change has been recommended:

"Bass gains the Break O’Day local government area.

Lyons retains the Blackstone Heights and Prospect Vale localities."

This now means former Clarence Mayor Doug Chipman's original submission has been adopted in full!  The boundary changes are now final and the Franklin divide is dead! 

The Commission is proposing that Franklin become Tongerlongeter.  Submissions on the new name are open until 21 July with a public inquiry on 31 July.    The new name would tie Eden-Monaro and Capricornia for the most syllables in an electorate name and Kingsford-Smith for the most letters.

10:40  On the Break O'Day change the Commission has argued that putting Break O'Day in Bass better reflects community of interest considerations while keeping all LGAs in a single electorate. They have also argued that leaving Prospect Vale and Blackstone Heights counters a concern about Glenorchy being the only urban area in neo-Lyons.   I don't think that was much of a concern in the submissions, they were more concerned about Glenorchy dominating the rural portions of the seat.  

11:25 The placement of Break O'Day in Bass shifts one of the Shooters Fishers and Farmers' stronger areas into the seat, not great news for Carlo di Falco though immaterial compared to his party getting swamped by One Nation.  It is also not great for Bass independent George Razay.  It makes Bass slightly stronger for the Greens at state level and weaker for the Liberals, though a part of the Liberal weakness is hidden in a very high personal vote for Nationals candidate and former state Liberal MP John Tucker in the St Helens area.  

I reproduce Doug Chipman's map of the new boundaries from his original submission.   


11:45 My previous conclusions about impacts of this change on the southern seats are of course unaffected.  We are likely to in coming years see a game of musical chairs in the south as MPs based in the ex-Franklin part of neo-Clark, the ex-Clark part of neo-Lyons and the ex-Lyons part of what may be Tongerlongeter consider relocation (or in some cases retire).  

Ben Raue has posted new state estimates here.  I will be working on One Nation estimates for the new boundaries based off recent state polling as time permits.  

Various notes later:

* If the renaming of Franklin to Tongerlongeter proceeds Bass will be the sole surviving unchanged name in the state.  That would also be the first time the alphabetical order of the divisions has changed with none of the previous renamings (Darwin to Braddon, Wilmot to Lyons and Denison to Clark) affecting it.  

* Antony Green has conveniently added One Nation Reps primary vote estimates that find only a marginal increase in Clark (up 0.2), a very small decrease in Franklin (-0.1) and no change to one decimal anywhere else.  

* The Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre is objecting to the proposed Tongerlongeter on the grounds that he would be honoured by a "colonial construct" that he fought against (and they say died fighting against though perhaps died while fighting against would be more accurate.)  This reflects a culture clash - the redistribution process works by applying criteria and considering public submissions, but the TAC (which does not stand for by any means all Palawa people but is the major body in the south) issues resources of place names that anyone is free to use, but beyond that expects to be consulted.  

I am also seeing some right wing culture war type accounts warming up against the proposal, so it will probably be on Andrew Bolt by the weekend.  

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