User:Thomas James Foster/List of Divisions of the Australian House of Representatives
Electoral divisions for the Australian House of Representatives are commonly known as electorates, seats or divisions. There are currently 150 single-member electorates for the Australian House of Representatives.
Apportionment
editSection 24 of the Constitution of Australia requires that the total number of members of the Australian House of Representatives shall be "as nearly as practicable" twice as many as the number of members of the Australian Senate.
Section 24 also requires that electorates be apportioned among the states in proportion to their respective populations; provided that each original state has at least 5 members in the House of Representatives, a provision that gives Tasmania higher representation than its population would justify.
The Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 sets out further provisions.[1] There are also two electorates in both the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory.
Within each state and territory, electoral boundaries are redrawn from time to time in a process known as redistribution. This takes place at least once every 7 years, or when the state's entitlement to the number of members of the House of Representatives changes. Boundaries are drawn by a Redistribution Committee, and apportionment within a state is on the basis of the number of enrolled voters rather than total residents.
The number of enrolled voters in each Division cannot vary by more than 10% from the average across a state or territory, nor can the number of voters vary by more than 3.5% from the average projected enrolment three-and-a-half years into the future. However, due to various reasons, larger seats like Fenner contain more than double the electors of smaller seats like Lingiari.
Divisions are divided into four classes according to population and demographic: inner metropolitan (well-established portions of a state capital city), outer metropolitan (more recently developed portions of a state capital), provincial (divisions made up predominantly of regional cities) and rural.[2]
Naming
editThe Divisions of the House of Representatives are unusual in that many of them are not named after geographical features or numbered, as is the case in most other legislatures around the world. Most Divisions are named in honour of prominent historical people, such as former politicians (often Prime Ministers), explorers, artists and engineers.
In some cases where a Division is named after a geographical locality, the connection to that locality is sometimes tenuous. For instance, the Division of Werriwa, created in 1901, was named after the Aboriginal word for Lake George in the Canberra region. However, Werriwa has not contained Lake George for many decades, and has steadily moved some 200 km north to the south-western suburbs of Sydney over the past century.
The redistribution, creation and abolition of Divisions is the responsibility of the Australian Electoral Commission. Some of the criteria the AEC use when naming new Divisions are listed below:[3]
- Name divisions after deceased Australians who have rendered outstanding service to their country, with consideration given to former Prime Ministers
- Retain the original names of Divisions proclaimed at Federation in 1901
- Avoid geographical place names
- Where appropriate use Aboriginal names
- Do not duplicate names of state electoral districts
List of Current Divisions
editThe list below shows all Divisions that existed at the Australian federal election, 2016.
Division | Map | State or Territory | Created | Held By | Area (km²) | Electors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adelaide | South Australia | 1903 | Kate Ellis (Labor) | 76 | 102,918 | |
Aston | Victoria | 1984 | Alan Tudge (Liberal) | 99 | 94,112 | |
Ballarat | Victoria | 1901 | Catherine King (Labor) | 4,562 | 103,296 | |
Banks | New South Wales | 1949 | David Coleman (Liberal) | 53 | 104,959 | |
Barker | South Australia | 1903 | Tony Pasin (Liberal) | 63,886 | 103,321 | |
Barton | New South Wales | 1922 | Nickolas Varvaris (Liberal) | 40 | 106,566 | |
Bass | Tasmania | 1903 | Andrew Nikolic (Liberal) | 7,278 | 72,195 | |
Batman | Victoria | 1906 | David Feeney (Labor) | 66 | 103,012 | |
Bendigo | Victoria | 1901 | Lisa Chesters (Labor) | 6,255 | 102,934 | |
Bennelong | New South Wales | 1949 | John Alexander (Liberal) | 60 | 106,005 | |
Berowra | New South Wales | 1969 | Philip Ruddock (Liberal) | 786 | 105,292 | |
Blair | File:Division of Blair 2013.png | Queensland | 1998 | Shayne Neumann (Labor) | 6,409 | 88,656 |
'Blaxland | File:Division of Blaxland 2013.png | New South Wales | 1949 | Jason Clare (Labor) | 61 | 103,539 |
Bonner | File:Division of Bonner 2013.png | Queensland | 2004 | Ross Vasta (Liberal Nation) | 360 | 95,317 |
Boothby | File:Division of Boothby 2013.png | South Australia | 1903 | Andrew Southcott (Liberal) | 130 | 103,987 |
Bowman | File:Division of Bowman 2013.png | Queensland | 1949 | Andrew Laming (Liberal Nation) | 537 | 95,874 |
Braddon | Tasmania | 1955 | Brett Whiteley (Liberal) | 20,826 | 71,677 | |
Bradfield | New South Wales | 1949 | Paul Fletcher (Liberal) | 101 | 105,735 | |
Brand | File:Division of Brand 2013.png | Western Australia | 1984 | David Brand (Labor) | 377 | 90,093 |
Brisbane | Queensland | 1901 | Teresa Gambaro (Liberal Nation) | 58 | 97,203 | |
Bruce | Victoria | 1955 | Alan Griffith (Labor) | 73 | 94,817 | |
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List of Commonwealth Electoral Divisions, 2016–present
editThe maps below show the Division boundaries as they existed at the Australian federal election, 2016.
New South Wales
editDue to changing demographics, New South Wales will lose one seat in the House of Representatives as of the 2016 federal election. The redistribution will involve extensive changes to existing boundaries, with approximately 20% of voters in New South Wales being moved into a new electorate. The AEC's initial proposal called for the Division of Hunter to be abolished, with its voters absorbed into the neighboring electorates of Charlton, New England, and Paterson. Due to the AEC's practice of giving preference to the names of the so-called 'Federation divisions,' those contested at the first federal election in 1901, Charlton was to have been renamed Hunter.[4]
Further, the Division of Throsby will be renamed Whitlam, after former Prime Minister Gough Whitlam, part of another AEC practice of honouring deceased Prime Ministers with electoral divisions.[5]
The final map, however, saw Charlton abolished, with Hunter moving eastward to absorb most of Charlton's territory. The name change from Throsby to Whitlam remained in effect.[6]
Victoria
editThere are 37 Divisions:
Queensland
editThere are 30 Divisions:
Western Australia
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2016) |
There are 16 Divisions:
- Burt
- Brand
- Canning
- Cowan
- Curtin
- Durack
- Forrest
- Fremantle
- Hasluck
- Moore
- O'Connor
- Pearce
- Perth
- Stirling
- Swan
- Tangney
Due to Western Australia's growing population, the state has gained a 16th seat in the Australian House of Representatives as of the 2016 federal election.[7] The Australian Electoral Commission has proclaimed the 16th seat the Division of Burt, named after one of Western Australia's most prominent legal families, and three members thereof in particular:
- Sir Archibald Burt (1810–1879), the first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Western Australia,
- Septimus Burt (1847–1919), Attorney-General of Western Australia during the colonial period, and
- Sir Francis Burt (1918–2004), Governor of Western Australia from 1990 until 1993.[8]
Burt is located in the south-eastern suburbs of Perth, and has been created out of portions of the neighbouring divisions of Canning, Hasluck and Tangney, and a small portion of Swan.[9]
Based on the results of the 2013 federal election, the new electorate of Burt is notionally a Liberal seat, with a TPP margin of 5.2 percent.[10]
South Australia
editThere are 11 Divisions:
Tasmania
editThe Territories
editAustralian Capital Territory
There are 2 Divisions:
- Canberra
- Fenner (also covers Jervis Bay Territory)
Prior to the 2016 federal election, the Division of Fenner was known as the Division of Fraser. The new name honours the Australian virologist Frank Fenner (1914–2010),[11] and the change was due to plans by the Australian Electoral Commission to name a Victorian electorate after former Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser when that state next undergoes an electoral redistribution.[12]
Northern Territory
There are 2 Divisions:
- Lingiari (also covers Christmas Island and Cocos (Keeling) Islands)
- Solomon
Abolished Divisions
editThese Australian electoral divisions no longer exist.
- Angas (1903–34) (SA)
- Angas (1949–77) (SA)
- Australian Capital Territory (1949–74) (ACT)
- Balaclava (1901–84) (VIC)
- Barrier (1901–22) (NSW)
- Bland (1901–06) (NSW)
- Bonython (1955–2004) (SA)
- Bourke (1901–49) (VIC)
- Burke (1949–55) (VIC)
- Burke (1969–2004) (VIC)
- Canobolas (1901–06) (NSW)
- Cook (1906–55) (NSW)
- Coolgardie (1901–13) (WA)
- Corinella (1901–06) (VIC)
- Corinella (1990–96) (VIC)
- Dalley (1901–69) (NSW)
- Dampier (1913–22) (WA)
- Darebin (1949–69) (VIC)
- Darling (1901–77) (NSW)
- Darling Downs (1901–84) (QLD)
- Darwin (1903–55) (TAS)
- Diamond Valley (1969–84) (VIC)
- Dundas (1977–93) (NSW)
- East Sydney (1901–69) (NSW)
- Echuca (1901–37) (VIC)
- Evans (1949–77) (NSW)
- Fawkner (1906–69) (VIC)
- Grampians (1901–22) (VIC)
- Gwydir (1901–2007) (NSW)
- Hawker (1969–93) (SA)
- Henty (1913–90) (VIC)
- Higinbotham (1949–69) (VIC)
- Hoddle (1949–55) (VIC)
- Illawarra (1901–22) (NSW)
- Isaacs (1949–69) (VIC)
- Kalgoorlie (1901–2010) (WA)
- Laanecoorie (1901–13) (VIC)
- Lang (1901–77) (NSW)
- Lawson (1949–69) (NSW)
- Lowe (1949–2010) (NSW)
- Martin (1922–55) (NSW)
- Mernda (1901–13) (VIC)
- Moira (1901–06) (VIC)
- Namadgi (1996–98) (ACT)
- Nepean (1906–22) (NSW)
- Northern Melbourne (1901–06) (VIC)
- Northern Territory (1922–2001) (NT)
- Oxley (1901–34) (QLD)
- Parkes (1901–69) (NSW)
- Phillip (1949–93) (NSW)
- Prospect (1969–2010) (NSW)
- Riverina-Darling (1984–93) (NSW)
- Scullin (1955–69) (VIC)
- South Australia (1901–03) (SA)
- South Sydney (1901–34) (NSW)
- Southern Melbourne (1901–06) (VIC)
- St George (1949–93) (NSW)
- Streeton (1984–90) (VIC)
- Tasmania (1901–03) (TAS)
- Throsby (1984-2016) (NSW)
- Watson (1934–69) (NSW)
- West Sydney (1901–69) (NSW)
- Wilmot (1903–84) (TAS)
- Wimmera (1901–77) (VIC)
- Yarra (1901–69) (VIC)
See also
edit- For a list of members of the current House of Representatives and the electorates they represent, see List of members of the Australian House of Representatives.
- For a description of how the House of Representatives is elected, see Australian electoral system.
External links
edit- For an electoral history of each Division since Federation in 1901, see Adam Carr's Electoral Archive: Index of House of Representatives Divisions 1901-2001
References
edit- ^ Australian Electoral Commission.Research Report 4 - Australian Federal Redistributions 1901-2003. Accessed 5 May 2008.
- ^ Demographic Classification of Divisions
- ^ Australian Electoral Commission. Guideline for Naming Divisions. Updated 20 July 2011. Accessed 1 February 2012.
- ^ http://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2015/oct/16/labors-joel-fitzgibbon-loses-seat-under-proposal-to-redraw-boundaries
- ^ http://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2015/oct/16/labors-joel-fitzgibbon-loses-seat-under-proposal-to-redraw-boundaries
- ^ http://blogs.abc.net.au/antonygreen/2016/03/2016-federal-election-pendulum-update.html
- ^ http://www.aec.gov.au/Electorates/Redistributions/2014/wa/proposed-report/files/proposed-report.pdf
- ^ http://www.aec.gov.au/Electorates/Redistributions/2014/wa/proposed-report/files/proposed-report.pdf
- ^ http://www.aec.gov.au/Electorates/Redistributions/2014/wa/proposed-report/files/proposed-report.pdf
- ^ http://www.abc.net.au/news/wa-federal-redistribution-2015/
- ^ http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-01-28/electorate-of-canberra-creeps-north-to-encompass-inner-city/7122282
- ^ http://aec.gov.au/Electorates/Redistributions/2014/act/proposed-report/files/proposed-report.pdf