Canning – Australia 2019

LIB 6.8%

Incumbent MP
Andrew Hastie, since 2015.

Geography
South of Perth. Canning covers urban fringe and rural areas to the south of Perth, including Mandurah and most of the Peel region. Canning covers the entirety of Boddington, Mandurah, Murray, Serpentine-Jarrahdale and Waroona council areas, as well as small parts of the Armadale, Gosnells and Kalamunda council areas.

History
Canning was first created for the expansion of the House of Representatives in 1949. For the early part of its history it was contested between the Liberal Party and the Country Party, and since the 1980s the seat has become much more of a Labor-Liberal marginal seat, usually being held by the party winning government.

The seat was first won in 1949 by Leonard Hamilton of the Country Party, who had previously held Swan since 1946.

Hamilton retired in 1961 and the seat was won by Liberal Neil McNeill, who was defeated by the Country Party’s John Hallett in 1963. Hallett held the seat until 1974, when the Liberal Party’s Mel Bungey defeated him.

The ALP’s Wendy Fatin won the seat in 1983 at the same time as the election of the Hawke government. Fatin transferred to the new seat of Brand in 1984, and the ALP’s George Gear transferred into Canning from Tangney, which he had held after the 1983 election.

Gear was defeated in 1996 by Liberal candidate Ricky Johnston, who had previously ran against Gear at every election since 1984. Johnston was defeated herself by Labor’s Jane Gerick in 1998.

Gerick was defeated narrowly by Liberal candidate Don Randall in 2001.

Randall held Canning for over a decade, winning re-election in 2004, 2007, 2010 and 2013. His narrow margin in 2001 blew out to 59.5% in 2004, shrinking to 52.2% in 2010 before growing out to 61.8% in 2013.

Randall died in early 2015, and the ensuing by-election was won by Liberal candidate Andrew Hastie. Hastie was re-elected in 2016.

Candidates

  • Malcolm Phillip Heffernan (Conservative National)
  • Jackson Wreford (One Nation)
  • Jamie Van Burgel (Australian Christians)
  • Jodie Moffat (Greens)
  • Steve Veevers (United Australia)
  • Andrew Hastie (Liberal)
  • Mellisa Teede (Labor)
  • Brett Clarke (Western Australia Party)

Assessment
Canning has become a less marginal seat since the creation of Burt shaved off the Armadale area prior to the last election. The seat could still flip if Labor does well, but it’s less likely than it once would have been.

2016 result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Andrew Hastie Liberal 42,497 50.3 -1.5
Barry Winmar Labor 27,918 33.0 +5.6
Aeron Blundell-Camden Greens 7,388 8.7 +1.6
Jason Turner Nationals 3,581 4.2 +2.5
Janine Joy Vander Ven Australian Christians 3,110 3.7 +1.5
Informal 3,743 4.2

2016 two-party-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Andrew Hastie Liberal 47,987 56.8 -4.6
Barry Winmar Labor 36,507 43.2 +4.6

Booth breakdown

Booths are split into four areas. About half of the seat’s population is in the Mandurah council area, and this area has been split into Mandurah North and Mandurah South, along the river. The remainder of the seat was split into north and south, with Serptentine-Jarrahdale, Armadale and Kalamunda council areas in the north, and Murray, Waroona and Boddington council areas in the south.

The Liberal Party won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in all four areas, ranging from 51.5% in Mandurah North to 59.2% in Mandurah South.

Voter group LIB 2PP % Total votes % of votes
North 57.0 15,681 18.6
Mandurah North 51.5 14,101 16.7
Mandurah South 59.2 12,022 14.2
South 57.9 8,890 10.5
Other votes 57.9 13,302 15.7
Pre-poll 57.6 20,498 24.3

Two-party-preferred votes in Canning at the 2016 federal election

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13 COMMENTS

  1. This seat is a really good example of changing boundaries being critical to election results over time. If I recall correctly, until 1980, Canning covered a large part of the overwhelmingly conservative wheatbelt, making it unwinnable for Labor. In 1980 the wheatbelt was united in O’Connor and Canning contracted into the southern suburbs, becoming a classic suburban marginal. It shifted northwards in 1984 with the creation of Brand, taking some voters from Tangney (and making that seat safer for the Libs), and then as Ben said, the most recent redistribution shifted Canning again, taking out Labor’s best area.

  2. Andrew Hastie always makes me think of Dudley Doright ! Has he ever done anything wrong, in his whole life !? How would you campaign against this bloke ?. It would have to be completely impersonal i suppose ?
    It is hard to see anything shifting Hastie. He is a dark horse for party leadership post election. However he will need to show a harder, & more penetrating edge to have a real chance.
    Perhaps a less positive, & optimistic leader is needed to tackle the huge systemic problems of the Liberal Party.

  3. Antony Green posted that Labor would be ahead 5.6% 2PP if they duplicated the state results. “Federal Drag” will save Hastie, although I’m not sure why the general consensus is that he’s safe and Keenan (on a safer margin with state numbers) is at risk in Stirling.

    Interestingly those state numbers also had Labor winning Forrest and in spitting distance of Moore and Tangney. If the WA Nats have a resurgence in the 2 large rurals, Julie Bishop could be a very lonely MP.

  4. The state swing was 12.7% – if it was even across the state, and repeated at the Federal election, the ALP would win 14/16 (leaving Curtin and O’Connor), and would sweep into office even if they only held what they current have in the rest of the country.

    Interestingly, the state swing was more muted in the Curtin and O’Connor areas (and in parts of Forrest) than the rest of the state.

    I’d also say this is only going to happen Federally in Bill Shorten’s wettest dreams. But certainly swings that take out Canning and Stirling (and Pearce, Swan and Hasluck) would not be surprising. I’d think at the moment it would be somewhere from 4.5% to 7.5%, though uneven.

  5. I think Hastie is probably in a good enough position to get over the line here, 6.8 is a large margin to lose from after already losing 4.6 last time. It will be interesting to see the results in the Darling Range by-election, if both parties run it will give a good indication on how the liberals are performing in outer suburbs WA without the Barnett factor.

    There was a larger swing last election in Canning compared with Stirling. I think Labor put a little more effort in to campaigning in Canning last time and nominated a candidate really late for Stirling, perhaps that is why people are guessing Keenan is at greater risk?

  6. Note that this will be the 7th time in 6 years that this region has had to go to the polls, and the 8th for those in the north (Darling Range, Armadale etc.).

    2013 WA State Election
    2013 Federal Election
    2014 WA Senate Special Election
    2015 Canning by-election
    2016 Federal Election
    2017 WA State Election
    2018 Darling Range By Election (For those in the north of the electorate)
    and now the 2018/19 Federal Election

    Surely that’s some sort of record.

    As for who wins I’m expecting a varying swing across the state ranging from 3-8%, making it close, but Hastie should win narrowly.

  7. Admittedly a lot of time left to go but heard that Mandurah booths are in play here for Labor, in which case with a strong showing in traditional areas around Armadale, that will topple WA’s version of a fascist Potato.

  8. Canning is more likely than not to fall to Labor despite the apparent margin, this is a seat in flux with its growing mortgage belt areas and is more vulnerable to large swings than established areas on similar margins like Stirling.

    Expect the biggest swings in the areas around Armadale in the north of the seat.

  9. Mrs WD took one look at Andrew Hastie & exclaimed “who is he ?”. Mrs WD past political, & politicised feminist past, makes her a hard marker of the male species. However she was immediately taken with Hastie, & i implicitly trust her judgement. Mrs WD is adept at judging people by their faces, & can immediately guess their fixation almost flawlessly, & virtually summer up their life history in most important respects. These are just a few of her many talents. Some of you will now be wondering why she is with me !!!. I won’t reflect on my good fortune !!.
    A year ago i judged Hastie far too harshly. Since then i’ve observed him on Bolt most Tuesdays interacting with Kimberly Kitching . In all his interactions he is clear, & direct, whilst always being courteous, charming, good humoured, & reasonable. This is absolutely unique.

    Hastie is the next liberal PM. When that will manifest, who knows?. But there it is. The least fixated, most functional MP IN parliament. What fixation there is is Type 3 Social subtype, & highly functional, & healthy. Closest historical comparison would be JFK. Although the infamous “Jack the Zipper” may well have been a sexual subtype !!. Consequently Hastie’s potential may well be beyond what we can imagine.

    Consequently Labor can forget about ever getting Canning back

  10. I’m having trouble getting a read on how seriously Labor are taking this seat.

    The candidate is definitely trying, but it’s not clear how much she’s getting in terms of resources. I would love to hear from a local. Shorten visited in August 2018, and Brendan O’Connor and Chris Bowen this month, so it’s on their radar.

    This seat overlaps with Darling Range, so Labor has to contend with the damage to their brand there.

    I don’t know if locals feel the same way about Hastie as winediamond. He was openly hostile and insubordinate to Turnbull in his final months, and Labor could definitely paint him as a key figure in the demise of Turnbull and Julie Bishop if they wanted to. However this seat seems ideologically rather than economically conservative, and there’s every chance that Hastie does actually have a personal following here.

  11. John
    If Labor sent O’Connor, & Bowen they are anything but serious !!. Interesting about Hastie’s attitude to Malcolm. Naturally i see that completely differently. Shows real values, & guts to callout the boss.

  12. Went to a friend’s house here today, saw may more signs for Hastie than his Labor opponent.

    I think Hastie will hold with a swing against him – the old Canning might have been a bit trickier for him though.

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