Western Victoria – Victoria 2014

Incumbent MLCs

  • David Koch (Liberal), since 2006. Previously MLC for Western 2002-2006.
  • David O’Brien (Nationals), since 2010.
  • Jaala Pulford (Labor), since 2006.
  • Simon Ramsay (Liberal), since 2010.
  • Gayle Tierney (Labor), since 2006.

Geography

Electorate Margin Electorate Margin Electorate Margin
Bellarine LIB 2.5% Lowan NAT 21.9% South Barwon LIB 4.9%
Buninyong ALP 1.6% Melton ALP 13.6% South-West Coast LIB 11.9%
Geelong ALP 4.0% Polwarth LIB 13.8% Wendouree LIB 0.1%
Lara ALP 13.8% Ripon LIB 1.6%

Westvic-LCWestern Victoria covers the greater Geelong region and stretches west to the South Australian border. In addition to Geelong, the region covers Ballarat, Warrnambool, Horsham, Colac, Bacchus Marsh, Melton and Torquay.

Six of the seats in the region are held by the Liberal Party, four are held by the ALP and one is held by the Nationals.

The Liberal holds two of its seats comfortably: South-West Coast (11.9%) and Polwarth (13.8%). The Liberal Party holds four marginal seats, ranging from 0.1% in Wendouree to 4.9% in South Barwon.

The ALP holds Melton and Lara with solid 14% margins, and holds Buninyong and Geelong by smaller margins.

The sole Nationals seat, Lowan, is a very safe seat, with a 22% margin.

Redistribution
Changes were relatively minor in Western Victoria. Nine out of eleven seats in the region kept their existing names, and the region didn’t gain or lose any seats. Despite these relatively minor changes, three marginal Labor seats were redrawn into marginal Liberal seats.

No changes were made to the South-West Coast electorate in the corner of the region. Relatively minor changes were made to Polwarth and Lowan, as well as to the Geelong-area seats of Geelong, Lara and South Barwon.

The seat of Melton, on the western fringe of Melbourne, contracted to a much smaller geographic area but kept most of its previous voters.

Significant changes were made to three seats in the Ballarat area. Ripon shifted north to take in areas previously contained in the abolished seat of Swan Hill. Ripon was previously a Labor seat with a 2.7% margin, but now has a 1.6% Liberal margin.

The seat of Ballarat East, which also covers rural areas to the east of the city, shifted southward and was renamed Buninyong. These changes had little impact on the seat’s margin.

The seat of Ballarat West, which is entirely contained within the Ballarat urban area, underwent only minor changes in its boundaries but was renamed Wendouree, and the changes flipped the seat’s margin from 1.1% for Labor to 0.1% for the Liberal Party.

Overall, the region’s changes increased the Liberal/National vote by 1%, and cut the Labor vote by 0.7%. The Greens vote dropped by 0.4%.

History
The Eastern Victoria region was created in 2006, when proportional representation was introduced.

At the 2006 election, the Liberal Party and Labor each won two seats, and the fifth seat was won by the Democratic Labor Party’s Peter Kavanagh. The Nationals ran a separate ticket from the Liberal Party.

In 2010, Kavanagh lost his seat to Nationals candidate David O’Brien, who was running on a joint ticket with the Liberal Party.

Liberal MLC John Vogels retired, and he was replaced by fellow Liberal Simon Ramsay.

2010 result

2010 election Redistribution
Party Votes % Quota % Quota
Liberal/National 184,446 43.34 2.600 44.35 2.661
Labor Party 162,807 38.25 2.295 37.55 2.253
The Greens 43,525 10.23 0.614 9.81 0.589
Family First 14,165 3.33 0.200 3.27 0.196
Country Alliance 11,399 2.68 0.161 2.77 0.166
Democratic Labor Party 9,252 2.17 0.130 2.15 0.129

On primary votes, the Liberal Party won two seats, and the ALP also won two seats. Sitting Democratic Labor Party MLC Peter Kavanagh won only 2.2% of the vote.

After the election of the first four candidates, and the exclusion of minor candidates, there were six candidates remaining, with Kavanagh in last place:

  • Marcus Ward (GRN) – 0.611 quotas
  • David O’Brien (NAT) – 0.593
  • Richard Morrow (ALP) – 0.294
  • Joshua Reimer (FF) – 0.200
  • Miles Hodge (CA) – 0.164
  • Peter Kavanagh (DLP) – 0.132

Kavanagh’s preferences flowed to Hodge, pushing the Country Alliance ahead of Family First:

  • Ward (GRN) – 0.613
  • O’Brien (NAT) – 0.595
  • Morrow (ALP) – 0.295
  • Hodge (CA) – 0.284
  • Reimer (FF) – 0.203

The elimination of Reimer pushed the Country Alliance ahead of Labor:

  • Ward (GRN) – 0.614
  • O’Brien (NAT) – 0.599
  • Hodge (CA) – 0.475
  • Morrow (ALP) – 0.296

Labor preferences then flowed overwhelmingly to the Greens, but it was not enough to give them the seat:

  • Ward (GRN) – 0.899
  • O’Brien (NAT) – 0.601
  • Hodge (CA) – 0.477

At this point, the Country Alliance candidate was eliminated, and his vote (almost half of a quota) flowed strongly to the Nationals, electing O’Brien over Ward:

  • O’Brien (NAT) – 1.067
  • Ward (GRN) – 0.902
  • Hodge (CA) – 0.002

The final margin of victory for the Nationals candidate over the Greens was 2.75% of the total vote, or 0.165 quotas, with a small batch of Country Alliance votes yet to distribute.

Candidates

  • A – Catriona Thoolen – Palmer United Party
  • B – Barry Newton – Family First
  • C – Kathy Francis – Cyclists Party
  • D – Garry Thomas – Voice for the West
  • E – Garry Kerr – Country Alliance
  • F – Michael Keane – Rise up Australia
  • G – Jayden Millard – Sex Party
  • H – Anne Foster – Australian Christians
  • I – Philip Gluyas – People Power
  • J – Liberal/National
    1. Simon Ramsay (Liberal)
    2. Josh Morris (Liberal)
    3. David O’Brien (Nationals)
    4. Jennifer Almeida Reis (Liberal)
    5. Donna Winfield (Nationals)
  • K – Andy Meddick – Animal Justice
  • L – Mark Thompson – Liberal Democrats
  • M – Nicole Bourman – Shooters and Fishers
  • N – Labor
    1. Jaala Pulford
    2. Gayle Tierney
    3. Jacinta Ermacora
    4. John Stewart
    5. Dale Edwards
  • O – Lloyd Davies – Greens
  • P – Mark Farrell – Democratic Labour
  • Q – James Purcell – Vote 1 Local Jobs
  • Ungrouped
    • Gary Mannion

Preferences

Assessment
The Coalition managed to win three seats in Western Victoria in 2010, but only by a small margin. A slight uptick in the combined centre-left vote will likely put the left in a position to win a third seat (likely the Greens candidate). In 2006, the Labor/Greens vote would have been enough to elect the Greens candidate, but the ALP chose to preference the DLP’s Peter Kavanagh.

5 COMMENTS

  1. Greens campaign in Western Vic seems more organised this time and both Greens and ALP should benefit from what looks like a small Statewide swing – enough to offset the redistribution. In other words, kind of similar to last time.

  2. ‘Similar to last time’

    I invite you and others to take a spin on the ABC preference calculator. It looks nothing like last time.

    Assuming a slight swing away from libs to Greens and Labor actually makes it quite a competition between the Greens and DLP.

    One or two other small parties getting 2 or 3% can put them into the running as well.

  3. Urely with the attack by both Major Parties actively supported by the Greens upon Geelong’s industries a massive move away from lib/lab green job destroyers must occur.

    I know Mark Farrell and feel confident that he will do a great job for Western Victoria if elected. He certainly will do more than Liberal and ALP Economic Rationalists who have actively worked to send Alcoa and Ford broke. Free Trade with Korea, Singapore and America has led to trade deficits for Australia and Great Wall has now an advantage over Falcon. Ford have gone.

    We need a return to Tariff Protection of Australian jobs from Slave Labor Wages in China. Tariff should be set so that importers gain no benefit from paying slave wages to Chinese Coolies. .

    Like China we need a great wall to protect us from slave Labor we do not need a “Great Wall” manufactured by slave labour, and we need to start treating the white ants on the inside of the wall as the enemy of our standard of living. Put Greens last ALP second last and Libs third last. Sort out your own How to Vote before election day and remember that in Victoria the Legislative Council Election is as important as the lower house.

    A vote for Mark Farrell and the DLP will be a vote for Infrastructure. It will be a vote for a development bank that will enable infrastructure to be built.

    Andrew Jackson
    apjackson@hotkey.net.au

  4. Andrew Jackson – this is a blog about electoral issues not about campaigning for a particular political candidate. any information on actual campaigning in Geelong I feel sure would be welcome

Comments are closed.