Bendigo – Australia 2013

ALP 9.4%

Incumbent MP
Steve Gibbons, since 1998.

Map of Bendigo's 2010 and 2013 boundaries. 2010 boundaries shown as red lines, 2013 boundaries shown as white area. Click to enlarge.
Map of Bendigo’s 2010 and 2013 boundaries. 2010 boundaries shown as red lines, 2013 boundaries shown as white area. Click to enlarge.

Geography
Bendigo and surrounding parts of northwestern Victoria. Bendigo covers Greater Bendigo and Mount Alexander council areas, as well as parts of Loddon, Mitchell and Macedon Ranges. A majority of the population lives in Bendigo, and the other major town is Castlemaine.

Redistribution
All of Central Goldfields Shire, including Maryborough, was transferred to Wannon. Bendigo gained a small part of Mitchell Shire and more of Macedon Ranges Shire around Woodend from McEwen. This slightly reduced the Labor margin from 9.5% to 9.4%.

History
Bendigo is an original federation electorate. In its 110-year history, the seat has switched back and forth between the major parties.

Bendigo was first won in 1901 by Protectionist candidate John Quick. Quick was a Victorian colonial MP and a delegate to the Constitutional Conventions. Quick served as a member of Alfred Deakin’s third ministry in 1909, and held the seat until his defeat in 1913.

Bendigo was won in 1913 by prominent lawyer John Arthur, standing for the ALP. Arthur won re-election in 1914 and was appointed Minister for External Affairs in the third Fisher government, but quickly fell ill and died in December 1914, aged 39.

The 1915 Bendigo by-election was won by the ALP’s Alfred Hampson. Hampson remained loyal to the ALP when it split over the issue of conscription in 1916, but at the 1917 election he was challenged for his seat by Prime Minister Billy Hughes, who had switched from the ALP to the new Nationalist Party.

Hughes had been a member of the House of Representatives since federation, holding the seat of West Sydney. He had served as a minister in the Labor governments of Chris Watson and Andrew Fisher, before becoming Prime Minister in 1915 upon Fisher’s retirement.

Hughes held Bendigo until 1922, when he switched to the seat of North Sydney. At that election his party lost its majority, and the price of Country Party support for the Nationalist government was Hughes’ replacement as Prime Minister by Stanley Bruce.

Hughes remained in Parliament for another three decades. He served on the backbench through Stanley Bruce’s government, before leading a group of rebels in 1929 which saw Bruce lose his majority and then lose the following election. Hughes later served in ministerial roles and indeed as leader of the United Australia Party, and served as an MP until his death in 1952.

Bendigo was won in 1922 by Nationalist candidate Geoffrey Hurry, who defeated the Country Party’s Edmund Jowett, whose seat of Grampians had been abolished in the redistribution. Hurry held the seat until the 1929 election, when he lost his seat.

Bendigo was won in 1929 by Richard Keane, who was General Secretary of the Australian Railways Union. He only held Bendigo for one term, losing in 1931, but later was elected to the Senate in 1937. He served as a minister in the wartime Labor governments, and died in 1946 while on government business in Washington DC.

Eric Harrison of the United Australia Party won Bendigo in 1931. He was re-elected in 1934, and attempted to move to the new seat of Deakin in 1937, but failed to win preselection, and retired.

In 1937, Bendigo was won by the Country Party’s George Rankin. Rankin held the seat until 1949, when the redistribution changed Bendigo substantially, and he was successful in winning election to the Senate. He served in the Senate until he retired in 1955.

In 1949, the ALP’s Percy Clarey won Bendigo. Clarey had been a member of the Victorian upper house and a state minister, while also serving as President of the ACTU. Clarey held the seat until his death in 1960.

The 1960 by-election was won by the ALP’s Noel Beaton. He held the seat until he resigned in 1969, triggering another by-election. The second by-election was won by the ALP’s David Kennedy. Kennedy lost Bendigo in 1972, against the flow of an election where Gough Whitlam won power for the ALP.

The Liberal Party’s John Bourchier won Bendigo in 1972, and held it until 1983, when he lost to the ALP’s John Brumby.

Brumby was re-elected in 1984 and 1987, but lost in 1990. Brumby was elected to the Victorian Legislative Council at a by-election in 1993, and only four months later was elected Leader of the Victorian ALP and won a second by-election for a Legislative Assembly seat. Brumby served as Opposition Leader until early 1999, when he stepped aside for Steve Bracks. Brumby served as a senior minister in the Bracks government from 1999 until Bracks’ retirement in 2007, when Brumby was elected as Premier.

Bruce Reid won Bendigo for the Liberal Party in 1990. He held the seat until 1998, when the ALP’s Steve Gibbons won the seat. Gibbons has held Bendigo ever since.

Candidates
Sitting Labor MP Steve Gibbons is not running for re-election.

  • Sarah Sheedy (Nationals)
  • Lisa Chesters (Labor)
  • Greg Bickley (Liberal)
  • Lachlan Slade (Greens)
  • Charlie Crutchfield (Sex Party)
  • Alan Howard (Family First)
  • Rod Leunig (Country Alliance)
  • Daniel Edward Abikhair (Independent)
  • Matine Rahmani (Independent)
  • Sandra Caddy (Rise Up Australia)
  • Anita Donlon (Palmer United Party)
  • Stephen John Stingel (Katter’s Australian Party)
  • Ewan Mcdonald (Australian Christians)

Assessment
Bendigo has become relatively safe for the ALP over recent elections, with a cumulative swing towards Labor of 8.5% over the 2007 and 2010 elections. The retirement of the sitting member and anti-Labor sentiments will likely see that margin cut substantially, but it will probably be enough to hold on.

2010 result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Steve Gibbons ALP 43,964 47.65 +0.51
Craig Hunter LIB 33,067 35.84 -2.58
Kymberlie Dimo GRN 12,440 11.84 +3.16
Belinda Clarkson FF 3,358 3.19 +0.70

2010 two-candidate-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Steve Gibbons ALP 54,928 59.53 +3.40
Craig Hunter LIB 37,337 40.47 -3.40
Polling places in Bendigo at the 2010 federal election. Bendigo North in red, Bendigo Rural in blue, Bendigo South in orange, Macedon Ranges in yellow, Mount Alexander in green. Click to enlarge.
Polling places in Bendigo at the 2010 federal election. Bendigo North in red, Bendigo Rural in blue, Bendigo South in orange, Macedon Ranges in yellow, Mount Alexander in green. Click to enlarge.

Booth breakdown
Booths have been divided into five areas. Polling places in the Mount Alexander and Macedon Ranges shires have been split up into two groups.

Polling places in the Greater Bendigo council area have been split into three groups. Those polling places in the Bendigo urban area have been split into “south” and “north”, with the remainder grouped as “Bendigo Rural”.

The ALP won a majority in all five areas, varying from 52.3% in Bendigo Rural to 68% in Mount Alexander.

The Greens vote varied from 9.8% in Bendigo Rural to a massive 21.5% in Mount Alexander, including a peak of 26.6% at Castlemaine North.

Voter group GRN % ALP 2CP % Total votes % of ordinary votes
Bendigo South 12.24 58.38 23,074 33.78
Bendigo North 10.58 65.35 14,180 20.76
Bendigo Rural 9.80 52.66 12,278 17.97
Mount Alexander 21.45 68.03 9,580 14.03
Macedon Ranges 15.63 59.34 9,194 13.46
Other votes 12.31 57.30 21,892
Two-party-preferred votes in Bendigo at the 2010 federal election.
Two-party-preferred votes in Bendigo at the 2010 federal election.
Greens primary votes in Bendigo at the 2010 federal election.
Greens primary votes in Bendigo at the 2010 federal election.
Two-party-preferred votes in the Bendigo urban area at the 2010 federal election.
Two-party-preferred votes in the Bendigo urban area at the 2010 federal election.
Greens primary votes in the Bendigo urban area at the 2010 federal election.
Greens primary votes in the Bendigo urban area at the 2010 federal election.
Two-party-preferred votes in the Castlemaine area at the 2010 federal election.
Two-party-preferred votes in the Castlemaine area at the 2010 federal election.
Greens primary votes in the Castlemaine area at the 2010 federal election.
Greens primary votes in the Castlemaine area at the 2010 federal election.

13 COMMENTS

  1. Will be interesting to see if the Nats run here – they have their upper house rep and senator based in the city

  2. I’d be surprised if the Nationals bothered, and if they did they wouldn’t do very well.

    The overlapping upper house seat extends mostly north and east of Bendigo, up to the Mallee and out through Shepparton. This is what passes for Nationals heartland territory in Victoria, so it’s no surpise they do well in that seat.

    The federal seat of Bendigo is quite different. It extends mostly south of Bendigo, into areas with a demographic closer to the NSW North Coast. Lots of tree-changers, alternative lifestylers, and Melbourne commuters in Macedon Ranges and Mount Alexander…….Not strong Nationals territory at all.

  3. Melbourne Tory, I appreciate your love for the Liberals, even though that’s not my leaning, but gotta respect anyone who has a passion, but you’re looking at the wrong seats. Your party will be easily elected in one of the biggest landslide wins in history, but Victoria is not going to be your happiest state, albeit you will do well there based on a National trend. Look to SA, Tas, Qld and NSW where you will pick up the most amount of seats. I’m pretty sure Labor will hold Bendigo, although it is likely to be quite marginal afterwards.

  4. Rudd for PM – where have I suggested that the Liberal Party will win Bendigo? I was simply disputing the suggestion that The Nationals can’t do well.

    For what it’s worth, I expect the swing in Victoria to be around the national swing, with Victoria remaining pro-Labor relative to the rest of the country.

  5. Another regional seat with an inflated margin that I expect will return to the marginal zone.

    Was a dark horse Lib gain under Gillard but in the absence of any commentary from DB I expect it to be Labor retain.

  6. Pollbludger reported a JWS automated phone poll where the ALP was ahead 50.9/49.1 in this seat. A similiarly large swing is being reported in neighbouring McEwen

    Considering the margin for error, this puts it in the too close to call category, although the ALP has some very strong Bendigo booths which my gut feel is saying should get them home.

  7. Very small margin for Labor next election. Labor should be able to hold it if Lisa Chesters shows she works hard and has the traditional swing to first term MPs. The Liberals had a strong candidate this time, and it showed in him outpolling Chesters on primary votes. Labor was lucky that the Green’s vote held up better than most, and that the National’s candidate didn’t poll as strongly as expected.

Comments are closed.