Goulburn – NSW 2019

LIB 6.6%

Incumbent MP
Pru Goward, since 2007.

Geography
Southern NSW. The electorate covers the towns of Goulburn, Yass, Boorowa, Crookwell and Moss Vale. The seat covers the entirety of the Goulburn Mulwaree, Yass Valley, Boorowa and Upper Lachlan council areas, and south-western parts of Wingecarribee Shire.

History
An electoral district named Goulburn existed continuously from 1859 until 1991. It was restored in 2007. The ALP dominated the seat from 1925 to 1965, and was held by the Country/National Party from 1965 until 1991. It is now a Liberal seat.

When proportional representation was introduced in NSW in 1920, Goulburn was expanded to cover Nowra, Yass, Bega, Eden, Queanbeyan and Cooma and elected three members. The district elected one Nationalist, one Progressive and one Labor in 1920 and 1922, but in 1925, elected two Labor and one Nationalist.

When Goulburn once again became a single-member district in 1927, it was won by the ALP’s Jack Tully, who had held one of Goulburn’s seats since 1925.

Jack Tully held the seat for the next two decades, with the exception of one term. In 1932 he lost to Peter Loughlin of the United Australia Party, then won it back in 1935. He then held his seat until his retirement in 1946.

The 1946 Goulburn by-election was won by Tully’s son, Laurie Tully. The younger Tully held the seat until his retirement in 1965.

In 1965, Goulburn was won by Mulwaree Shire president Ron Brewer, running for the Country Party. He resigned from the seat in 1974 to contest the federal seat of Eden-Monaro. After losing the federal race, he won back his state seat at the following by-election. He held the seat until his retirement in 1984.

The National Party’s Robert Webster won Goulburn in 1984. He was re-elected in 1988. By the 1988 election, Goulburn had shifted west so that it stretched out to the north and west of Goulburn, covering much of Lachlan Shire and the town of Cowra. Webster became a minister in the Liberal-National coalition government in 1989.

In 1991, the seat of Goulburn was abolished, and the neighbouring Liberal seat of Southern Highlands took over the town of Goulburn, while the rest of the seat shifted into Burrinjuck, which was then a Liberal seat. Webster shifted to the Legislative Council, where he remained until his retirement in 1995. He served as a minister until his retirement from politics.

The town of Goulburn was now included in the seat of Southern Highlands, which was held by senior minister John Fahey. He became Premier in 1992 when Nick Greiner resigned. Fahey lost power in 1995, and in 1996 he resigned from Southern Highlands to contest the federal seat of Macarthur, which he won. He went on to hold Macarthur until his retirement in 2001, and served as Finance Minister in the Howard government.

Fahey was succeeded in Southern Highlands in 1996 by Liberal candidate Peta Seaton. Seaton held the seat until her retirement in 2007.

The 1999 redistribution shifted Southern Highlands deeper into the Wollondilly area, while the town of Goulburn shifted into the neighbouring seat of Burrinjuck. Burrinjuck had been held by Liberal MP Alby Schultz from 1988 until 1998, when he left the seat to win the federal seat of Hume. His state seat was won by National Party candidate Katrina Hodgkinson. Hodgkinson held Burrinjuck until it was renamed Cootamundra in 2015, and retired in 2017.

At the 2007 election, the seat of Southern Highlands was abolished. The northern part of the seat was added to the new seat of Wollondilly, while the Southern Highlands itself was combined with the town of Goulburn in the restored seat of Goulburn.

In 2007, the seat was won by former federal Sex Discrimination Commissioner Pru Goward. She saw off a challenge from Goulburn Mulwaree mayor Paul Stephenson.

Pru Goward was re-elected in 2011 and 2015, and has served as a minister since 2011.

Candidates

Assessment
Goulburn and its predecessor seat has been a solid Liberal seat for decades, but a large swing in 2015 has left Pru Goward with a less-than-comfortable 6.6% margin. Current statewide polling suggests she should be able to hold on, but it’s a bit too close for comfort.

2015 result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Pru Goward Liberal 23,725 48.7 +9.7
Ursula Stephens Labor 16,681 34.3 +18.5
Iain Fyfe Greens 3,827 7.9 -2.1
Wal Ashton Outdoor Recreation 2,552 5.2 +5.2
Adrian Van Der Byl Christian Democrats 1,196 2.5 -0.5
Stephen Fitzpatrick No Land Tax 692 1.4 +1.4
Informal 1,373 2.7

2015 two-party-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Pru Goward Liberal 25,138 56.6 -20.2
Ursula Stephens Labor 19,248 43.4 +20.2

Booth breakdown

Booths in Goulburn have been split into four areas, based on local government boundaries. Polling places in Goulburn Mulwaree, Yass Valley and Wingecarribee council areas respectively have been grouped as Goulburn, Yass Valley and Southern Highlands. Polling places in Upper Lachlan and Boorowa council areas have been grouped as ‘north-west’.

The Liberal Party won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in all four areas, ranging from just 50.5% in Goulburn to 64.5% in the Southern Highlands.

Voter group LIB 2PP % Total votes % of votes
Goulburn 50.5 10,299 21.2
Southern Highlands 64.5 8,981 18.5
Yass Valley 53.0 6,132 12.6
North-West 63.3 4,631 9.5
Other votes 59.1 7,860 16.1
Pre-poll 53.6 10,770 22.1

Two-party-preferred votes in Goulburn at the 2015 NSW state election

Become a Patron!

26 COMMENTS

  1. uneven electorate …… if Labor could get between 53 to 55 % in The Goulburn area that
    would be good enough to win

  2. Having come from Goulburn, I can assure that the local politics is especially important, especially given that all of its television comes from Canberra.

    Last time, Foley promised big bucks for the local Base Hospital and that obiviously influenced a substantial swing. I can’t see that happening this time, especially as Pru Goward is a hard working Member.

    Labor could win the seat, but its needs the right candidate. However, the demographics in Goulburn has changed since the police academy, which is an arm of Charles Sturt University has become an instituation.

  3. Goulburn is one of those weird regional seats that swung so big last time that you’re left wondering whether it’s a genuine marginal now or if instead there’s just no more swing to be had.

    A retiring member obviously helps Labor. But did Goward have much of a personal vote? Recall that Goulburn was her consolation prize after losing the Epping preselection.

  4. When I first saw this tonight, yes, I actually thought Labor would win this too (loss of sitting member, personal vote or not).

    BUT, I just realised the Nationals will be able to contest, so probably will be close but I reckon Nationals could take it.

  5. @David Walsh – Can confirm that it was a consolation prize after losing to Greg Smith in a Pre-Selection for Epping.

    The Liberal Party will still run a member here as they are still considered an incumbent (even with a retiring member). But this will go close now. I tip a very narrow Coalition win. VERY NARROW!

  6. Idk what pills your on to think the coalition will win goverment in the state election. Look up how toxic the party has become. I prooved ya’ll wrong at victoria, Allot of you said Labor wouldn’t pickup seats in the Sandbelt or eastern Melbourne, But they did, People are sick of old politics, have you spoken to people? If not you cannot really call a coalition victory

  7. More than hope, because they are favoured, i can easily see a statewide swing of 5-6% in the tpp vote, although it wont be uniform

  8. Daniel, please don’t refer to me as ya’ll, don’t make insinuations that I am on drugs and don’t berate someone who is trying to have an objective discussion with subjective vitriol. It’s unbecoming of the site and it is really disrespectful.

    Furthermore, I never once commented on the Victorian election because I am not familiar with the minute detail around demographics and local issues that can affect an election there, whether it be state or federal. I have always been a NSW commentator and have tended to stick with that.

    Finally, I didn’t say that the Coalition would win the election, I made the prediction for the seat itself that it would be a very narrow coalition retain.

    It will really depend on who the Coalition preselect for the seat. Ideally, they would want to pick up someone smack bang from Goulburn as it is where they are most vulnerable. Pru had been positioned closer to Bowral, as the seat was situated closer to the city before the 2015 Redistribution.

  9. Idk if she can win. It will be tricky. But not impossible. It all depends how much they campaign here, If Labour put some serious effort here they may gain it. But only for 1 term

  10. looking at the boundaries a small shift….eg Bowral out or Harden young Cootamundra in could make a big difference……… line ball

  11. @mick – If this seat keeps shifting west, expect this to become a target for the Nats to take over this seat. There were already issues with Pru running this seat from this last redistribution.

  12. One Nation have thrown their hat into the ring for Goulburn with their candidate Richard Orchard being announced by Mark Latham.

    Any insight on how he may go in this seat?

  13. PRP – I took a look at my four-party-preferred Senate results from NSW last time. Of the major population centres, One Nation got 7-9% in the Yass booths, and 10-14% in the Goulburn booths. 14% in Crookwell, about 6% in Moss Vale.

    So they might beat the Greens but anything better seems unlikely.

  14. onp will possibly help labor .. take votes off the libs then some exhaust………don’t know if Prue had a personal vote …. if yes that helps Ursula further…….. Labors strongest areas Goulburn and Yass….. which make up half the seat…….. if can average 55 there can well win

  15. Has anyone noticed the amount of women running for this election in Goulburn N.S.W. , they far outweigh the amount of men raising concerns that men’s rights are not necessarily being properly represented. Is anyone going to address the issue ?

  16. Likely Liberal hold, Goward’s retirement could be the base for an upset Labor gain though.

  17. Ursula deserved to win Goulburn. It is an absolute tragedy for the electorate that Ms Tuckerman won. Goodbye Goulburn TAFE. Goodbye Victoria Park. Hello greyhound racing track. Hello more dodgy RTO and “employment” providers. When will the people of Goulburn (and Hume) switch on to the cold hard reality that only the marginals get attention? Welcome to another four years of being treated like you don’t matter Goulburn.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here