Brighton – Victoria 2010

LIB 10.9%

Incumbent MP
Louise Asher, since 1999.

Geography
Southern Melbourne. Brighton covers the northern half of Bayside local government area, and a small part of the City of Port Phillip. The seat covers the suburb of Brighton and parts of Elsternwick, Elwood, Hampton and Moorabbin.

History
Brighton has existed as an electoral district ever since the creation of the Victorian Legislative Assembly in 1856. The seat has never been held by a Labor MP, and has been almost always held by the Liberal Party for the last century.

Brighton was held by unaligned members of Parliament from 1856 to 1909. Sir Thomas Bent had held the seat for 32 of the previous 38 years, but died in 1909.

The 1909 by-election was won by Liberal candidate Oswald Snowball. He held the seat for the Liberal and Nationalist parties for almost two decades. In 1927 he was elected Speaker of the Legislative Assembly, and he retained that role until his death in 1928.

The 1928 by-election was won by Ian MacFarlan. He served as a member of the Nationalists and United Australia Party, although he served as an independent from 1937 to 1943. He served as deputy leader of the UAP and Liberal Party from 1943 to 1945, when he led a breakaway group of Liberals that brought down the state government of Albert Dunstan. He was briefly appointed as Premier, but lost his seat at the 1945 election.

MacFarlan was defeated in Brighton by Liberal candidate Raymond Tovell. He served as a Liberal Party member until 1953, when he was expelled from his party over his support for former Liberal Premier Thomas Hollway, who had created a breakaway ‘Electoral Reform League’ campaigning to end malapportionment of electoral boundaries. Tovell lost his seat in 1955.

Tovell was defeated by John Rossiter, who held the seat for the Liberal Party from 1955 to 1976, when he retired. He was succeeded by Jeannette Patrick, who held the seat until 1985.

Brighton was won in 1985 by barrister Alan Stockdale. When the Liberal Party came to power in 1992, Stockdale became Treasurer. He served in that role until his retirement at the 1999 election.

Louise Asher won Brighton in 1999. Asher had previously held the upper house seat of Monash since 1992. Asher served as a junior minister in the second term of the Kennett government. After the 1999 election she served as Liberal deputy leader and Shadow Treasurer until just before the 2002 election. She has continued as a frontbencher ever since, and returned to the deputy leadership in 2006.

Candidates

Political situation
Brighton is quite safe for the Liberal Party.

2006 result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Louise Asher LIB 18,067 54.91 +1.72
Jane Shelton ALP 8,473 25.75 -5.14
Jonathan Walters GRN 4,372 13.29 -2.73
Clifford Hayes IND 1,398 4.25 +4.25
Mark Freeman FF 592 1.80 +1.80

2006 two-candidate-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Louise Asher LIB 20,041 60.93 +3.52
Jane Shelton ALP 12,853 39.07 -3.52

Booth breakdown
Booths in Brighton have been divided into three areas, central, north and south. The Liberal Party’s majority was largest in the centre of the seat. They only won a 51.4% majority in the southern end of the seat. The Greens polled most strongly at the northern end of the seat.

 

Polling booths in Brighton at the 2006 state election. South in green, Central in blue, North in orange.
Voter group GRN % LIB 2CP % Total votes % of votes
Central 10.33 67.83 12,226 37.17
North 16.71 56.28 6,508 19.78
South 13.76 51.39 6,054 18.40
Other votes 14.65 61.36 8,106 24.64
Two-party-preferred votes in Brighton at the 2006 state election.
Greens primary votes in Brighton at the 2006 state election.

3 COMMENTS

  1. Candidates in ballot paper order are:

    Louise Asher – Liberal
    Laurence Giddings – Family First
    Tom Daley – Labor
    Alan Thompson –
    Margaret Beavis – Greens

Comments are closed.