Corangamite – Australia 2025

ALP 7.9%

Incumbent MP
Libby Coker, since 2019.

Geography
South-western Victoria. Corangamite covers suburbs on the southern fringe of Geelong and then extends out to Torquay. The seat also covers the Bellarine peninsula. Most of the electorate is in the Greater Geelong council area, along with a small part of the Surf Coast council area.

Redistribution
Corangamite contracted, losing Bannockburn, Inverleigh, Moriac and Modewarre to Wannon. These changes slightly increased the Labor margin from 7.6% to 7.9%.

History
Corangamite was an original federation division, and a seat which changed hands often in early years, before becoming a solid conservative seat in the latter half of the 20th century.

It’s first member was Chester Manifold of the Protectionists, but he retired due to ill-health at the 1903 election and the seat was won by Grafton Wilson for the Free Traders. Wilson was defeated in 1910 by the ALP’s James Scullin, who held the seat for one term before being defeated by former member Manifold, who returned to contest the seat for the Liberals. Manifold, whose son, Sir Chester, was a state MP and a famed horse-breeder and racing administrator, held the seat until he died at sea in 1918.

The December 1918 by-election saw the first use of preferential voting for the federal parliament. Scullin returned to contest the seat for the ALP, and topped the primary vote, but was comfortably defeated on preferences by the Victorian Farmers Union’s William Gibson. Scullin would subsequently win the seat of Yarra in 1922 and serve as Prime Minister from 1929-32.

Gibson held the seat for the Country Party, serving as Postmaster-General and Minister for Works and Railways until his defeat in 1929 by Labor’s Richard Crouch, who had previously been a Protectionist/Liberal MP for Corio from 1901-1910. Crouch then lost to Gibson in 1931, who served one more term before winning election to the Senate in 1934.

Geoffrey Street of the UAP, who would serve as Defence Minister in Menzies’ first government, won Corangamite in 1934 and held it until his death, along with two other ministers, in a plane crash in 1940.

Allan McDonald, a former state MP, won the seat for the UAP in 1940, and quickly became a minister in the Menzies government. He unsuccessfully contested the UAP leadership in 1941 and 1943, and remained on the backbench when the Liberals returned to power in 1949. He died in 1953, and was succeeded by Daniel Mackinnon, who had previously been MP for Wannon.

Mackinnon retired in 1966, and was succeeded by Tony Street, son of the former member Geoffrey, who served as a minister in various portfolios in the Fraser government and subsequently retired in early 1984.

Stewart McArthur won the seat in 1984, and held it until defeated by the ALP’s Darren Cheeseman in 2007. Cheeseman was re-elected in 2010, and lost to Liberal candidate Sarah Henderson in 2013. Henderson was re-elected in 2016.

Labor’s Libby Coker defeated Henderson at the 2019 election. Henderson returned to parliament later in 2019 after being appointed to fill a vacancy in the Senate. Coker was re-elected in 2022.

Candidates

  • Kate Lockhart (Independent)
  • James Jackson (Trumpet of Patriots)
  • Paul Barker (Libertarian)
  • Mitch Pope (Greens)
  • Colin Seabrook (One Nation)
  • Libby Coker (Labor)
  • Harley Mackenzie (Legalise Cannabis)
  • Darcy Dunstan (Liberal)
  • Assessment
    Corangamite is a classic marginal seat but Coker now holds the seat by a sizeable margin.

    2022 result

    Candidate Party Votes % Swing Redist
    Libby Coker Labor 38,573 38.2 +2.4 38.4
    Stephanie Asher Liberal 34,463 34.1 -8.3 34.0
    Alex Marshall Greens 15,349 15.2 +6.5 15.3
    Daniel Abou-Zeid United Australia 3,233 3.2 +1.0 3.2
    Paul Barker Liberal Democrats 2,526 2.5 +2.5 2.5
    Luke Sorensen One Nation 2,548 2.5 +2.5 2.4
    Meg Watkins Animal Justice 1,986 2.0 -0.2 2.0
    Jean-Marie D’Argent Hinch’s Justice Party 1,421 1.4 -1.2 1.4
    Stephen Juhasz Federation Party 868 0.9 +0.9 0.8
    Informal 4,088 3.9 -0.1

    2022 two-party-preferred result

    Candidate Party Votes % Swing Redist
    Libby Coker Labor 58,160 57.6 +6.6 57.9
    Stephanie Asher Liberal 42,807 42.4 -6.6 42.1

    Booth breakdown

    Polling places in Corangamite have been divided into three areas. Booths in the Geelong urban area have been grouped together, as have those on the Bellarine peninsula. The rural booths around Torquay have been grouped as “south-west”.

    Labor won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in all three areas, ranging from 58.1% in Bellarine to 62.6% in Geelong.

    The Greens came third, with a primary vote ranging from 15.5% in Bellarine to 25.2% in the south-west.

    Voter group GRN prim ALP 2PP Total votes % of votes
    Bellarine 15.5 58.1 20,600 22.2
    Geelong 16.5 62.6 10,468 11.3
    South-West 25.2 61.3 4,611 5.0
    Pre-poll 15.0 58.6 35,995 38.8
    Other votes 13.1 53.2 21,104 22.7

    Election results in Corangamite at the 2022 federal election
    Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for Labor, the Liberal Party and the Greens.

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    58 COMMENTS

    1. @ Yon An
      Also in WA
      Tangney, Cowan and Swan bigger swings than Pearce, Canning and in QLD Moreton, Oxley, Rankin, Bonner bigger wings than Petrie, Longman

    2. Mick based on state enrolment data it’s more likely to shrink further. They really need to change the Corangamite name.

    3. Nimalan Pearce and canning swung to the libs. I reckon Pearce should be a lib gain in 2028 especially if the sitting member retires

    4. @Nimalan, it looks like the more CALD seats in Victoria swung away much more from the Liberals.

      In NSW, provincial electorates (classified by AEC) like Robertson, Dobell and Shortland swung strongly away from the Liberals. The latter two are less culturally diverse and have fewer migrants.

      In Victoria, similar coastal provincial electorates that are 50km to 150km away from the capital city CBD didn’t swing much.

    5. Which seems to justify the liberal strategy of targeting outer surburban working class white voters.

    6. @ John
      Yes that what i meant Pearce and Canning did swing to the Libs. I pointed out that even before the election i said i thought there will be a swing to Libs in Pearce and they may even possibly win it but i said no chance of Libs winning Swan in 2025. Pearce is largely an affluent Anglo mortgage belt area where Dutton may have been liked.
      @ Votante
      Yes CALD voters may have what prevented an Anti-Allan backlash. Even in Lalor, there were big swings to Labor around Tarneit which is CALD but swings against Labor in more Anglo and older Werribee. Calwell had a notional TPP swing to Labor and on booth result big notional swings around Muslim parts in Meadow Heights etc which had the biggest anti-lockdown swings in both state and Federal elections in 2022 now a lot but not all of it has been reversed.

      I do agree that NSW provincial electorates on Central Coast had big swings to Labor. Shortland i think is a recovery from Adani backlash in 2019 which may have taken two elections

    7. @ John
      As i pointed out before the strategy of targeting Outer Suburban White (including Eastern and Southern Europeans) Voters may have worked.

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