Macarthur – Australia 2028

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6 COMMENTS

  1. This seat should be a safe hold/retain for Labor, even if sitting MP Mike Freelander chooses to retire in 2028.
    Most of the seat is now Campbelltown council and generally consists of established suburbs instead of new estates which have been moved into adjacent Hume.

  2. @Yoh An – as a Macarthur resident myself, agreed. Mike Freelander is a very hard-working MP and has built up a strong reputation in the community, especially with his background as a pediatrician. Even if he retires, Labor is certain to retain, and the representatives in the Campbelltown area (Freelander, Greg Warren, Darcy Lound) are quite popular that the Labor brand here has improved substantially.

    Long gone are the days when Russell Matheson and Pat Farmer held the seat, and when Glen Alpine voted 60%+ Liberal, Ruse and some of the Bradbury & Campbelltown booths were Liberal, and even when Rosemeadow and Leumeah were marginal suburbs (2013 results FYI).

    @SpaceFish – astute observation there. The Greens did do quite well especially in the more CALD and low-income parts of Campbelltown and the public housing suburbs. I do question if they will keep the momentum up as I know there was a decent protest vote due to Palestine, only time will tell.

  3. There is very little of Camden left on these boundaries and while the margin is inflated due to Mike Freelander popularity, i think Labor can still retain even in a 2013 style defeat on current boundaries Labor would have got only 48% TPP in 2013 but the Labor brand is quite stronger in Campbelltown council also the area has diversified rapidly especially growth of the Bangladeshi community which helps Labor.

  4. The Camden part is mainly greenfield housing estates.

    The Labor vote was helped in 2025 thanks to a Liberal unpopularity and poor campaigning as well as an uptick in the Greens vote. The Greens picked up swings in suburbs where there is a larger Muslim and/or low socioeconomic demographic.

    @Nimalan, Macarthur and Barton are two seats that Labor couldn’t win at the 2013 wipeout but would survive a future wipeout. Their margins are high and the electoral demographics have changed since.