Polwarth – Victoria 2018

LIB 10.6%

Incumbent MP
Richard Riordan, since 2015.

Geography
Southwestern Victoria. Polwarth covers regional areas between Geelong and Warrnambool including the towns of Anglesea, Lorne, Lismore, Colac, Camperdown, Terang and Mortlake. Polwarth covers the entirety of Colac Otway and Corangamite shires, and parts of Golden Plains, Moyne and Surf Coast shires and small parst of the City of Greater Geelong and Ararat Shire.

History
Polwarth has existed as an electoral district in the Legislative Assembly since 1889. In that time it has never been held by the Labor Party. Except for the 1940s, when it was held by the Country Party, the Liberal Party and its predecessors have held the seat ever since the seat first elected party-aligned members in 1911.

Nationalist Party member James McDonald won Polwarth at a 1917 by-election. He served as a minister from 1924 to 1927, and held Polwarth until his death in 1933.

Allan McDonald, nephew of the former member, won the seat for the United Australia Party in 1933. He held the seat until 1940, when he stepped down to run for the federal seat of Corangamite. He held Corangamite until his death in 1953, serving as a prominent member of the conservative Opposition through the 1940s.

Edward Guye of the Country Party won Polwarth in 1940. He joined the Liberal Country Party in 1949, and served as a minister from 1949 to 1950. Guye held the seat until 1958, when he was succeeded by Thomas Darcy, also of the Liberal Country Party, which later was renamed the Liberal Party. Darcy served as a minister from 1964 to 1967, and then retired in 1970.

Darcy was succeeded in 1970 by Liberal candidate Cecil Burgin. He held Polwarth until 1985.

Polwarth was won in 1985 by Ian Smith. He had served as Member for Warrnambool from 1967 to 1983, serving as a minister in the Liberal state government from 1970 to 1982. He had resigned from Parliament following the defeat of the Liberal Party in 1982, but returned at the next election in Polwarth.

He returned as Minister for Finance from 1992 to 1995, and retired from Parliament in 1999.

The Liberal Party preselected Terry Mulder to run in Polwarth in 1999. He was challenged by retired footballer Paul Couch, who ran for the Nationals. He was considered to be a threat to the Liberal hold on Polwarth, but he failed to overtake the ALP, and his preferences helped Mulder easily win the seat.

Mulder was easily re-elected in 2002, and became a member of the shadow cabinet. He was considered to be a leadership contender prior to the 2006 state election.

Terry Mulder was re-elected again in 2006 and 2010. Mulder served as Minister for Public Transport and Roads from 2010 until 2014, and retired following the coalition government’s defeat in 2014.

The 2015 by-election was won by Liberal candidate Richard Riordan.

Candidates

Assessment
Polwarth is a safe Liberal seat.

2014 result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Terry Mulder Liberal 21,861 55.4 -0.5
Libby Coker Labor 11,045 28.0 +1.1
Simon Northeast Greens 4,352 11.0 +2.8
Philip Edge Country Alliance 2,206 5.6 +1.7
Informal 1,599 3.9

2014 two-party-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Terry Mulder Liberal 23,944 60.6 -3.2
Libby Coker Labor 15,541 39.4 +3.2

2015 by-election result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Richard Riordan Liberal 17,798 49.6 -5.7
Joe Miles Greens 5,715 15.9 +4.9
David O’Brien Nationals 4,292 12.0 +12.0
Carmel Kavanagh Democratic Labour 2,911 8.1 +8.1
Meredith Anne Doig Sex Party 2,140 6.0 +6.0
Melinda Cass Country Party 2,043 5.7 +0.1
Geoff Rogers Christians 575 1.6 +1.6
Brendan Eckel Independent 373 1.0 +1.0
Informal 2,578 6.7

2015 by-election two-candidate-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes %
Richard Riordan Liberal 23,235 64.7
David O’Brien Nationals 12,687 35.3

Booth breakdown

Booths in Polwarth have been divided into three parts: east, west and central. The ‘Central’ area covers those polling places in Colac Otway Shire. The ‘East’ area covers those in Golden Plains and Surf Coast council areas. The ‘West’ area covers those in Corangamite and Moyne council areas.

At the 2014 election, the Liberal Party won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in two out of three areas, with 61.5% in the centre and 71.3% in the west. Labor won 51.9% in the east of the electorate.

The Greens primary vote at the 2014 election ranged from 7.8% in the west to 13.7% in the east.

The Liberal Party won a majority of the two-candidate-preferred vote (against the Greens) in all three areas at the 2015 by-election, ranging from 61.3% in the centre to 66.1% in the east. The Nationals primary vote ranged from 7.2% in the east to 15.9% in the west.

2014 booth breakdown

Voter group GRN prim % LIB 2PP % Total votes % of votes
West 7.8 71.3 9,677 24.5
East 13.7 48.1 8,550 21.7
Central 11.9 61.5 8,137 20.6
Other votes 14.2 59.3 5,372 13.6
Pre-poll 9.0 61.1 7,728 19.6

2017 by-election booth breakdown

Voter group NAT prim % LIB 2CP % Total votes % of votes
West 15.9 65.3 8,388 23.4
East 7.2 66.1 7,895 22.0
Central 15.2 61.3 6,656 18.6
Other votes 10.7 65.2 12,908 36.0

Election results in Polwarth at the 2014 Victorian state election
Click on the ‘visible layers’ box to toggle between two-party-preferred votes and Greens primary votes.

Election results at the 2015 Polwarth by-election
Click on the ‘visible layers’ box to toggle between two-candidate-preferred votes (Liberal vs Greens) and Nationals primary votes.

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3 COMMENTS

  1. how much does this overlap Corangamite appears that the non western distritcts part of the seat have a higher liberal vote than I would expect

  2. MQ, the state vote at the general election is actually about the same as the federal vote around Anglesea, Lorne, Bannockburn, Winchelsea, etc.

    The by-election results show a much stronger Liberal vote as no Labor candidate contested.

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