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词条 Division of Macarthur
释义

  1. History

     Since 2007 

  2. Demographics

  3. Members

  4. Election results

  5. References

  6. External links

{{short description|Australian federal electoral division}}{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2015}}{{Use Australian English|date=January 2015}}{{Infobox Australian Electorate
| federal = yes
| name = Macarthur
| image = Division of MACARTHUR 2016.png
| caption = Division of Macarthur in New South Wales, as of the 2016 federal election.
| created = 1949
| mp = Mike Freelander
| mp-party = Labor
| namesake = John Macarthur and Elizabeth Macarthur
| electors = 104857
| electors_year= 2016
| electors_footnotes=
| area = 363
| class = Outer Metropolitan
}}

The Division of Macarthur is an Australian electoral division in the state of New South Wales. The division is named after John Macarthur and his wife Elizabeth, who were both pioneers of Australia's wool industry. The main products and work in the electorate are in the fruit and vegetable production, lucerne and fodder crops, wine, dairy cattle and horse-breeding.

Located in outer south-west Sydney and covering {{convert|363|km2}}, the present boundaries of the division cover the southern suburbs of Campbelltown and parts of the local government area of Camden. It encompasses the suburbs of Airds, Ambarvale, Blair Athol, Blairmount, Bow Bowing, Bradbury, Campbelltown, Catherine Field, Claymore, Currans Hill, Eagle Vale, Englorie Park, Eschol Park, Gilead, Gledswood Hills, Glen Alpine, Gregory Hills, Kearns, Kentlyn, Leumeah, Menangle Park, Minto, Minto Heights, Oran Park, Raby, Rosemeadow, Ruse, Smeaton Grange, St Andrews, St Helens Park, Varroville, Wedderburn; as well as parts of Bringelly, Denham Court, Harrington Park, Ingleburn, Leppington, Menangle, Mount Annan, Narellan, and Rossmore.

Macarthur was held by the Liberals for a twenty-year period between the 1996 federal election and the 2016 federal election when Liberal incumbent Russell Matheson was unseated by Labor's Dr Mike Freelander. Though in part assisted by a redistribution, Labor managed to pick up a large post-redistribution two-party swing of nearly 12 percent.

Ahead of the 2016 federal election, ABC psephologist Antony Green listed the seat in his election guide as one of eleven which he classed as "bellwether" electorates.[1]

History

Macarthur has changed hands regularly over the years as redistributions have favoured different parties. Macarthur was a bellwether seat from the time of its establishment in 1949 until the 2007 election—during that 58-year period it was always held by a member of the governing party or coalition. Originally a hybrid urban-rural seat stretching from southwest Sydney to the Southern Highlands, successive redistributions have shrunk the geographical size of the seat due to the rapid growth of the Campbelltown area. In the redistribution prior to the 2001 federal election, Southern Highlands towns such as Bowral and Moss Vale were removed, shrinking the seat to one eighth of its original size and making it an entirely Sydney-based seat. This made the seat notionally Labor by 1.3%, from the previous 5.6% of the Liberals, prompting Liberal minister and former New South Wales premier John Fahey to retire. However, his replacement as Liberal candidate, former ultra-marathoner, Pat Farmer, achieved an 8.3% swing to retain the seat for the Liberals, actually tallying a primary vote large enough to win without the need for preferences. He increased the margin from 7 to 9.5% at the 2004 election.[2][3]

Since 2007

Ahead of the 2007 election, a redistribution seemingly consolidated Farmer's hold on the seat; the Liberal majority was boosted to 11.1%. However, Farmer was nearly defeated in the election, suffering a swing of 10.4%. The swing was spread evenly across the electorate, reflecting its solid mortgage belt character. The swing was particularly large in the heavily mortgaged suburbs of Narellan, Camden and the traditionally more Labor-voting areas of Campbelltown. Farmer's margin was reduced to an extremely marginal 0.7%. A further redistribution in 2010 made it notionally a Labor seat. Farmer was defeated for Liberal preselection by Campbelltown mayor Russell Matheson, who was able to retain the seat for the Liberals. Matheson gained a large swing at the 2013 election, increasing the Liberal margin to 11.1 percent. The Liberal margin was reduced to just 3.3 percent in the redistribution prior to the 2016 election,[2][3] and additionally, a ReachTEL poll of 628 voters conducted in Macarthur during the election campaign saw Labor leading the Liberals.[4] At the 2016 election Labor challenger Mike Freelander took the seat off the Liberals on a swing of just under 12 percent, turning it into a safe Labor seat in one stroke. Freelander actually won enough votes on the first count to defeat Matheson without the need for preferences.

Demographics

While the electorate is predominantly outer-suburban, its contains some semi-rural areas such as Bringelly and Leppington. The population of the electorate is likely to expand significantly over coming years due to the release of new land surrounding Sydney for residential development.[2][3]

It is a mortgage belt area, with a high percentage of young families, leading to the proportion of residents under 18 being 35%, compared to the national average of 27.2%, with a low proportion of senior citizens (5.9% compared to 12.1%). This is further highlighted in the fact that 23.3% of the population is attending school, compared to the national average of 18.1%. The income is above average, with 19.7% of the families in the electorate earning less than A$500 per week, compared to 24.3% for the national average. The birth demographics of the electorate are similar to the rest of Australia, with the proportion of people born overseas and in non-English speaking countries within one percentage point of the national average.[2][3]

Members

MemberPartyTerm
Liberal}}| Jeff Bate Liberal 1949–1972
Independent}}|  Independent 1972–1972
Labor}}|  John Kerin Labor 1972–1975
Liberal}}|  Michael Baume Liberal 1975–1983
Labor}}|  Colin Hollis Labor 1983–1984
Labor}}|  Stephen Martin Labor 1984–1993
Labor}}|  Chris Haviland Labor 1993–1996
Liberal}}|  John Fahey Liberal 1996–2001
Liberal}}|  Pat Farmer Liberal 2001–2010
Liberal}}|  Russell Matheson Liberal 2010–2016
Labor}}|  Mike Freelander Labor 2016–present

Election results

{{main|Electoral results for the Division of Macarthur}}{{Election box begin
|title=Australian federal election, 2016: Macarthur[5]
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
|candidate = Mike Freelander
|party = Labor
|votes = 46,650
|percentage = 51.88
|change = +13.68
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
|candidate = Russell Matheson
|party = Liberal
|votes = 32,235
|percentage = 35.85
|change = −9.81
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
|candidate = James Gent
|party = Christian Democrats
|votes = 3,875
|percentage = 4.31
|change = +1.20
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
|candidate = Ben Moroney
|party = Greens
|votes = 3,836
|percentage = 4.27
|change = +0.10
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
|candidate = Richard Bakoss
|party = Nick Xenophon Team
|votes = 3,316
|percentage = 3.69
|change = +3.69
}}{{Election box formal
|votes = 89,912
|percentage = 93.38
|change = +2.95
}}{{Election box informal
|votes = 6,379
|percentage = 6.62
|change = −2.95
}}{{Election box turnout
|votes = 96,291
|percentage = 91.83
|change = +2.23
}}{{Election box 2pp}}{{Election box candidate AU party
|candidate = Mike Freelander
|party = Labor
|votes = 52,448
|percentage = 58.33
|change = +11.72
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
|candidate = Russell Matheson
|party = Liberal
|votes = 37,464
|percentage = 41.67
|change = −11.72
}}{{Election box gain AU party|
|winner = Labor
|loser = Liberal
|swing = +11.72
}}{{Election box end}}

References

1. ^The Bellwether Contests: Antony Green ABC
2. ^Macarthur - 2016 federal election guide: Antony Green ABC
3. ^Macarthur guide: AEC
4. ^[https://www.reachtel.com.au/blog/7-news-macarthur-poll-19may2016 19 May 2016 Macarthur poll: ReachTEL 20 May 2016]
5. ^Macarthur, NSW, Virtual Tally Room 2016, Australian Electoral Commission.

External links

  • Division of Macarthur- Australian Electoral Commission
{{Australian federal divisions of New South Wales}}{{coord|-34.065|150.764|display=title}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Macarthur, Division of}}

3 : Electoral divisions of Australia|Constituencies established in 1949|1949 establishments in Australia

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