[103] Hobart's The Mercury stopped short of endorsing a party, remarking that with "polls indicating that a hung Parliament remains a possible scenario ... having [Independent candidate for Clark, Andrew] Wilkie advocating for Tasmania in Canberra would not be a terrible outcome". [22][23][24] The Liberal and Labor parties agreed to support a motion in the parliament that the first six senators elected in each state would serve a six-year term, while the last six elected would serve a three-year term.[25][26]. Electorates with a higher proportion of self-described 'labourers' had a strong correlation with voting for the United Australia Party (0.605), and a moderate correlation of voting for One Nation (0.380). https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Members_of_the_Australian_House_of_Representatives,_2019–2022&oldid=978974077, Members of Australian parliaments by term, Lists of current office-holders in Australia, Short description with empty Wikidata description, All Wikipedia articles written in Australian English, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, This page was last edited on 18 September 2020, at 01:25. [118], Election for the 46th Parliament of Australia. It was the first time since 2001 that a Federal government in Australia won a third consecutive term in office. However, in the cases of disqualified House of Representatives MPs, most of these were returned in resulting by-elections. The number of crossbenchers increased by two to a record 20.   Centre Alliance (1) There was moderate correlation between median household income and preferencing (0.358) the Greens.   Greens (1) South Australia is the least-populated state where the current number of seats can decrease, as Tasmania's current representation is the minimum guaranteed by the Constitution. [113] The Canberra Times provided no endorsement, but concluded that the choice between the two major parties was "for changes that may benefit [Canberrans] personally" or "for change that has the potential to benefit those less fortunate than they are". Members of Parliament and Senators who chose not to renominate for the 2019 election are as follows: The result of the 2019 election was in stark contrast to the aggregation of opinion polls conducted over the period of the 45th parliament and the 2019 election campaign. The election period included three national public holidays: Good Friday (19 April), Easter Monday (22 April) and Anzac Day (25 April), as well as May Day and Labour Day in Northern Territory and Queensland, respectively, both falling on 6 May. [5][6][7] After a week of vote counting, neither the incumbent Turnbull Government led by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull of the Liberal/National Coalition nor the Shorten Opposition led by Opposition Leader Bill Shorten of the Australian Labor Party had won enough seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives to form a majority government. The Liberal National Party of Queensland won 23 of the state's 30 seats with a statewide primary vote of 43%. Government (77) Further dissatisfaction within the Liberal Party saw a number of centrist and economically-liberal candidates announce that they would nominate as independents in wealthy electorates, with a specific focus on "addressing climate change".[29][30]. Has since sat as an LNP member with the government, though refused to sit in either the National or Liberal party-rooms. The bottom map shows the final two-party preferred vote result by electorate. All four newspapers published by News Corp Australia (Melbourne's Sunday Herald Sun, Adelaide's Sunday Mail, Brisbane's The Sunday Mail and Sydney's The Sunday Telegraph) endorsed the Coalition. Section 32 of the Constitution says: "The writs shall be issued within ten days from the expiry of a House of Representatives or from the proclamation of a dissolution thereof." Assuming a theoretical nationwide uniform swing, the Labor opposition needed at least 50.7% of the two-party vote (at least a 1.1-point two-party swing) to win 76 seats and majority government. [58], During the ABC's election coverage, election analyst Antony Green stated, "at the moment, on these figures, it's a bit of a spectacular failure of opinion polling", with the election results essentially a mirror image of the polls with the Coalition's two-party vote at around 51%. Concluding that "the Coalition has neither credible policies nor a competent team", it finds that "Labor is the only party with a credible climate policy and a chance of forming government", but also giving qualified support to The Greens as its "climate policy is more ambitious than Labor’s and its tax and spending policies more redistributive". 2 As a result of the 2018 boundary redistribution, the Victorian Liberal-held seats of Corangamite and Dunkley became notionally marginal Labor seats. [105], Morrison stated that "the quiet Australians ... have won a great victory tonight".   Greens (1) Coalition [4], The outcome of the 2016 federal election could not be determined on election night, with too many seats in doubt. Following the reapportionment, which applied to the 2019 election, the allocation of seats was: On 7 December 2016, the Electoral Commission for the Northern Territory announced the results of its deliberations into the boundaries of Lingiari and Solomon, the two federal electoral divisions in the Northern Territory. [112] While critical of its stance on climate change and energy policy, its broadsheet The Australian Financial Review endorsed the Coalition, arguing the party "does at least grasp that Australia needs a growth policy in order to lift incomes and sustainably pay for the services government provides". [104], The Guardian Australia also endorsed Labor, arguing that "the climate emergency is the most pressing issue of our time" and that "the Coalition appears deaf to the rising clamour from the electorate...[while] it clings to an obviously deficient emissions reduction target". The last redistribution was completed in 2018, in time for the 2019 federal election. Electorates with a higher proportion of self-described 'professionals' had a strong correlation (0.693) to placing the Greens as first preference. Using the proportion of adults aged between 20 and 24 who had completed 12 years of education as an indicator of education, there was moderate correlation (0.600) between education achievement in an electorate and the likelihood of placing the Greens as the first preference. It also wrote positively of "credible independent candidates who could make positive contributions in the parliament". Results of the 2019 Australian federal election (House of Representatives), Members of the Australian House of Representatives, 2019–2022, Results of the 2019 Australian federal election (Senate), the post-election opposition won more seats than the post-election government, Results of the 2016 Australian federal election (House of Representatives), Results of the 2016 Australian federal election (Senate), Section 44 of the Constitution of Australia, 2018 Liberal Party of Australia leadership spills, Liberal Party leadership spill on 24 August 2018, by-election in his former seat of Wentworth, Candidates of the 2019 Australian federal election, Pre-election pendulum for the 2019 Australian federal election, Post-election pendulum for the 2016 Australian federal election, Post-election pendulum for the 2019 Australian federal election, Opinion polling for the 2019 Australian federal election, 2019 Australian Labor Party leadership election, Members of the Australian House of Representatives, 2016–2019, Members of the Australian Senate, 2016–2019, "Swing against Malcolm Turnbull's Coalition leaves election on a knife-edge", "We don't have a winner, so what happens now? [108], In Perth, the Seven West Media-owned The West Australian endorsed the Coalition as having "proved they will listen to Western Australia with their historic shakeup of the GST", and commending the Western Australian Liberal Party for "a proven track record of being powerful advocates for [the] state". [116], Following the results Shorten announced his resignation as leader of the Labor Party, triggering the 2019 Australian Labor Party leadership election. [65] This could only have occurred if a bill that had passed the House of Representatives was rejected by the Senate twice, at least three months apart. Since the 2016 election, a number of parliamentarians resigned from their seats, while some were disqualified by the High Court of Australia in the parliamentary eligibility crisis as a result of the dual citizenship of some MPs. New boundaries gazetted from 7 February 2017 saw the remainder of the Litchfield Municipality and parts of Palmerston (the suburbs of Farrar, Johnston, Mitchell, Zuccoli and part of Yarrawonga) transferred from Solomon to Lingiari. It runs the risk of hubris should reality not conform with voter expectations". - A detailed breakdown of Australia's election, Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives, Chronology of Australian federal parliaments, List of Acts of the Parliament of Australia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2019_Australian_federal_election&oldid=987263538, Use Australian English from September 2019, All Wikipedia articles written in Australian English, Pages using bar box without float left or float right, Articles with unsourced statements from April 2020, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Indeed, the net two-seat swing to the LNP in Queensland was enough to allow the Coalition to regain its majority. The Coalition claimed a two-seat majority with 77 seats, Labor finished with 68, whilst the remaining six seats were won by the Australian Greens, Centre Alliance, Katter's Australian Party and three independents. The House therefore would expire on 29 August 2019, unless it were dissolved earlier. Scott Morrison 2019–present Hon David Coleman Liberal: Banks: NSW: 2013–present Hon … [83][84], A redistribution of federal electoral divisions in Victoria commenced on 4 September 2017, due to changes in the state's representation entitlement. The Senate crossbench became substantially smaller, with incumbent senators Derryn Hinch, Duncan Spender, Peter Georgiou, Brian Burston, and Fraser Anning, as well as former parliamentarians Clive Palmer and Skye Kakoschke-Moore, failing in their bids to win Senate seats. [117] Albanese's path to the leadership was cleared after Chris Bowen, Shadow Treasurer in the Shorten Ministry and a member of the more fiscally-conservative Labor Right, withdrew his candidacy shortly after nominating. Out of 40 Senate seats up for election, the Coalition won 19, while Labor won 13 seats. This was the third time South Australia had lost a seat since the 1984 enlargement of the parliament, with Hawker abolished in 1993 and Bonython in 2004. Crossbench (6) [85], The commission also renamed several divisions: Batman to Cooper (after William Cooper), McMillan to Monash (after Sir John Monash), Melbourne Ports to Macnamara (after Dame Jean Macnamara) and Murray to Nicholls (after Sir Douglas and Lady Nicholls). [114] The Australian wrote that "Mr Morrison’s plan errs on the side of being safe but deliverable; his policies, consistent with traditional values, do not unduly raise expectations as Mr Shorten has done".   Liberal National (23)[i] Three Victorian Liberal candidates had to withdraw based on section 44 issues.[27]. The incumbent Coalition government no longer held a majority, and required at least 51.1% of the two-party vote (at least a 0.7-point two-party swing) to regain it. [97], Both the Nine Publishing newspapers (Melbourne's The Sunday Age and Sydney's The Sun-Herald) stopped short of endorsing a party, with The Sunday Age calling for bipartisan action on climate change.   Katter's Australian (1) The Liberal/National Coalition will require at least nine additional votes to reach a Senate majority, an increase of three.   Liberal National (1)[c] Electorates with a high proportion of households consisting of a couple and children had a moderate correlation (0.357) to vote for the Australian Labor Party. All 151 seats in the House of Representatives (lower house) and 40 of the 76 seats in the Senate (upper house) were up for election.   Independent (3)[ii], This is a list of members of the House of Representatives of the 46th Parliament of Australia (2019–2022).[1].

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