HIGGINS | ||||
# | % | SWING | 2PP | |
O’Dwyer (LIB) | 34764 | 54.4% | 0.2% | 59.6% |
Hamilton (GRN) | 20778 | 32.5% | 22.2% | 40.4% |
Australian Sex Party | 2084 | 3.3% | ||
Liberal Democrats | 311 | 0.5% | ||
Australian Democrats | 1455 | 2.3% | 1.1% | |
One Nation | 199 | 0.3% | ||
Democratic Labor Party | 2452 | 3.8% | ||
Independents | 1828 | 2.9% | ||
TOTAL | 63871 | |||
COUNTED: | 72.5% | |||
BOOTHS (OF 38): | 38 |
BRADFIELD | ||||
# | % | SWING | 2PP | |
Fletcher (LIB) | 39159 | 56.3% | -3.2% | 63.8% |
Gemmell (GRN) | 17608 | 25.3% | 14.4% | 36.2% |
Democratic Labor Party | 1477 | 2.1% | ||
Australian Sex Party | 2222 | 3.2% | ||
One Nation | 450 | 0.6% | ||
Liberal Democrats | 561 | 0.8% | ||
CCC | 702 | 1.0% | ||
ENE | 719 | 1.0% | ||
Independents/CDP | 6646 | 9.6% | ||
TOTAL | 69544 | |||
COUNTED: | 73.1% | |||
BOOTHS (OF 40): | 40 |
Tuesday. 3726 postals from Bradfield, massively favouring the Liberals (75.4-24.6 on 2PP).
Sunday (9pm). Turnout on ordinary votes was 88.8% of the 2007 election in Higgins and 95.9% in Bradfield, compared with 89.3% at the Mayo by-election, 93.2% in Lyne and 89.4% in Gippsland. So it was actually quite high in Bradfield and only slightly below par in Higgins. Part of the reason in Higgins might be that it’s not a growth area. We could equally get a high number of pre-polls and postals bringing the number closer to average. I suspect we’ve seen half the pre-polls counted so far (the rest should come in quite quickly) and a third of the postals (which should dribble in over the next week).
Sunday (7.30pm). 2938 postals from Higgins added. Error in my Bradfield table corrected.
Sunday (4.30pm). 5841 pre-polls from Higgins and 3765 from Bradfield added. These have been particularly strong for Kelly O’Dwyer, increasing her two-party margin from 8.3 per cent to 9.1 per cent. Special hospital team (about 500 votes) also added from Bradfield; not yet available from Higgins.
Sunday (early). The AEC has seen fit to publish booth results, so too late to be any use, I hereby reinstate the table. Also, here’s a revised version of my regional Higgins breakdown. I’ve abolished the distinction between the “pink-green” area of Prahran-Windsor and “red” Carnegie – notwithstanding that there’s some distance between the two, the figures were near identical. The other distinction is between “deep blue” Toorak-Kooyong and the “light blue” bulk of the electorate.
LIB | CHANGE | GRN | LIB 2PP | SWING | |
Light Blue | 52.76% | -1.2% | 24.4% | 58.5% | 1.1% |
Deep Blue | 61.13% | -2.9% | 19.8% | 65.3% | -0.7% |
Marginal | 41.03% | 2.1% | 27.9% | 48.6% | 6.8% |
And here’s the Bradfield breakdown, the “marginal” area being what I described previously as “pockets on the edges of the electorate in the north-west at Asquith and Hornsby and in the south at Chatswood and Willoughby”.
LIB | CHANGE | GRN | LIB 2PP | SWING | |
Deep Blue | 58.0% | -5.6% | 25.2% | 66.0% | -1.7% |
Marginal | 48.4% | 0.2% | 28.9% | 57.1% | 4.1% |
The general impression is that while the Greens absorbed most of the missing Labor vote across the board, some of it leaked either to the Liberals or to other minor parties (the DLP in particular polled 6.6 per cent in the marginal areas of Higgins, and scored double the vote in the marginal areas of Bradfield compared with the rest of the electorate) and thence to the Liberals as preferences. This counterbalanced a fall in the Liberal primary vote in the deep blue areas of both electorates, which proved nowhere near the magnitude required to put them in danger. It’s interesting to note that this fall was lower in Higgins than in Bradfield, which it’s tempting to put down to resistance to Clive Hamilton among those at the highest end of the income scale.
9.20pm. I’ve performed a similar exercise in Bradfield. There are marginal pockets on the edges of the electorate in the north-west at Asquith and Hornsby and in the south at Chatswood and Willoughby. These areas swung to the Liberals 4.7 per cent in two-party terms. However, the wealthy Liberal heart of the electorate, from Killara north through St Ives, swung 5.1 per cent to the Greens.
8.40pm. Psephos in comments notes the trend detectable from Higgins in the table below (which I’m continuing to update as the last few booths come in) is reflected in Bradfield: “Hornsby Central, Labor’s best booth in the seat: Liberal primary vote up 5.9%.”
8.20pm. I’ll keep that coming in tabular form. “Light blue” zone is the bulk of the electorate; “deep blue” the riverfront from South Yarra through Toorak to Kooyong; “pink-green” Prahran/Windsor; “red” the Carnegie area.
LIB 2PP SWING | BOOTHS REPORTING | |
Light blue zone | 0.9% | 20 out of 21 |
Deep blue zone | -0.8% | 6 out of 6 |
Pink-green zone | 6.3% | 6 out of 6 |
Red zone | 7.1% | 3 out of 3 |
8.02pm. While I’ve been quiet, I’ve been calculating the Higgins booth results provided by Antony into four zones. While this has been happening the Liberal-Greens margin has blown out to 9 per cent. All four zones have swung to the Liberals: the normally Labor-voting area in the south-east around Carnegie by 9.3 per cent; posh Toorak/Kooyong has swung 1.7 per cent; pink-green Prahran/Windsor 4.3 per cent; and the middle-Liberal balance, from Armadale to Glen Iris and Camberwell to Malvern, by 1.1 per cent. That’s assuming my calculations are correct, which I can’t state with total confidence.
7.38pm. Twelve booths now in from Higgins, swing steady at 5.4 per cent, Kelly home and hosed. Props though to the 400 or so voters of Toorak West for the short-lived entertainment they provided.
7.32pm. Another booth pushes Liberal two-party lead in Higgins to 5.4 per cent. Antony has abandoned commentary, but if he hadn’t I’m guessing he would be calling it now.
7.30pm. No alarms for the Liberals in Bradfield: projected margin 12 per cent.
7.28pm. Antony nonetheless says Higgins “can’t be called yet”.
7.27pm. Antony Green has eight booths in from Higgins and 9.2 per cent counted – O’Dwyer with an almost certainly sufficient 4.8 per cent two-party lead.
7.22pm. Possum, who took about 10 seconds to call the US election for Obama, says on Twitter: “Shorter Higgins – Greens went well with wealthy Lib voters but not so good with middle income Libs. Failed with ALP voters. game over”.
7.19pm. I’ve abandoned the table – it is not possible to keep up with the furious number crunching I needed to do to keep track as each new booth reported. Head to the ABC for elucidation on what’s happening.
7.15pm. That Toorak West result looking quirkier after Gardiner booth reports, but it’s still close. Having trouble keeping up due to AEC failure to report individual booths, so double check anything you see above.
7.13pm. Better result for Liberals in Higgins from Kooyong Park.
7.05pm. Both the booths have 2PP votes in, so my 2PP figures are now less speculative.
7.02pm. First Higgins booth is super wealthy, super Liberal Toorak West, and it shows a very interesting plunge in the Liberal vote.
6.49pm. Unless I’m mistaken – please let it be so – the AEC are not providing individual polling booth figures, which means I might as well pack up and go home.
6.46pm. Lady Davidson Hospital booth in from Bradfield – only 293 votes, but no evidence of a remarkable result.
6.36pm. Still nothing. These are urban electorates so there are no small booths that report quickly; the large number of candidates, particularly in Bradfield, might also be slowing things down.
6.20pm. Until I get notional 2PP counts, my 2PP will be based on the following preference estimates:
HIGGINS: ASP 80-20 to Greens; LDP 80-20 to Liberal; Dems 70-30 to Greens; ONP and DLP 80-20 to Liberal; all others 55-45 to Liberal.
BRADFIELD: DLP 80-20 to Liberal; ASP 80-20 to Greens; ONP and LDP 80-20 to Liberal; CCC and ENE 50-50; all others 75-25 to Liberal.
# and % primary vote figures are raw; primary vote swing and 2PP figures are based on booth matching.
6pm. Welcome to the Poll Bludger’s live coverage of the Higgins and Bradfield by-elections. First figures should be in in about 20 minutes.
Will the Sex Party get 5%?
I’m predicting 53-47 to the Libs in Higgins, but Malcolm Mackerras is predicting a Greens win, so hopefully the by-election result is reasonably close and interesting…
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/politics/mackerras-predicts-boilover-in-higgins/story-e6frgczf-1225806355860
The other household members went for the Greens at Bradfield. So Greens should do well.
What is the Abbott pass mark for both seats?
I think the informal vote in Bradfield will be very high because of the large number of candidates. I think it will be 5.5%.
[What is the Abbott pass mark for both seats?]
No drop in their vote from the last election?
[What is the Abbott pass mark for both seats?]
50% primary vote.
Shows on,
I don’t know but they get a high rating for their green creds. from Vote Climate, The Greens and the Democrats.
I’m surprised that Family First isn’t running in either seat. Are they broke?
[Will the Sex Party get 5%?]
With my support yes and more 👿
[With my support yes and more]
I’m not interested in dolphin sex.
Pass mark fot Tony Abbott
Bradfield Liberal TTP 55+
Higgins Liberal TTP 53+
What will be higher in Bradfield? The Sex Party vote or the informal vote?
Vote Climate is not a political Party-I’m assuming you don’t live in Higgins-it’s an organisation of a coalition of various community climate groups.
Until I get notional 2PP counts, my 2PP will be based on the following preference estimates:
HIGGINS: ASP 80-20 to Greens; LDP 80-20 to Liberal; Dems 70-30 to Greens; ONP and DLP 80-20 to Liberal; all others 55-45 to Liberal.
BRADFIELD: DLP 80-20 to Liberal; ASP 80-20 to Greens; ONP and LDP 80-20 to Liberal; CCC and ENE 50-50; all others 75-25 to Liberal.
# and % primary vote figures are raw; primary vote swing and 2PP figures are based on booth matching.
The Lib primary vote in 2007 was 59.1 in Bradfield and 53.6 in Higgins. A 5% drop in primaries would about match expectations I think. A 10% drop would be bad for Abbott, 15% catastrophic.
OK, here’s one that’s probably been covered, but I’ll ask….
Why is there 9 different Christian Democrats in Bradfield?
I thought you could only have one from each party
Tipping a TPP swing of about 4% against the Liberals here
Did anyone notice that Costello was wearing beige chinos today? Does anyone need any more convincing that these are the pants of power? My god!
Was there a reason the Liberals did so poorly at the Mayo by-election? I can’t recall.
Anthony Green has his site nicely set up with an explanation as to how he is presenting the results to enable some sort of sensible comparison with the 2007 results.
[Why is there 9 different Christian Democrats in Bradfield?]
Certified dickheadery.
A by-election live blog has become an exciting way for me to spend a Saturday night. My life is officially over.
Go greens.
sirrego
It’s Fred Nile’s Extreme Christian sense of fair play.
Haven’t they been counting for an hour?
[Haven’t they been counting for an hour?]
The booths closed at 6pm EDST. That’s 23 minutes ago
OK, I’ve ripped the top off a cold one, opened up a packet of BBQ shapes…I should start settling down soon, but geez I’m nervous.
[The booths closed at 6pm EDST. That’s 23 minutes ago]
That’s interesting. Don’t they close at 5 PM in general elections?
ShownOn in general elections it is 6pm
Itep20
A couple of strong independents, one running on River Murray issues and something of a less than stellar Liberal party candidate was the mix for Mayo.
Antony:
[18:23 – Four downloads so far, all with zero votes. The suspense is terrible!]
[That’s interesting. Don’t they close at 5 PM in general elections?]
No.
shows on, go and do citizenship 101 and then return to this site.
I think I would’ve had to vote for this guy ahead of the Greens:
http://efn.org.au/index.php?p=1_11
I agree ShopwnsOn normally by now we have a few little NAT Booths with 99% for the Nats and Antony screaming it is way too early to call.
Who would ever have thought that elections in Bradfield and Higgins would cause “terrible suspense”? These are two of the most solidly upper-class seats in Australia.
[shows on, go and do citizenship 101 and then return to this site.]
I’ve already done it! Our first Prime Minister was Don Bradman.
Opps sorry ShownsOn i have just given you a whole new name
sireggo @ 17
I’ve asked that same question on various blogs and no one seems to be able to answer. Good luck and I hope you get an answer as I’d still be interested to know. It’s not as if you would see 5 Labor or 7 Liberal candidates on the same ballot paper now, is it? Or can you? Maybe they thought they were on a Senate ticket. LOL.
The AEC is teasing us….
[Who would ever have thought that elections in Bradfield and Higgins would cause “terrible suspense”?]
With the challenge coming from the Greens too!
Greens, welcome to the third force in Australian politics 🙂
They closed at 5 PM in Qld. So I will get the result an hour earlier than youse guys. 🙂
Don’t you love no daylight saving?
[Who would ever have thought that elections in Bradfield and Higgins would cause “terrible suspense”? These are two of the most solidly upper-class seats in Australia.]
Yeah I don’t think the results are going to be terribly surprising! I await the spin from all the parties which is always the most amusing part.
Surely it is time for Malcolm Mackerras to call the election now.
William Bowe: Sorry but are these starting price prices?
[Who would ever have thought that elections in Bradfield and Higgins would cause “terrible suspense”?]
Antony GREEN wants to see how well the party he controls will do so that he can enact his socialist take over of the country.
“A” for effort Shows On
[Does anyone need any more convincing that these are the pants of power? My god!]
Inner Westie – it’s the older blokes who can’t hack the tight jeans anymore – ask my OH. lol
I still can’t believe that people are actually floating the thought of seats changing hands tonight
For pretty much the history of both these seats, you could stick a Liberal badge on a pot plant and it would get elected
How things have changed….
Its like a mexican standoff who will call the first booth