South Australian election guide

My seat-by-seat guide to the March 20 South Australian election is open for business. If you’re a Crikey subscriber, you can read my general overview of the situation in today’s daily email, which I’ll republish here at a later time. In the meantime, enjoy the following charts showing the electoral progress of South Australia since it entered the modern world with the introduction of one-vote one-value in 1970, the first showing vote share and the second the proportion of seats one by each party (so where the red dips below the line in the middle Labor had a majority; where the blue rises above it, the Liberals had one). Note that I’ve lumped the Liberal Movement, a feature of the 1975 election, together with the Australian Democrats on the vote share chart, rightly or wrongly. I’m afraid I can’t for the life of me work out how to rearrange the seat share chart the way I want it in Excel, hence the lack of a title.

savoteshare

saseatshare

UPDATE (12/1/10)

I’ve calculated results for marginal electorates from the equivalent booths at the last two federal elections, to give some sense of where Labor over- and under-performed in 2006.

FED 2004 SA 2006 FED 2007
LIGHT (Wakefield) 44.0% 52.4% 51.6%
MAWSON (Kingston) 48.5% 53.1% 52.5%
NORWOOD (Adelaide/Sturt) 49.3% 53.5% 54.0%
NEWLAND (Makin/Sturt) 42.4% 55.1% 48.8%
HARTLEY (Sturt) 47.0% 54.8% 52.3%
MORIALTA (Sturt) 44.0% 57.4% 49.9%
BRIGHT (Boothby/Kingston) 43.7% 56.4% 46.7%
ADELAIDE (Adelaide) 49.5% 60.5% 55.3%

And here’s my piece in yesterday’s Crikey Daily Mail:

With one federal and three state elections in the offing, 2010 looms as the most event-packed year on the electoral front in recent history. As far as timing is concerned, the only wild card in the deck is the federal election. Kevin Rudd could use the emissions trading scheme trigger to call a double dissolution election at any time, although doing so in the first half of the year would commit the government to a highly problematic half-Senate election no later than mid-2012. Less troublesome would be a double dissolution later in the year, which would have to be held no later than October 16. A normal House of Representatives and half-Senate election could be held at any time from August 7, and could legally be delayed until as late as April 2011 next year – although it most assuredly won’t be.

Barring extraordinary circumstances, no such uncertainty surrounds the state elections. Victoria’s fixed term legislation sets the date for the last Saturday in November, which will be the 27th. South Australia likewise has a fixed election date of March 20. Tasmania does not have fixed terms, but Premier David Bartlett has announced the date well in advance – annoyingly also for March 20, setting up a repeat of the two states’ simultaneous elections in March 2006.

Today’s lesson concerns South Australia, for which I have just published my seat-by-seat election guide. Mike Rann’s rise to power after the February 2002 election completed Labor’s clean sweep of state and territory governments, which remained intact until the Carpenter government’s defeat in Western Australia in September 2008. The Rann government’s electoral fortunes since have followed a familiar pattern. It came to power as a minority government when conservative independent Peter Lewis made a shock post-election decision to throw his lot in with Labor, after saying during the campaign that any talk he might do so was “sleazy nonsense”. Faced by a fracturing opposition under the indecisive leadership of Rob Kerin, Rann brought home the bacon at the 2006 election, picking up a 7.7 per cent swing and winning six seats from the Liberals.

The trajectory of first-term minority government to landslide re-election had earlier been followed by Labor in Queensland (elected 1998, re-elected 2001) and Victoria (1999 and 2002), and was partly reflected by NSW Labor’s experience in winning a one-seat majority in 1995 followed by a resounding win in 1999. In each case Labor went on to win only slightly less emphatic third victories. While the polls suggest the Rann government will be re-elected (the most recent Newspoll gave it a 53-47 two-party lead), it seems unlikely it will do so in quite as fine style as Bob Carr in 2003, Peter Beattie in 2004 or Steve Bracks in 2006.

While poll respondents have strongly indicated they will not let the Michelle Chantelois allegations influence their vote, the issue is an electoral negative if only because the looming court cases threaten to distract Rann in the early part of the next term. The issue is also feeding into perceptions he will not see out the next term, taking some of the shine off his personal vote-pulling power. With no clear heir apparent in place, it also raises the prospect that ministers’ energies will be diverted into jockeying for the succession. Most importantly, Rann will not enjoy the electoral gift of a long-serving and increasingly unpopular Coalition government in Canberra.

The Liberals by contrast have stumbled almost by accident on a leader whose Newspoll approval rating for October-December was 51 per cent – the best result for a South Australian Opposition Leader in 17 years. As Antony Green demonstrates, voters don’t really get to know Opposition Leaders until an election campaign. If Isobel Redmond really is as saleable as her 33 per cent net positive rating makes her appear, and if she and her party can run a sufficiently tight ship, a lot of the 31 per cent who profess themselves undecided about her will break her way during the campaign – and many will jump on the Liberal bandwagon in doing so.

For all that, the odds remain stacked in Labor’s favour. It would take the loss of five seats to cost them their majority, and most likely six to cost them government given that one of the three cross-benchers is Labor-turned-Greens-turned-independent member Kris Hanna. In the context of South Australia’s compact 47-seat House of Assembly, that represents a considerable hurdle for the Liberals, who will need an overall swing of about 7 per cent.

The two pieces of low-hanging fruit are the seats of Light, based on Gawler just to the north of Adelaide, and Mawson, which consists of outer southern suburbs plus the McLaren Vale wine-growing area. Both are naturally conservative seats that are very likely to return to the fold.

Interestingly, the next four seats up the pendulum are the eastern suburbs neighbours of Norwood, Newland, Hartley and Morialta, which can brace themselves for some heavy duty pork-barrelling in the weeks to come. The 3.7 per cent margin in Norwood looks surmountable, but the seat recorded an unusually small swing to Labor in 2006 due to the popularity of the Liberal candidate, former Adelaide Crows star Nigel Smart. With a considerably lower profile entrant this time around, its natural margin would be at least 6 per cent.

Even more problematic is Newland (5.2 per cent), where the Liberals have scored an own goal by endorsing Trish Draper, the federal member for Makin from 1996 until her retirement in 2007. Draper continues to carry the baggage of an episode in 2004 when she was accompanied at taxpayers’ expense by her then boyfriend Derick Sands on a study trip to Europe. While she just managed to retain Makin at the 2004 election, she did so in the face of the biggest swing to Labor in the state – a woeful result for an electorate so heavily stacked with mortgage payers. Far from being forgotten, this episode made a return to the front pages last year, when Sands lost a defamation case he pursued against Channel Seven and the ABC over reports he had been identified as a suspect in a murder investigation.

In Hartley (5.6 per cent), the Liberals have made the less than inspiring decision to re-nominate Joe Scalzi, the long-term back-bencher who lost the seat to up-and-coming Labor member Grace Portolesi in 2006. Despite the relatively higher margin, the Liberals probably have more reason to be optimistic about Morialta (6.8 per cent), where incumbent Lindsay Simmons faces former Young Liberals president and Christopher Pyne staffer John Gardner. The only other seat with a margin that would normally be considered surmountable is Bright, located on the coast south of Glenelg around Brighton, where Labor member Chloe Fox has achieved an impressive electoral track record.

If the Liberals are to fall short in more than one of the seven aforementioned seats, they will need to make up for it with a freakish double-digit swing in Adelaide (10.5 per cent) or Florey (12.0 per cent). The government has been very mindful of the significance of the former seat in particular, making a number of contentious policy decisions relating to the city centre with a view to protecting its member, Jane Lomax-Smith.

Further up the pendulum are a number of Adelaide seats which normally lean moderately to Labor, where margins were engorged in 2006 by an Adelaide-wide swing of around 9 per cent. Even if the momentum the Liberals have been building in recent polling continues, they appear to be at considerable risk of achieving their biggest swings in these seats, where Labor can afford to take the hit.

Author: William Bowe

William Bowe is a Perth-based election analyst and occasional teacher of political science. His blog, The Poll Bludger, has existed in one form or another since 2004, and is one of the most heavily trafficked websites on Australian politics.

371 comments on “South Australian election guide”

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  1. Bob, 348:

    [ Except for the fact that one’s Liberal and the other’s Labor… ]

    True enough. They’ll eventually be killed by the same fire, though. If Alannah MacTiernan didn’t have higher ambitions federally, she’d probably be leader by now and helping demolish the factional system in WA Labor (one of the things that helped Burke’s ghost hang around, causing hard-to-understand factional splits in the process). Strikes me the SA and NSW branches need a couple of similar new brooms.

  2. Problem is, socially conservative Labor Right is here to stay. If Labor was to have a new A-G, I wouldn’t expect any change in the progressiveness of the government.

  3. And we both know that Labor Left gets jack shit in SA.

    This is why I refuse to vote Labor #1. They will still collect my preference though.

    I’m expecting the Greens to poll as well as the Dems did in 1997. I’m hoping for 2 Green LCs to bring the total to 3 🙂

  4. If Jay took the leadership from Mike back when his leadership was under question, Labor would be polling better, the Green vote would still be low, and none of the Chantelois stuff would matter.

    Don Farrell thinks his actions make SA Labor more electable. But what his actions have done is put the next election under a cloud. He’d better pray that Labor wins (i’m sure he does anyway) otherwise there’ll be some very empty years ahead…

  5. [I’ll certainly be making sure Bob Randall is last on my ballot paper. Looks like I have a lot of numbers to fill out]

    Don’t you put the social conservative parties last, and from bottom to top rather than top to bottom? 🙂

  6. Jay has always been my preferred Rann successor. I suspect the right will pump up John Hill, but I think Weatherill would be the better option.

    The left has had some pretty safe pairs of hands in the Rann government; Conlon, Caica and Weatherill to name a few.

  7. The only issue I have with Jay is, at times, his appearance and how he comes across. I don’t know what it is but sometimes it is there… and aloof is not the right word. Hesitant? No…

  8. [ Also, I don’t think one can compare a WA election to an SA election, due to the WA Nats. ]

    Except that Brendon Grylls specifically cited Karlene Maywald as an example of where he wanted to take the WA Nats… one of the things that had people wondering if there was about to be an ALP-Nat govt. The SA and WA Nats are even quite similar historically, with bits of the party either merging with the Libs or breaking off to be more independent than eastern Nats. The Nats here had a messy split (into two competing parties) in the 80’s which is probably the grandfather of the current relationship between Libs and Nats.

    The biggest reason I wouldn’t compare the WA and SA elections is the mining boom here… the amount of money we’ve got inevitably colours everything. I’m guessing SA has a little bit less spent on public infrastructure… for somewhere almost the size of Perth, Adelaide’s trains are pretty bad. There’s probably a few other dodgy things I could comment on if I’d spent more than two days in the place, like the water (apparently less yummy than Coopers Pale).

  9. [ I’m expecting the Greens to poll as well as the Dems did in 1997. I’m hoping for 2 Green LCs to bring the total to 3 🙂 ]

    2010 could end up being a mirror image of 1997. Governing party gets a previous landslide almost wiped out and has to rely on independents (Hanna, Brock and Maywald I guess); third party gets a historically large result while not quite winning Heysen.

    Continue that analogy, and Isobel Redmond becomes premier in 2014 and the SA Greens will be wiped out. I guess there’s only so far you can take these analogies, eh.

  10. Also, The Advertiser article shows that the swing came from the rural areas. The metro vote didn’t move nearly as much. There’s only a small swing in the metro areas which is where all the marginals are sans Stuart which Labor doesn’t hold and probably won’t.

  11. Labor has a lot of votes locked up in seats like the one I’m in – Colton, which have margins which don’t match the demography. These seats will probably swing more than the true marginals.

  12. They can swing more but, aside from Norwood, any seat held by Labor prior to 2006 now holds double digit figures. You’d be asking a lot to get a 16% swing in Colton.

  13. Margins don’t mean a thing. There were some wild swings last time and you can expect similar swings back the other way this time, especially in eastern suburbs seats like Morialta, which is naturally Liberal.

    There are marginal country seats and they will be important. The Libs will pick up Mount Gambier and are a good chance in Frome. If they don’t get Chaffey and we finish with a hung parliament, which way will Karlene jump?

    As for the predicted demise of Family First, that perfidious organisation seems to be on the rise, with two upper house seats possibly in its grasp. God help us all!

  14. sykesie

    Completely agree on those three as good future leaders of SA Labor. Weatherill is especially electable but all three are very solid.

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