New South Wales election live

Live coverage of the counting for the New South Wales state election. One exit poll for starters shows Labor set to gain Coogee from the Liberals.

10.28pm. The Nationals look to have gone off the boil in Lismore, in another turn in fortunes for that seat. By this I mean they are trailing Labor in the two-candidate preferred count. But Labor are still coming third behind the Greens on the primary vote, and I think you can give it to the Greens if they stay there.

10.25pm. I’ve been casting around for information on the below-the-line upper house voting rate at past elections. I’ve come up with a figure of 2.1% at the 2011 election, which is lower than I would have thought. If we bump that up to 3%, which is two-thirds of a quota. That leaves well over two quotas for parties whose vote totals we have no idea about. If any one of them — David Leyonhjelm, say, can get about a quarter of that, they should be in business.

10.21pm. Gladys Berejiklian victory speech concluded.

10.16pm. The Legislative Council count is 18.45% through, and while this is completely unmatched and might swing around, we’ve got seven quotas for the Coalition, six for Labor, two for the Greens, one apiece for One Nation and Shooters, and four to be accounted for. The Coalition has enough of a surplus to be in the hunt for one of those; Labor doesn’t, at least on the current numbers. One Nation is in the hunt on the current numbers, but I guess they will fade as more big booths in Sydney report. Ditto Shooters. The Christian Democrats and Animal Justice look possibilities, but I wouldn’t go any further than that. The big wild card is that 2.93 quotas are identified by the Electoral Commission as “others”, that includes not only the outstanding parties, but all below-the-line votes. There is plenty of room in that for David Leyonhjelm, but since it also includes all below-the-lines, we really need more information.

9.46pm. The Nationals now have a handy looking lead in the two-party count against Labor, but the Greens are ahead on the primary vote, and will probably win if they stay there. One way or another, this one’s staying on the watch list.

9.41pm. Michael Daley has conceded to Gladys Berejiklian and will shortly give his concession speech.

9.32pm. The view around the room is that East Hills is falling out of Labor’s reach.

9.18pm. Upper Hunter is very close – I’ve been leaving it off my potential list of Coalition losses. That list has fairly consistently been four or five seats, with its composition changing over time.

9.16pm. Labor have fallen behind in East Hills according to the Nine count, but not the ABC’s (yet). I think you would rather be the Nationals than the Shooters in Barwon at this stage, but nor would you call lit.

9.04pm. Another seat you can’t give away if only because of the slow count is Penrith, where the Liberals are ahead but not by ahead to be definitive about it, with only 22.6% counted on the primary and 12.8% on two-party. Pre-polls could transform the situation here, one way or another, and we may have to wait beyond this evening for a meaningful picture there.

8.58pm. Finally, an update in Auburn, and it’s looking better for Labor now, but will still require monitoring.

8.52pm. Other than that, there have been a number of dogs that haven’t barked. The count in Kogarah is painfully slow, but Labor is in front, and that’s the only evidence of a Chinese backlash effect – Labor has a fairly solid swing in the other supposedly endangered seat, Strathfield. The Nationals have done okay on the northern coast, contrary to expectations. And the Liberals have held up in their south-eastern seats of Goulburn and Bega.

8.50pm. Antony is calling Dubbo as lineball, whereas my sense was that the Nationals were doing okay. So there’s a fifth seat the Coalition might potentially lose.

8.40pm. Hard to identify the six seats that would cost the Coalition its majority. All I’m seeing is East Hills and Coogee to Labor, both only maybes (particularly East Hills). Barwon, under threat from Shooters, is looking better for the Nationals now, but the Shooters continue to look strong in Murray. I would also note that in Auburn, where the count is particularly slow, the very early numbers have the Liberals in the lead.

8.31pm. Labor look like they might win East Hills and Oatley, but beyond that gains for them are hard to identify. Lismore remains a very confusing picture, but the Nationals have strengthened there. Shooters look good in all three of their target seats. Other than that, it looks like a remarkably stable result. The Greens look like retaining their three seats; the two independents have retained their seats, but don’t look like being joined by any new ones. The Nationals have not suffered as expected on the northern coast: Tweed and Upper Hunter look good for them.

8.16pm. I’m painting a somewhat less favourable picture for the Coalition because I’m focused only on seats where the count is seriously advanced, of which there are remarkably few. But the Nationals look okay in Tweed and Upper Hunter, which Labor seriously needed to win.

8.14pm. Antony Green says he thinks the government has been returned, and the only question is majority or minority.

8.12pm. General consternation at the slow speed of the count, or at least the slow rate at which results are being uploaded to the media feed, which also seem to contain some anomalies.

8.05pm. The surprisingly good picture for the Greens seems to be holding: they look like they’ve retained Balmain and Newtown, it looks very encouraging for them in Ballina, and the picture in Lismore remains as before – the Nationals struggling, and an open question as whether it would fall to the Greens or Labor.

8.02pm. Looking very close in Upper Hunter. I’m currently seeing a 1.7% swing to Labor, with a Nationals margin of 2.2%. They

7.52pm. And Labor look to be ahead in Kogarah, although there is a swing against them. Labor’s Chris Minns is down about 4.4% on the primary vote and the Liberals are up 2.5% – not enough for Labor to lose given their 6.9% margin. This is from six booths out of 28 on the primary vote and 13.3% counted.

7.51pm. Right on cue, Chris Uhlmann just said Labor scrutineers say they believe they will win Strathfield.

7.50pm. Encouraging numbers for Labor from Strathfield, given this was expected to be part of any Chinese backlash. Jodi McKay is up about 3% on the primary vote, and the Liberals are down about 4.5%, with seven booths in on the primary vote and 18.8% counted.

7.41pm. From what we’re seeing so far, the Greens seem to be doing surprisingly well. The first numbers in Ballina show a strong swing in their favour; they are in the hunt in Lismore; and Antony called Newtown for them, although perhaps too early.

7.38pm. Really tight three-cornered contest in Lismore. The Nationals are down nearly 5% on the primary vote, on which they will need to improve. Lineball based on current numbers as to whether Labor or the Greens will make the final count against them. Unless the Nationals improve – which they certainly may – the seat will go to whoever wins the Labor-Greens race.

7.32pm. Talking Blue Mountains a lot because the count is progressing particularly well there. It does look like there’s a modest swing to Labor of 3% to 4%, based on eight booths on the primary vote and 17.4% counted.

7.24pm. That big swing to Labor in Blue Mountains has disappeared, but they are still on track to retain their margin of 8%.

7.20pm. Early primary votes looking good for Shooters in Murray, although this could be missing geographic variability.

7.17pm. Antony says the Greens will win Newtown very easily. Latest numbers from Upper Hunter look less good for Labor than the ones I’ve counted earlier — no swing projected on the two-party figures that I’m seeing.

7.14pm. With 5.4% of the primary vote counted in Lismore, the Greens are down about 3.4%, the Nationals are down about 2.5%, and Labor are unchanged. That would get Labor into the final count ahead of the Greens, which they narrowly failed to do last time, and then to narrowly defeat the Nationals.

7.07pm. Based on five booths and 3.1% of the electoral roll counted, Philip Donato has a clear primary vote majority in Orange.

7.01pm. Good early results for Labor in Blue Mountains, with three booths in on the primary vote — Labor is on 48.5%, which compares with 38.4% in the same booths in 2015.

6.58pm. With 4% of the primary vote counted in Upper Hunter, the Nine system is projecting a 3.5% two-party swing to Labor in Upper Hunter, which would be sufficient to get Labor up by 1.3%. However, this is based on speculative preference flows.

6.31pm. First booth from Orange is 288 votes from Spring Hill Public, and there’s a good sign for Shooters member Philip Donato, who is up from 41.1$ to 57.3% on the primary vote.

6.25pm. Mulgoa Electorate Manager’s Office wins the prize for first booth to report. Splits 120-31 to the Liberals, which is a big swing in their favour for what that’s worth (i.e. nothing).

6pm. Let the record note that polls have closed.

5.25pm. The YouGov Galaxy exit poll for the Nine Network has primary vote numbers very similar to Newspoll’s, with the Coalition on 41% (the same), Labor on 36% (one point higher) and the Greens on 9% (one point lower). Two-party preferred is 50-50, compared with Newspoll’s 51-49 to the Coalition. However, the poll is from the state’s 16 most marginal seats, rather than statewide. A set of numbers from the 2015 election is provided for purposes of comparison, so the precise way to read this is to compare the results just noted with the following set of numbers: 53.1-46.9 to the Coalition on two-party preferred, and primary votes of Coalition 45.9%, Labor 36.1% and Greens 9.7%. In other words, the poll suggests a 3.1% swing to Labor, which is almost identical to Newspoll’s 3.3%.

Two-party breakdowns are provided for western Sydney and “regional” – I’m not sure of the precise dimensions of the latter. These have it at 50-50 in western Sydney, a 2.7% swing to Labor since 2015, and 51-49 to the Coalition in regional New South Wales, a swing of 3.5%, which is one point more favourable to the Coalition than the Newspoll result. The sample for the poll is 1666.

5.04pm. The Coogee exit poll has the Liberals crashing from 46.6% to 31% and Labor up from 32.5% to 41%. It does not appear there is a two-party figure, but with the Liberal margin at 2.9%, you can take it for granted that this points to an emphatic win for Labor. The poll was conducted by Lonergan Research for Greenpeace and the Nature Conservation Council from a sample of 1482.

5pm. One hour until polls close. I’m behind the scenes at Channel Nine’s election night coverage – they have YouGov Galaxy exit polling that will go live in 15 minutes. I have it in my hands right now, but I’ll spare you the “wow” routine. Greenpeace has put out a Lonergan Research exit poll of Coogee that apparently shows Labor set to gain the seat from the Liberals, in line with expectations. I’ll have a summary of that poll with you very shortly.

To get the ball rolling, I’ll repaste what I posted last night about how the NSWEC is approaching the count. We will not be privy to as much counting of pre-poll results on election night as we have lately grown accustomed. All we are promised is incomplete progress counts of the primary vote from pre-poll voting centres, which will presumably posted quite late on the night. That means no pre-poll results on two-party preferred, which could well leave us hanging in more seats than usual at the end of the night. Some postals will be counted on the night – I can’t tell you if this will just be primary votes or if it will include two-party totals as well.

The Legislative Council count on the night will be unusual, in that the only things that are specifically being tallied are above-the-line votes for the Coalition, Labor, the Greens, Shooters, the Christian Democrats, Animal Justice and One Nation. Beyond that, an “others” total will be published that will include above-the-line votes for everyone else, and below-the-line votes for all and sundry (including votes that will prove, on closer inspection, to be informal). Among other things, this means those of you hanging on the electoral prospects of David Leyonhjelm will go to bed disappointed.

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.

689 comments on “New South Wales election live”

Comments Page 6 of 14
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  1. Zoidlord
    says:
    Saturday, March 23, 2019 at 8:16 pm
    And btw, Greens. No body except Coalition Party has won.
    You damn fools.
    _____________________
    It’s not the Greens fault the ALP couldn’t do anything after 8 years of Coalition government.
    Perhaps not electing racists and sexual assaulters to the leadership might help.

  2. brigid glanville
    ‏Verified account @brigidglanville
    3m3 minutes ago

    Breaking : @AntonyGreenABC forecasts the election for the Coalition. Still not clear if it’s a majority or minority government. #NSWvotes

  3. Anthony is a TV person. Everything has to happen NOW before everybody goes to bed or changes the channel. Very funny.

  4. @nath

    LOL it’s not the greens fault, it’s not the greens fault..

    Stop making excuses.

    Perhaps look yourself in the mirror.

  5. This is actually a good election for the ALP to lose. There is still very little talent in the NSW ALP (see Daily)and they are not ready to govern and NSW is actually doing very well under the Liberals with the lack of doing anything wrongs of the Carr government being fixed. Finally NSW is moving forward and it will be a better place the next time the ALP take over

  6. Only possible Labor gains at the moment look like Upper Hunter, Coogee and East Hills and none of them really in the bag yet. Kogarah has moved back into the Labor column.

  7. Daniel
    says:
    Saturday, March 23, 2019 at 8:19 pm
    @nath
    LOL it’s not the greens fault, it’s not the greens fault..
    Stop making excuses.
    Perhaps look yourself in the mirror.
    ____________________
    Well it’s not. The greens have done well vs the nationals in the North. The ALP couldn’t win any seats!

  8. Paul Kidd
    ‏Verified account @paulkidd
    4m4 minutes ago

    BREAKING NEWS : Bad State elects Bad Government. #NSWvotes #lathogeddon #gladystopia

  9. nath

    Really poor form to diss someone for making more of a contribution to the democratic process than you can be bothered to do yourself.

    We should be encouraging people to get involved, not snarking at them for doing so.

  10. Labor is well short of a majority and there are lots of minors and independents. Even if the Libs are short of a full majority they have lots of rural indie options to form government with. They will only need 1 or 2 max. So her government should be pretty stable.

  11. For the life of me I cannot see what all the fuss is about Burney. She is one of the worst communicators i have seen labor roll out. Very underwhelming!

  12. I reckon Antony has way jumped the gun here. Certainly would rather be the Libs than Lab at this point, but I think we can probably say with some confidence that the last week has really hurt Labor.

    So I wouldn’t be calling seats with big pre polls and small margins for a long time just yet.

    Fascinating count in it’s disjointedness though.

  13. The Oz seems to be using a different bunch of experts to those mentioned here. Seats so far “called by the experts”: ALP 26, Lib 9, Nat 12, Other 4, undecided 42.

  14. ‘Dovif says:
    Saturday, March 23, 2019 at 8:20 pm

    This is actually a good election for the ALP to lose. There is still very little talent in the NSW ALP (see Daily)and they are not ready to govern and NSW is actually doing very well under the Liberals with the lack of doing anything wrongs of the Carr government being fixed. Finally NSW is moving forward and it will be a better place the next time the ALP take over’

    A million dead fish and record breaking heat waves and record drought say you are not only wrong but dreadfully shortsighted.

  15. zoomster
    says:
    Saturday, March 23, 2019 at 8:21 pm
    nath
    Really poor form to diss someone for making more of a contribution to the democratic process than you can be bothered to do yourself.
    We should be encouraging people to get involved, not snarking at them for doing so.
    _____________________________
    Who are we talking about, the racist or the sexual assaulter?

  16. nath @ #251 Saturday, March 23rd, 2019 – 8:18 pm

    Zoidlord
    says:
    Saturday, March 23, 2019 at 8:16 pm
    And btw, Greens. No body except Coalition Party has won.
    You damn fools.
    _____________________
    It’s not the Greens fault the ALP couldn’t do anything after 8 years of Coalition government.
    Perhaps not electing racists and sexual assaulters to the leadership might help.

    Very fair points, nath.

  17. Ben Raue

    Let’s look at the seats in the 6-10% margin. The Coalition has retained Oatley, Holsworthy, Heathcote, Kiama, Terrigal, South Coast and Mulgoa. I’m still watching Penrith, Goulburn, Bega, Myall Lakes and Seven Hills but a number of these seats are leaning to the government.

    While it’s not clear whether the government will retain their majority, it now seems impossible for Labor to win a majority and very unlikely that Labor will be in a position to form a minority government.

  18. I do think should the results continue as showing so far Daley really has to wear the blame and will likely be rolled.

    But as I said, I wouldn’t be at all surprised if the longer this goes the better for Labor it looks even if they don’t actually get into a position to form government.

  19. ‘Catprog says:
    Saturday, March 23, 2019 at 8:23 pm

    @Boerwar
    Saturday, March 23, 2019 at 8:22 pm

    I think that is more Federal then state issues’

    The dead fish were in NSW.

  20. For those not from NSW a lot of people here in NSW have not forgiven the previous ALP govt…. Obeid etc………going to take a while to cleanse those people away from the memories of voters. They just don’t trust them enough at the moment.
    For what it’s worth imho the federal election will be entirely different in that people will want the Libs gone and will vote accordingly..

  21. Boerwar
    “A million dead fish and record breaking heat waves and record drought say you are not only wrong but dreadfully shortsighted.”

    Yes there are still some terrible negatives for NSW Libs. The $34 billion Westconnex dodgy deal is another. If Labor wins federally it really should put into place a federal ICAC with the power to investigate spending of federal funds. The MDB funds would be one of the first places to start.

  22. This will encourage ScoMo and the federal libs surely?

    Daley a dud. Look at the swing in his own seat!! Coogee def not in the bag either.

    Far less close than polling suggested. Can anyone list seats Coalition in danger of losing… anyone get to 6

  23. Boerwar
    A million dead fish and record breaking heat waves and record drought say you are not only wrong but dreadfully shortsighted.

    And when you add to that list the record-breaking land-clearing and bio-diversity loss that has occurred under this government, as well as the rising threat to national parks from miners, extractors, loggers, and other sundry Coalition-aligned vandals, Labor’s abject failure at this election becomes all the more unforgivable.

  24. Boerwar says:
    Saturday, March 23, 2019 at 8:24 pm

    Yes but I think people see it as the federal government being responsible not the state government.

  25. Anyone predicting good times in the future for NSW Labor really must be an optimist. If Daley is the best they can do, then there must be a very shallow talent pool. Andrews – Daley. Spot the difference. One has energy, policy charisma and the other…. Fair dinkum Daley is hopeless

  26. nath says:
    Saturday, March 23, 2019 at 8:14 pm

    Great night for the Greens.

    The ALP have to ask themselves how many votes is C@tmomma driving towards the Libs on a daily basis? She is up early campaigning, spreading the love every day. It’s gotta be worth a few thousands votes to the Libs at least.

    Petty, pathetic, vindictive bile!

    You are a disgrace.

  27. zoomster
    says:
    Saturday, March 23, 2019 at 8:27 pm
    nath
    C@.
    __________________
    Oh, well she gives me more than I give back. Believe me. I usually let it go. But I do worry that she might be a bit aggressive out there!

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