12.06am. “We’re bringing back Macquarie”, says Scott Morrison in his victory speech. Not so fast — Labor have just hit the lead there. And not because of that Katoomba pre-poll booth I mentioned a few times earlier, which barely swung on two-party preferred.
11.13pm. Kerryn Phelps has her nose in front in Wentworth, but I would note that the Rose Bay pre-poll hasn’t reported yet. It wasn’t a booth at the 2016 election but was at the by-election, and when it came in, there was a pretty handy shift to the Liberals. Also outstanding is the Waverley pre-poll booth, which does a very great deal of business.
10.59pm. The Liberals have edged into the lead in Boothby, after Glenelg pre-poll swung 4% their way (though Brighton went 3% the other way).
10.57pm. Labor just hanging on in Cowan, well out of contention now in Swan, and every other WA seat they hoped to win.
10.56pm. I was suggesting Labor wasn’t home in Moreton before. Probably safe now. But Mansfield pre-poll swung 14.4% to Coalition, while Rocklea and Wooldridge didn’t move.
10.39pm. With 45.8% counted, South Australia looks like three Liberal, two Labor and one Greens. Centre Alliance performing weakly at 2.8%.
10.38pm. Oh, and by the way — Clive Palmer is on 3.4% in Queensland and is being flogged by One Nation.
10.38pm. Jacqui Lambie is on 8.7% in Tasmania and should be back. The result should go two Liberal, two Labor and one Greens. 58.2% counted.
10.35pm. One Nation are on over 10% in Queensland, where I’m inclined to think the most likely result is Coalition two, Labor two, Greens one, One Nation one, with 33.4% counted.
10.34pm. Looks like three Coalition, two Labor and one Greens in Victoria too, with 32.4% counted. But maybe Labor could take a third seat off the Coalition, if their position improves as more metropolitan votes come in. No one else is cracking 3%.
10.32pm. Some early indications from the Senate. Starting in New South Wales, with 35.6% counted. One Nation aren’t doing great at 5%; United Australia Party tanking on 1.4%. Looks like three Coalition, two Labor and one Greens.
10.30pm. Labor leads 1.3% in Lilley, which Nine projects down to 0.5%. One pre-poll in swung slightly more heavily than the 5.2% norm; two more are still to come.
10.28pm. Labor leads 2.3% in Blair, which the Nine computer projects down to 0.9%. One pre-poll booth, Ipswich South, swung typically; two more are outstanding.
10.21pm. That Katoomba pre-poll booth in Macquarie which Anthony Albanese said had swung heavily to Labor still isn’t in the system. Labor has a raw lead of 1.3% lead there, but absent pre-polls (Katoomba and five others), the Nine computer projects absolutely nothing in it.
10.19pm. A 9.8% swing has reduced Labor to a 4.9% lead in Hunter, projected to be 2.7%. Should be okay for them, but the one pre-poll booth swung 14.1%, and there are eight still to come, whih are worth keeping at least half an eye on.
10.16pm. Labor leads 2.8% in Eden-Monaro, Nine computer projects 1.3%, 1.6% swing to Liberal. There are eight pre-polls, none of which have reported.
10.14pm. Labor leads by 2.0% in Dobell after a 3.5% swing to Liberal, with the Nine computer projecting 1.4%. Two pre-polls, Tuggerah and The Entrance, have swung normally. Pre-polls yet to come from Charmhaven and Gosford.
10.10pm. Independent Helen Haines holds what the Nine booth projects as a 1.8% lead in Indi: two pre-polls in, Wodonga, which swung heavily to Liberal, and Mansfield, which swung only very slightly (by swing here, I mean compared with Cathy McGowan’s margin of 4.8%). Wangaratta pre-poll still to come. Very much too close to call.
10.04pm. The Nine computer now projects a tiny lead for the Liberals in Chisholm. Four pre-polls still to come may decide the result. The one pre-poll that has reported, Blackburn North, swung 1.6% to Labor.
10.02pm. The yo-yo of Swan has swung back in favour of the Liberals, while Labor maintains only a fragile lead in Cowan. Still nothing in it in Boothby, Labor very slightly ahead.
9.44pm. Labor has very tenuous leads in Blair and Lilley, so there’s certainly paths to a Coalition majority. Other seats the Liberals wouldn’t be giving up on include Corangamite, Eden-Monaro and Moreton.
9.42pm. Now it’s getting very close in Chisholm. Other seats the Liberals wouldn’t be giving up on yet include Corangamite, Dobell, Eden-Monaro,
9.39pm. Spoke too soon about Swan — close again now.
9.34pm. Particularly remarkable results from scanning around include double-digit two-party swings against Labor in Hunter, Capricornia and, would you believe it, Dawson. The latter two suggest a very strong Adani effect.
9.30pm. Another blow for Labor with Swan now looking beyond their reach. However, they have moved ahead in Cowan, so it looks like status quo in WA.
9.21pm. Anthony Albanese just said on Nine that there is a big swing to Labor on the Katoomba pre-poll centre in Macquarie, which is not in the system yet. That should save Labor’s bacon there.
9.17pm. Very advanced stage of the count in Bass, with even the pre-polls in, and Labor look too far behind.
9.05pm. Both Labor-held Cowan and Liberal-held Swan are very close, but Liberals looking good in Hasluck, Pearce and Stirling. At best though, a net gain of one for Labor in WA.
8.54pm. And if all goes well for the Liberals in WA, the door widens a little on the prospect of a Coalition majority.
8.51pm. First results look encouraging for Christian Porter in Pearce. Ditto Stirling, but very few votes there. Some results in Cowan, looks close, but too early to be meaningful. First booth looks good for Liberal in Hasluck. Individually all too early to say, but collectively discouraging for the notion that WA might save the day for Labor.
8.48pm. Given pre-polls heavily favoured the Liberals at the Wentworth by-election, I would read the present lineball result as somewhat encouraging for the Liberals.
8.45pm. Haven’t said a thing about Wentworth — it looks very, very tight. A number of the independents failed to mark much of a mark, including Kevin Mack in Farrer and Rob Oakeshott in Cowper.
8.38pm. Labor looks okay in Solomon; the CLP leads on the raw vote in Lingiari, but the Nine computer projects them ahead, because these are mostly conservative booths from Katherine and such.
8.29pm. Another big picture overview. In New South Wales, Labor wins Gilmore but loses Lindsay; Tony Abbott loses Warringah. Labor-held Macquarie could go either way. Labor wins Chisholm, Corangamite and Dunkley. Tasmania: Labor loses Braddon and looking shaky in Bass. Queensland: Labor to lose Herbert and Longman, Leichhardt looking unlikely now. In South Australia, the potential Labor gain of Boothby is lineball. Talk that Labor is in danger in Lingiari, but the Nine computer projects them in the lead, and there’s nothing from Solomon yet. Nothing meaningful yet from Western Australia. My best guess remains that the Coalition will land just short of a majority, but the wild cards of WA and pre-polls remain in the deck.
8.20pm. By best guess is that the Coalition will land a few seats short of a majority, but again: nothing yet from WA, and the possibility it will play out differently on pre-polls. The likely cross bench: Adam Bandt, Zali Steggall, Bob Katter, Andrew Wilkie, Rebekha Sharkie … possibly Helen Haines, probably not Kerryn Phelps.
8.14pm. I’ve been doing real work for the last half hour, but the situation hasn’t fundamentally changed: a few gains for Labor in Victoria, maybe a net gain for the Coalition in New South Wales, Braddon and possibly Bass lost by Labor in Tasmania as well, and a net loss for Labor in Queensland. Boothby lineball though, and Labor praying for gains in Western Australia and a favourable dynamic on pre-polls.
7.48pm. Macquarie lineball, but looking better for Labor than earlier.
7.46pm. Also, the first results in Boothby are good for Labor.
7.45pm. Looking better for Labor now in Lilley though.
7.40pm. Labor should gain three in Victoria; but only Gilmore looks strong in NSW, they look like losing Lindsay, and they’re in trouble in Macquarie. In Queensland, the Nine computer has Labor behind in Blair, Herbert, and Longman, but it’s not calling any of them. However, they are running Warren Entsch close in Leichhardt.
7.33pm. I’m certainly not seeing any gains for Labor in Queensland, and they’re in trouble in Herbert, Longman and Lilley. But Tony Abbott is clearly gone in Warringah.
7.29pm. Looks close in Herbert, but Labor are struggling in Queensland in some surprising places: Lilley
7.26pm. Labor should win Chisholm, Dunkley and Corangamite, but the seats further down the pendulum in Victoria don’t appear to be swinging
7.23pm. Lineball in Macquarie as well.
7.22pm. Looking dicey for Labor in Lindsay as well.
7.21pm. Still nothing in it in Bass, Liberals looking like winning Braddon.
7.19pm. Early assessment: it’s going to be close. Labor far from assured of a majority.
7.18pm. But it’s looking good for Labor in Gilmore.
7.13pm. Early days, but I’m not seeing any great wave to Labor. They are struggling in the two northern Tasmanian seats, and only looking really good in Corangamite in Victoria. And it looks close early in Griffith, a seat they hold in Queensland.
7.12pm. Early indications are that it’s close in Chisholm – six booths in on primary, two on two-party (50 in total).
7.09pm. Labor have moved ahead on Nine’s projection in Bass, but remain behind in Braddon.
7.08pm. If nothing else, the news from Queensland is consistently looking good for the Coalition.
7.06pm. The swing to LNP in Bonner I noted earlier has come off, now looking status quo (LNP margin 3.4%).
7.05pm. Dreadful early numbers for Tony Abbott, who trails 40.3% to 32.5% on the raw primary vote with five booths out of 50 in.
7.02pm. The Nine computer sees a 3.9% swing to Labor in Corangamite, where there is no margin.
7.01pm. Related by Chris Uhlmann, Labor believes they have won Corangamite. But the overall picture in Queensland for the Coalition looks strong, as per the exit poll result.
7.00pm. Early numbers looking encouraging for Peter Dutton in Dickson — a swing approaching 5% in his favour off four booths.
6.58pm. Labor look to have the edge in Gilmore, with 13 booths out of 66 on the primary vote – Liberal down 17.4% of which 12.7% has gone to the Nationals, while Labor are down very slightly. Ex-Liberal independent Grant Schultz only on 5.3%.
6.56pm. Four booths in from Braddon, and Labor looks in trouble. One booth in from Bass, swing looks almost exactly equal to the Labor margin.
6.54pm. Based on four primary vote results and a speculative preference throw, the Nine computer sees a 4.25% swing to Labor in La Trobe, suggesting it will be tight.
6.52pm. First two-party result in Bonner is encouraging for LNP incumbent Ross Vasta.
6.51pm. The first two-party booth from Corangamite, which is obviously in the country, has swung 5.4% to Labor.
6.50pm. Little swing in Macquarie with three booths in on two-party (it goes without saying these are small ones).
6.47pm. Gilmore looks close with eight booths out of 66 in on the primary vote.
6.43pm. First two booths from Kooyong, albeit very small ones, look encouraging for Josh Frydenberg.
6.42pm. Promising early numbers for independent Helen Haines in Indi, with 13 bush booths in on the primary vote.
6.38pm. Some fairly encouraging early numbers for Nationals member Kevin Hogan in Page, a marginal seat in northern New South Wales that Labor was never confident about.
6.35pm. Over 1000 votes in from Calare, and early indications are Nationals incumbent Andrew Gee will keep enough of his primary vote to hold off Shooters, if they indeed make it ahead of Labor to reach the final count. Early days yet though.
5.45pm. Welcome to live blogging of the federal election count. I have been working in what little time I have had to spare on an election results facility, but I probably won’t be able to get it in action this evening. However, I should be able to make it functional for the count after election night. Similarly, I may or may not find time to do some live blogging this evening, in between my duties as a behind-the-scenes operator for the Nine Network’s coverage. Speaking of, the YouGov Galaxy exit poll for Nine, from a sample of about 3300, has Labor leading 52-48, which I’m pretty sure presumes to be effectively nationally, even though only specific marginal seats have been targeted. State by state though, the swing is, as expected, uneven: 52-48 to Labor in New South Wales (2.5% swing to Labor), 55-45 in Victoria (3.2% swing to Labor), 53-47 to Coalition in Queensland (a swing to the Coalition of 1.1%), and 52-48 to Labor in the other three states combined (a swing to Labor of 2.5%).
Fuck that noise. Tired of pandering to them.
QLD can be deported.
“If they lose, the public reject them …then they MUST be looking at their policy and ideology”
Yep. They’ll have to pursue policies that are against the long term interests of the voters.
Maybe a policy of your on the mining industry we’ll give you a job at the same pay in renewables. $250k jobs installing solar panels.
FWIW from Antony
“If pre-polls favour Labor, then the Government is going to fall short of a majority. If the pre-polls are exactly the same as the results we’re getting tonight, then I think the Government will win 76 seats.”
E. G. Theodore @ 11:26
You make good points. Antony Green should acknowledge your points and be much more conservative in his modelling of seat outcomes. There’s been way too much focus on the honour of calling the election at a certain time in the night. Notice how Cassidy picked up Green on his (somewhat hesitant) call at 9:30 tonight.
Message from Indi.
No to Adani.
What’s taken Shorten so long to emerge ?
@nath
>Is Andrews going to take Morrison’s 4 billion for the east/west tunnel?
Depends on where the vote swings in the equivalent Victorian seats affected by the EW link. But Andrews decide on state issues, and currently he is knee deep in the Westgate Tunnel and NE Link to even start anything with the EW link. Putting the state at work on all of the above will paralyse the state.
Looks like the Greens will get a senator in every state.
Socrates,
Queenslanders clearly disagree with you and the clear opposition of the State and Federal ALP to Adani.
Wong appeals to insiders. To ordinary suburban voters, Wong is part of the problem.
just a shout out to the people of Indi. Someone correct me if I’m wrong, but I think this is the first time in history an independent has successfully passed the baton to another independent. Virtually everyone had written them off, assuming that without both the Mirabella factor and McGowan’s personal following, Indi was a virtual shoe-in for the liberals. Even with a compete fizza of a swing away from liberals in Victoria. I’m greatly impressed by that grassroots movement those people have created to reject a previously safe liberal seat. I hope to see more trully democractic grassroots movements springing up in other electorates.
Socrates @ #1543 Saturday, May 18th, 2019 – 11:28 pm
I doubt that would work. People would still complain about losing jobs/economic activity due to coal mining.
Democrats have tried using this strategy in the US for years and it has yet to have worked.
Blobbit, your missing my point about that co-hort.
They’ve never experienced a recession, and so far have been able to sail along. When the reality hits and the good times end, what will the Libs offer other than given them Welfare- Cards (Hey Austerity, you know) and cuts to the very services they need just when the need those services the most.
Labor needs to attack the economic paucity of the Liberals, as well as campaign for manufacturing, mining etc
shorten concedes
Rex,
He hadn’t written a concession speech. Much like Billary.
Same as in the NSW election; the ALP tried to be Pauline Hansen in Katoomba and Sarah Hanson Young in Balmain. The Australian people aren’t to be taken as fools
Antony Green seems to have uncalled it.
What did I say about Victoria seceding from Australia?
“guytaur says:
Saturday, May 18, 2019 at 11:31 pm
Message from Indi.
No to Adani.”
So? Won’t change who’s in government at this stage.
Adani has lost the left the election overall. It was viewed as putting people out of work, and nothing was offered to those who were going to be displaced.
All we offered those who were going to lose jobs was – don’t worry, new things will turn up, you’ll be fine.
People didn’t believe it.
Has he announced he’s stepping down yet?
Andrew_Earlwood @ #1498 Saturday, May 18th, 2019 – 11:13 pm
Clive has already reminded that Morrison is beholden to his 3.5% vote. I think we need to know whether Clive contributed moneywise to the Lib campaign.
It’s going to be an interesting 3 yrs watching Morrison wield his power.
I guess the key question is what changed between the by-elections in 2018 and this election?
“Looks like the Greens will get a senator in every state.”
two bright points in an otherwise black night: first this and second, no seats for Clive.
This Helen Haines is quite impressive.
Blobbit
Ask Zoomster how Left Indi is.
I agree with you about not offering new jobs. That’s where I agree with Socrates. Real concrete projects for people to go to. Queensland Labor needs to do this now for the next election. That way Labor can say you are already in new jobs and or point to those new jobs
The little mate of Billionaires has conceded
My daughter has returned home. She is disappointed with election result, but nonetheless happy to be home.
Seems I was right about the SA Greens vote rising again with NXT gone.
Shorten conceding.
“Blobbit, your missing my point about that co-hort”
Maybe. I was addressing the point where some were saying all the young voters who enrolled for the SSM vote were going to change things.
It appears not. They’ll only vote for self interest, and they won’t know what that is until they’ve suffered a recession.
Well I’m devastated for this country. This is Trump all over again.
Me personally, I don’t lose, I get to keep my franking credits but this result is a kick in the guts for fairness and re-balance in our society. Will take 6 months off, not listening or visiting any political blogs.
If I was the ALP now, I would take a no-holds approach. Attack the government just like Abbott did every single day (the public obviously don’t give a shit so why should they) and more so if they are a minority government.
I wouldn’t like to see a recession as it will hurt those less fortunate in our society however perhaps it is the only option to exposure how economically incompetent the Coalition are.
And, if it is any consolation at all the whole political commentariat is perplexed as to ‘what went wrong’. Not that fact that Labor lost, but that the polls were so wrong so long. And this does not apply just to the smaller outfits…………………Newspoll has questions to answer…………………When asked about “why?” Barry Cassidy on ABC said he did not know.
I thought the Channel 2 format coverage was the weakest I have seen for some years………………..too much time spent on talking heads, whereas I would have liked much more presentation from Green. He was almost side-lined tonight.
Mulling over Queensland, it seems what they were looking for was reassurance from Morrison that everything was going to be okay. A kind of soft dictatorship required for these folk I guess. The nasty problems waiting for the LNP are not going away, but after watching this election I wonder if it really makes any difference to that sea of blue seats up to tropical Queensland, the pathetic response in WA while what to make to the Tassie vote is anyone’s guess. It seems the great Labor state of NSW also has had an identity crisis…………………………..
Enquirer,
Exactly that – they are different types of elections and voters vote differently in them.
Chloe is starting to disconcert me, with the way she is gazing at Shorten.
“guytaur says:
Saturday, May 18, 2019 at 11:35 pm
Blobbit
Ask Zoomster how Left Indi is”
Dude, we lost. Adani was an issue – the election was lost in Qld.
Stepping down as leader.
Bill Shorten will not recontest Labor leadership ballot
Big A Adrian: “two bright points in an otherwise black night: first this and second, no seats for Clive.”
Add a third bright point – Abbott losing his seat.
Otherwise a miserable night…
Kirky,
the metaphore you are looking for, is labor need to put lumps of coal into footy socks and start swinging them at the libs.
Diogenes @ #1553 Saturday, May 18th, 2019 – 11:31 pm
Still bare bones – and who knows where S44 might go. Dutton ?
Its a mess and more instability.
FFS
Fess
Yep. As expected.
Let’s see how the plebs in QLD cope with the recession coming their way? it will be great for them, I’m guessing.
“put lumps of coal ”
Fuck no. It’s the economy
Really think this is a sad day for our political landscape. For the next decade at least no party will take positive policies or controversial policies to an election again, it’ll just be all scares and fear and the like. Not after 1993 and now 2019
General observations on the state of the minor parties:
A fairly strong night for the Greens, who have locked down Senate wins in each state (including what look like truly impressive results in Qld and SA). Nowhere even vaguely close on additional House seats; genuinely bad results in Cooper, Wills and Grayndler; surprisingly strong in Canberra.
One Nation have done well in Qld (while not coming close to any seats), but not anywhere else. Not close to any additional Senate seats.
The Centre Alliance minus Xenophon is clearly toast. Apart from Rebekha Sharkie (essentially an independent in all but name), they polled terribly in Barker and Grey and got nothing in the Senate. Sharkie will probably become an actual independent at some point in the next few years.
Outside Jacqui Lambie, none of the other small parties have made much of an impact. No joy for Palmer, Anning or Derryn Hinch, who have all done very badly.
Truly historic result for Helen Haines in Indi; she was largely written off throughout the campaign and I for one am genuinely surprised by this result. Of all the independents to finally manage to bequeath their seat to a successor, it wasn’t any of the ones with ginormous majorities (Andren, Windsor, Oakeshott) but Cathy McGowan, whose hold on Indi was never particularly strong but who clearly had much more of an organisational support structure.
Why did Queensland Labor voters shift to PHON and Clive ?
Chloe’s obviously just noticed a mole on the side of Bill’s head that she thinks he should get checked out.
BTW, i said weeks ago that Labor needed to advertise against Palmer, but no, he was let off the hook.
“Antony Green seems to have uncalled it.”
I suspect we are at the point where the seats that are left undecided, and which will decide the election, are the ones that won’t be known until about a week.