Western Australian election live

Live coverage of the count for the Western Australian state election.

Click here for full Western Australian election results updated live.
End of Saturday night

The two-party projection on the entry page to my live election results facility currently credits Labor with a 13.7% swing, which if uniform would have left the Liberals only with Cottesloe and Vasse, both on margins of less than 1%. Those are indeed the only two seats the Liberals have clearly won – that they’re ahead by a fair bit more than 1% there reflects a general tendency for the swing to be a little milder in their own seats, which may yet save them in Churchlands, Carine and Nedlands. It should be noted that a very great proportion of the vote remains uncounted, with last night’s proceedings only scratching the surface of the unprecedented postal and pre-poll count. A dynamic may yet emerge which favours the Liberals in the in-doubt seats, but there hasn’t been any evidence of it in the pre-polls and postals that have thus far been counted, which have actually been even worse for the Liberals than the election day votes.

Whether the Nationals will emerge with more seats than the Liberals remains to be established. They look to have lost North West Central to Labor, who get belated revenge for Vince Catania’s defection to the party way back when, although the Nationals wouldn’t be conceding yet. A loss here would bring to an end the regional empire the party built under Brendon Grylls. The South West region seat of Warren-Blackwood has swung 11.7% to Labor and has not definitely been retained, which could potentially reduce them to three.

Nonetheless, the Nationals’ performance in their traditional Wheatbelt heartland was the only bright spot for conservative politics last night. Happily for the Nationals, the four electorates here are accommodated by the boutique Agricultural upper house region, which has three-and-a-half times as much voting power as the metropolitan area, and in which they have retained their two seats. The party’s primary vote was up in all four of these seats (and was down only slightly in Warren-Blackwood), but a slump in support for the Liberals and One Nation powered two-party swings to Labor of roughly 10%. This gained them Geraldton, where former Liberal member Ian Blayney had defected to the Nationals since the last election.

Now to the upper house, where I don’t see Labor winning less than 21 seats out of 36, and could get another three besides; the Liberals will get five to seven; the Nationals four or five; the Greens one to three; Legalise Cannabis one to two; and Shooters should have one.

Agricultural. Looks like being Labor three, Nationals two and Liberal one.

East Metropolitan. The ABC computer has this as four Labor, one Liberal and one Legalise Cannabis, but with Labor on 64.7%, there could be a scarcely believable result of five Labor, one Liberal if the micro-party vote fades in late counting.

Mining and Pastoral. The ABC says four Labor, one Nationals and one Shooters, but depending on where the uncounted votes are from, the Liberals may take the Nationals seat. The Daylight Saving Party could potentially take the Shooters seat, though I would expect late counting will reduce the micro-party preference snowball.

North Metropolitan. Labor clearly has three and Liberal one, with the last two seats a game of musical chairs between Labor, Liberal and the Greens, with the Greens seemingly behind the eightball. However, there’s another scenario in which Australian Christians take the seat that might go to the second Liberal.

South Metropolitan. The ABC says four Labor, one Liberal and one Green, but the Greens have only a slight lead over the micro-party preference snowball which leaves an outside chance of another fluke another win for Aaron Stonehouse of the Liberal Democrats.

South West. Three Labor and one each for Liberal, Nationals and Legalise Cannabis, according to the ABC, but a bit of playing with the calculator suggests the situation to be a bit fluid: the Legalise Cannabis seat could go to the Greens or a fourth Labor, and I’ve managed to concoct a scenario where the Nationals vote goes to Australian Christians.

Election night commentary


11.17pm. My results updating was offline for half an hour while my laptop was in transit, and is now back on to greet the late night addition of pre-polls and postals. My intimation that these might save some furniture for the Liberals is not being borne out: the collective two-party swings so far on pre-polls (15.3%) and postals (20.7%) is worse for them than the election day vote (a mere 13.2%).

9.48pm. So to summarise, it’s very hard to see how Labor doesn’t win a majority. Kevin Bonham notes the raw figures these calculations are coming off look too low for the Greens, so they could make it to three, although the worst case scenario is zero. A micro-party or two could get up, but that’s up in the air. For the second time, One Nation have come up empty-handed a term after winning three seats.

9.41pm. South West is three Labor and one apiece for Liberal, Legalise Cannabis and Nationals. The Nationals seat could conceivably go to Australian Christians or a fourth Labor, though I assume they will firm up in late counting.

9.40pm. South Metropolitan currently four Labor, one Liberal and one Greens, but the Greens only have their nose in front against the micro-party snowball at the close. I assume though that the latter will come back a bit in late counting.

9.36pm. North Metropolitan currently Labor four and Liberal two, but the last two seats are a very tight race between the fourth Labor, the second Liberal and the Greens, and could land with any combination thereof.

9.32pm. Back to the upper house. The ABC’s Mining and Pastoral progressive projection is Labor four, Liberal one and Shooters one, but the Liberal seat could potentially go to the Nationals, and it’s a squeaker between Shooters and the Daylight Saving Party for the last seat.

9.31pm. My system is now calling North West Central for Labor, as the ABC and Nine already were, a result that makes it slightly less likely the Nationals will emerge with opposition status.

9.30pm. In East Metropolitan, the ABC currently says four Labor, one Liberal and one Legalise Cannabis. But Legalise Cannabis has only a slight lead over the Greens at a key point, and if it closes there could be an opening for the Greens.

9.25pm. I’m going to go through the upper house region by region with highly impressionistic views of the situation based on how early returns are playing out through the ABC’s preference calculators. Starting with Agricultural, which looks like it should go three Labor, two Nationals and one Labor, which would be the first time Labor has ever won three seats here. However, there could be an opening for a micro-party at the third Labor’s expense if they fall back substantially.

9.20pm. The ABC and Nine are both calling North West Central for Labor, but I’m not quite there yet. That would mean four seats for the Nationals. The best case scenario for the Liberals is five, in descending order of likelihood: Churchlands, Vasse, Nedlands, Churchlands and Carine. The ABC is calling the latter two for Labor, but neither I or nine are.

9.05pm. Kevin Bonham tweets on the upper house: “Seems to me a very good chance of a Labor majority upstairs. 20 seats looks realistic.”

8.55pm. An update of booth-matched primary vote swings by upper house region. I’m hoping someone with more mental energy than I have at the moment might analyse their implications for the Legislative Council result which I can then pass off as my own work.

8.41pm. The Nationals have four seats in the bag, are in danger of losing North West Central, and clearly haven’t held Geraldton. Do the Liberals clear that hurdle? Only Cottesloe and Vasse look in the bag. Churchlands is very tight; they may yet get home in Nedlands; Carine isn’t looking good for them.

8.32pm. My statewide two-party preferred for projection isn’t improving for the Liberals, and shouldn’t move much until pre-polls start coming in. Then we will see if, as I keep suggesting it might (though this is far from certain), the situation improves a bit for the Liberals.

8.30pm. Now there are two-party numbers in from Nedlands, my system is no longer calling to for Labor. This is because independent Fiona Argyle is on 13.1% and was apparently directing preferences to the Liberals — for the want of better information to go on, it was assuming they would split evenly. I’ve still got Labor ahead, but I wouldn’t be at all surprised if a more positive dynamic for the Liberals on pre-polls pulls it out of the fire for them.

8.29pm. My results weren’t updating for a period, but we’re back in business now.

8.06pm. The Greens are running ahead of the Liberals in Fremantle, Kimberley, Kwinana, Maylands and Perth, after having done so nowhere in 2017. Obviously that’s more a reflection the Liberals’ performance than Labor’s — I’m calculating a 1.2% swing against the Greens on the primary vote.

7.59pm. All the interest now is what the Liberals can hold on to, which is no more than Cottesloe, Vasse, Churchlands and Carine, though I wouldn’t rule out a late miracle in Nedlands.

7.50pm. The image below shows lower house primary vote swings by upper house region, which may be of use to those of you trying to work out how the Legislative Council will look.

7.43pm. Dawesville being called now for Labor by the ABC and Nine (my system is less conservative it seems).

7.35pm. I’ve lost count of what of my system’s calls I have and haven’t related, so I’ll run through the projected Liberal defeats: Dawesville, Geraldton, Hillarys, Kalgoorlie, Nedlands, Riverton, Scarborough and South Perth. The only seat I’m calling for the Liberals is Cottesloe: they are merely ahead in Vasse and Churchlands.

7.34pm. So my election results facility is running very smoothly I’m pleased to say. If you’re finding it useful, note that I’ve tactfully but donations buttons on the top right of each page.

7.32pm. Nationals leader Mia Davies just asked on Nine if she is about to become Opposition Leader, a not unreasonable question. As noted two entries below though, a degree of caution is still required as to quite how bad this will be for the Liberals when all the votes are in.

7.31pm. There are now TCP figures from four seats, and my statewide Labor two-party projection has gone up rather than down.

7.29pm. My system is now calling Nedlands for Labor. I will add one note of caution though: we could be seeing a dynamic where Liberal voters were more inclined to go from election day to pre-poll and posting voting this time. Something similar happened at the last Victorian elections, and there were a few calls in Nedlands-like seats that ended up being reversed when pre-polls came in in the small hours.

7.26pm. There’s finally TCP figures for two booths in Balcatta, so a statewide two-party projection is now showing on my results page. It has Labor on 71.2% — but like I said, two booths from Balcatta.

7.22pm. There still aren’t any TCP results from the WAEC, but my primary vote projections suggest a swing of about 12%, which is in line with the YouGov poll. Their Dawesville poll isn’t looking bad either.

7.21pm. Calling Dawesville for Labor.

7.12pm. I’m now calling Hillarys and Scarborough called for Labor.

7.08pm. My system is calling Riverton for Labor, estimated a two-party swing of around 10% based off the primary vote numbers.

7.06pm. Apparently the WAEC likes to hold back on publishing two-candidate preferred data for some reason.

7.02pm. On top of anything else, movement from Liberal to Nationals in country seats.

6.58pm. I have the Liberals retaining Cottesloe after one booth with around 1000 votes recorded only modest swings on the primary vote.

6.55pm. First result in from Dawesville with 342 primary votes, and I’m calculating a 7.3% swing to Labor against Zak Kirkup’s 0.5% margin, which happens to be the smallest swing I’ve yet seen.

6.52pm. Two booths in Kalgoorlie both have Labor up around 30%, causing my system to call it for them. I note that there is yet to be a two-party result anywhere — hopefully this isn’t some issue with the media feed.

6.50pm. A bunch of booths on the primary vote make it clear Labor will win Geraldton with a swing of around 15%, so the regions appear on board with the swing.

6.43pm. Pilbara (a 38% primary vote swing in the Roebourne booth) and Swan Hills (23% at Wooroloo Primary School) added to the Labor retain booth.

6.40pm. Still early days of course, but every indication I’m seeing points to the anticipated Labor avalanche. With two booths in from Baldivis the Labor primary vote is up 38% — an independent polled 21% here in 2017.

6.38pm. With around 2000 votes in from Central Wheatbelt, I’m projecting a swing to Labor of around 10%, which still leaves Nationals leader Mia Davies very safe.

6.37pm. Each of those calls is based on small booths showing primary vote swing to Labor of between 15% and 28%.

6.33pm. My system is calling Rockingham, Burns Beach and Butler for Labor already.

6.31pm. We’re getting a flood of Special Institutions, Hospitals & Remotes results – there are a handful of these for each electorates and they’re evidently being counted straight up, and not a few days later as I’m normally used to. As well as being small in number, I don’t have historic data for them to calculate swings.

6.26pm. The blockage in my results facility has now been removed. Those party swing figures on the entry page are screwy but everything else looks okay.

6.17pm. There are 77 primary votes in from Central Wheatbelt (Westonia Shire Office). About a 15% swing to Labor, for what little that is worth.

6.15pm. I think my results facility is working — the WAEC’s time stamps are screwy which makes it hard to say until results the first results are in, which should probably be in about 15 minutes.

6pm. Polls have closed. Commentary and, hopefully, live publication of results to follow.

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.

345 comments on “Western Australian election live”

Comments Page 5 of 7
1 4 5 6 7
  1. Socrates

    A party giving good governance versus a party with no discernable policies might have something to do with it.

    Now, lets explain this to NSW Labor 🙂

  2. Socrates says:
    Sunday, March 14, 2021 at 12:21 am

    Kirkup struck me as a bit hapless but also harmless.

    I didn’t see all his concession speech. But the part I did see showed Kirkup talking about himself. He’s unfit for politics. Voters are not interested in his self-authored political obituary. The Liberals really need to learn to listen to voters rather than talking past them. They thoroughly deserve everything that has happened in this election.

  3. Rational Leftist says Sunday, March 14, 2021 at 12:25 am

    Victoria, 2018: “Look at us and how much we’re rejecting the Liberal Party!”
    WA, 2021: “Hold my (whatever the preferred beer of Western Australians is)!”

    Thankfully, I don’t think it’s Emu Export any more.

  4. Congrats to McGowan on a well managed term.

    Labor with tough borders is a vote winner.
    Just please don’t fall to the temptation to weight the LC towards metro regions.

    We already have the lower house for that, a hallmark of a successful system is one that can balance interests. Our population isn’t balanced though (in spread), and that means unbalanced vote weights or unbalanced regional representation.

    The way we have it today, the status quo, is the better choice for long-term health, for a depth of reasons that would be denied by most here, but nevertheless are true.

    Regional opinions move more slowly than metro, and this in the end is a stabiliser.
    Sad if this is forgone in pursuit of ideology and advantage.

  5. CC, the problem with the WA Liberals is not merely that they are short of policies. It is that the policies they have spoken to are completely contrary to the interests of the people of WA. They stand against our shared best interests. They seemed to think this would not matter. But it does matter. Voters here will not be taken for granted.

    If the Liberals do not change their policies they will get the same sort of treatment at the Federal election in WA seats. Several hundred thousand voters here chose Labor for the first time. They can do it again.

  6. Early results in the LC looking very bad for the Greens, with Labor landing at or near the quota in most regions, giving it very little surplus to distribute (traditionally the way for Greens candidates to top themselves up to the quota).

    Preference snowball seems to have fallen the way of Legalise Cannabis microparty with two members (though that may not be borne out by the full count, such is the nature of the Group Voting Ticket roulette), which just goes to show that GVTs have to go.

  7. Wow. Several weeks ago someone predicted my seat of South Perth would change hands and I thought they had rocks in their head.

    I’m not sure how Canberra is going to spin this tomorrow. Insiders might be interesting, Shane Wright is normally pretty good and Laura Tingle is at the top of her form.

  8. Andrew Elder @awelder

    I am going to bed now, and when I get there it will have as many people in it as there are to be WA Liberals MLAs

  9. N says Sunday, March 14, 2021 at 12:31 am

    CC, the problem with the WA Liberals is not merely that they are short of policies. It is that the policies they have spoken to are completely contrary to the interests of the people of WA. They stand against our shared best interests. They seemed to think this would not matter. But it does matter. Voters here will not be taken for granted.

    If the Liberals do not change their policies they will get the same sort of treatment at the Federal election in WA seats. Several hundred thousand voters here chose Labor for the first time. They can do it again.

    I still can’t work out why they thought Roe 8 was a vote winner.

  10. In case people in other states don’t understand the magnitude of this result look at Nedlands. A leafy riverside suburb home to some of Perth’s real old wealthy families.
    Labor is ahead.
    Charles Court held this seat from 1953 to 1982 and was premier.
    His son Richard held it from 1983 till 2001 and was premier.
    Now Labor is ahead.
    Old Charlie must be rotating in his grave.

  11. BC

    Had a note in my mailbox during the campaign from Morrison’s right hand man Ben Morton telling me why Roe 8 and 9 must go ahead and the feds would help fund it.
    Yeah. Nah.

  12. “I’m gunna go to the pub.”

    I’d forgotten how funny Mike Nahan’s accent was. He’s got a good point though. I’m going down to 399. In the off chance I see John Carey down there, even though he only got my #2 vote (Briefly, that one’s on you), I’ll shake his hand and pat his dog. He’s a good bloke.

  13. It was interesting in the last Commonwealth Election that South Perth in the seat of Swan shifted to Labor. Is there something here. In fact what cost Labor Swan was that the tradition Labor area of Swan voted Liberal.

  14. James says Sunday, March 14, 2021 at 12:46 am

    It was interesting in the last Commonwealth Election that South Perth in the seat of Swan shifted to Labor. Is there something here. In fact what cost Labor Swan was that the tradition Labor area of Swan voted Liberal.

    I didn’t know that. So, Swan could go red in the next election. I just need Irons to get that pool built without delay, but with a roof.

  15. I’ve seen Mike Nahan when he was opposition leader tramping up the stairs to his seat on the top level among the plebs at Optus Oval to watch the Eagles, I was kinda impressed seeing as it would be easy for him to prop himself up in a box with moneyed set.
    I’ve never agreed with any of his political ideas but he seems a genuine bloke.

  16. The Liberals sent me an email this morning. “Before you vote, ask yourself, who will be there to stand up for you and stop Labor when they go too far.”
    My reply, “It may be time to reflect why the community does not believe that you will stand up for them.”

  17. WA state election 2021 as it happened: Total Liberal wipeout as rockstar Premier Mark McGowan celebrates landslide win

    SMH

  18. So, the question for Albo is, how can he take what Anna P, Chairman Dan, and McGowan have and emulate the vibe of also having it?

    I James is right and CP is the downfall of Smirko.

  19. Seadog

    Nahan was my local member and I hate his politics and IPA economic theories.
    But I’ll give him a tick for tonight. He took it on the chin and aimed some shots across the bows of the liberal powerbrokers who are more interested in factional battles than anything.
    And he said it many times. Never give up.

  20. , and it’s a squeaker between Shooters and the Daylight Saving Party for the last seat.

    Choose your weapons, boys.

    DSP: “Hey, look! Different time on my wrist! A magic extra hour of sunshine every day! Better economy! Better life! Buggerising about with clocks for no reason is so -”

    Shooters: *click clack*

  21. Bird of paradox says:
    Sunday, March 14, 2021 at 12:45 am
    “I’m gunna go to the pub.”

    I’d forgotten how funny Mike Nahan’s accent was. He’s got a good point though. I’m going down to 399. In the off chance I see John Carey down there, even though he only got my #2 vote (Briefly, that one’s on you), I’ll shake his hand and pat his dog. He’s a good bloke.

    It’s a secret ballot. You can express yourself any way you like. I could not care less. Your vote is a matter for your conscience, not mine.

  22. Is this the first election nation wide that the Liberal party has achieved gender equality?
    Mr Newbie?
    Julie Bishop will be happy

  23. “In case people in other states don’t understand the magnitude of this result look at Nedlands. A leafy riverside suburb home to some of Perth’s real old wealthy families.”

    That is really a wtf moment. Still, lots of ALP members with lots of work to do to keep as much of the last two elections worth of swings as possible. Maybe the biggest obstacle to the Libs bouncing back will turn out to be the Nats and the Greens trying to make the most of the new landscape??

  24. ” look at Nedlands. ”

    It’s worth a look at some of the suburbs of Perth that on current numbers will have Labor members:
    – Dalkeith
    – Nedlands
    – City Beach (most of it anyway)
    – Churchlands
    – Floreat (both the Neds and Churchlands parts)
    – Applecross, Ardross and Alfred Cove
    – South Perth
    – Attadale (though they did before as a Lib voting part of Bicton)

    That’s some seriously expensive real estate (with the expected conservative leans)

    (Not to mention a bunch of suburbs that aren’t far off those – Wembley Downs, Booragoon, Mount Pleasant, Salter Point, Bateman, Trigg, North Beach, Marmion, and Sorrento)

  25. Cameron
    Both McGowan and Andrews do not campaign against the top end of town and because they are solid leaders the wealthier areas feel more comfortable about supporting them.

  26. Driving around my area I think I saw more corflutes for Jack Taylor, the LDP candidate in South Perth, than for all other candidates combined. Given their blue background I actually thought he must have been the Liberal candidate (which must say something about the impact Ryan Chorley has had on the electorate). It’s good to see all that expenditure has so far only netted him 411 votes.

    I’ve just been looking at William’s page for South Perth and it appears the only polling place where the Liberal candidate out polled the ALP candidate was “Special Institutions, Hospitals & Remotes” (47 vs 37). The Libs next best was postals where they managed 40.8%.

    This is a truly remarkable result.

  27. Will WA be the first state to legalise Cannabis? 🙂

    If the Legalise Cannabis Party get 2 seats in the Upper House, their votes could be crucial.

  28. A thrilling result!

    I’m feeling just a bit more sober in the light of morning (in every sense). A compete gutting of one side isn’t necessarily good for democracy, though it may give WA Labor a generational chance to right some wrongs and reposition the economy. The ALP came back in magnificent fashion in Qld after the Tarago incident, but to paraphrase that famous WA’ian Alan Bond, you only get one Campbell Newman in your lifetime. The problem is that Liberal moderates who lose seats go on to reasonable careers and interests elsewhere, which leaves the loony Pentecostal/RWNJ fringe propped up on Church-funded sinecures to increasingly dominate the party, stack branches with congregation and deter more progressive voices such as pretty much everyone else, all the while presenting themselves, their spouses and kids as benignly interested in Middle Australia and Families. A worry, although you would hope that an inability to keep the lid on their more regressive policies would make them less electable (I say this as a superficially attractive such candidate ran in my state electorate over here in Qld, though thankfully the overlapping Federal seat is increasingly inner-city progressive and the ALP state incumbent prevailed).

  29. Cat

    The upper house looks like a clear Labor majority (20 or 21 of 36). Labor won’t need the Greens, let alone a micro party. As William said, the postals came in even more for Labor than the votes on the day. Its a landslide in both houses.

  30. Didn’t say it loud enough through that nervy little caveat of mine: stonking congratulations to WA Labor with all bells on, and all the very best to Premier McGowan and team.

    And thanks again to our glorious leader William for magnificently curating the count and for invaluable background detail.

  31. Very interesting news came from the WA state election results, even beyond the Liberal party total wipe out:
    a) A sizeable number of former Liberal voters switched to the ALP.
    b) There was a collapse of the PHON vote.

    No surprise if ScuMo will use the “pandemic” and “it’s just a state election” narratives to explain away the loss of the Libs in WA whilst trying to desperately stop anybody drawing any inference for the coming Federal election…. HOWEVER, there is federally a movement among moderate Liberals to start making a stand against ScuMo and his gang, although they may prefer to vote for an Independent; and the PHON collapse seems to be real across the board, which looks likely it will favour Labor, especially in the all-important Queensland.

    …. Something funny seems to be happening on the way to the Federal election… stay tuned.
    🙂

  32. “sprocket_says:
    Sunday, March 14, 2021 at 7:38 am
    What a humiliation for the Liberal Party…”

    …. They are not even worthy of being the official state opposition….

    They can only cheer themselves up dreaming that they will do a Palaszczuk at the next state election…. Good luck with that, not even Nahan believed it in one of his comments yesterday night on the ABC….

  33. “Warrigal says:
    Sunday, March 14, 2021 at 7:19 am
    … A complete gutting of one side isn’t necessarily good for democracy”…. But some times it is, especially when that side of politics is becoming a gangrenous appendage to the body… In that case, a swift amputation will save the rest of the body… Oh, I suddenly thought about the gangrenous Federal Liberals…. Hmmm

  34. “Mexicanbeemersays:
    Sunday, March 14, 2021 at 3:10 am
    Cameron
    Both McGowan and Andrews do not campaign against the top end of town”….

    Think about the top end of town as a milking cow. To get the milk over a long term you need the cow to stay alive. A dead cow is good for a one-day BBQ… and that’s it. So, keep the cow alive by all means, but get the bloody milk out to feed the community, allow her to feed in the paddock in an environmentally sustainable way and just enough to be productive (no waste).

  35. It seemed to me that Mark McGowan ran a campaign based on a pseudo-secessionist dream and keeping Kerry Stokes happy: “keeping WA safe and strong”. I guess the question now is whether he’ll be able to deliver the dream of a separate country.

Comments Page 5 of 7
1 4 5 6 7

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *