Division of Port Adelaide

Port Adelaide
Australian House of Representatives Division
Division of Port Adelaide in South Australia, as of the 2016 federal election
Created1949
Abolished2019
NamesakePort Adelaide
DemographicInner metropolitan

The Division of Port Adelaide was an Australian electoral division in the state of South Australia. The 181 km2 seat extended from St Kilda in the north to Grange Road and Findon in the south with part of Salisbury to the east. Suburbs included Alberton, Beverley, Birkenhead, Cheltenham, Findon, Kilkenny, Largs Bay, Mansfield Park, North Haven, Ottoway, Parafield Gardens, Paralowie, Pennington, Port Adelaide, Queenstown, Rosewater, Salisbury Downs, Semaphore, Woodville, West Croydon, and part of Seaton. The seat also included Torrens Island and Garden Island. Port Adelaide was abolished in 2019, after a redistribution triggered by a change in representation entitlement which saw South Australia's seats in the House of Representatives reduced to ten.

History

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The region of Port Adelaide, the division's namesake

The seat was named after the suburb of Port Adelaide, the working port of Adelaide. Before 1949, most of the seat had been part of Hindmarsh, which moved south as a result of Port Adelaide's creation. The seat was proclaimed at the redistribution of 11 May 1949, and was first contested at the 1949 federal election. The newly created Port Adelaide division included Albert Park, Port Adelaide, Semaphore and Woodville subdivisions, and Kilburn which was part of the Prospect sub-division (west of Lower North road) from the old division of Adelaide.[1]

For most of its history, it has been a comfortably safe Labor seat. The closest Labor has ever come to losing it was at the 1988 by-election, where Labor candidate Rod Sawford won on a 5.2 percent two-party margin. The two-party margin currently stands, after the 2016 vote, at 20.72 percent, making it the safest Labor seat in the state and one of the safest Labor seats in the nation. Port Adelaide remains the only electorate in South Australia to have voted Labor at every federal election in its existence.

The seat was pushed slightly northward in 2004 with the abolition of the other safe Labor seat in northern Adelaide, Bonython. A few southern portions of Bonython transferred to Port Adelaide, however the majority of Bonython was transferred to Wakefield which contributed to Wakefield's change from a rural safe Liberal seat to a hybrid urban-rural notional marginal Labor seat.

A notable curiosity in recent years was that in the 1998 and 2001 federal elections, the seat was the only one in Australia where a Communist Party candidate, Michael Perth, stood for election. This was the only occasion when the Liberal Party did not preference the One Nation Party last. He achieved about one percent of the vote on each occasion.

Sawford retired at the 2007 election, which saw South Australian Labor's historically safe seat easily won by the newly endorsed Labor candidate, unionist and former head of the Left state Labor faction Mark Butler.

At the 2016 election, as a result of the emergence of the Nick Xenophon Team, Butler became the first Labor candidate in 20 years, and only the second ever, to come up short of a majority on the primary vote. He easily won after preferences, with NXT pushing the Liberals into third place. While Port Adelaide remains the safest Labor seat in South Australia on two-party terms, Butler's primary vote was actually one percent lower than that of Amanda Rishworth in Kingston. Despite also falling short of a majority on the primary vote, Rishworth received the highest primary vote of South Australia's 11 seats, but remained the second safest Labor seat in South Australia on two-party terms. The presence of NXT candidates in all eleven state seats resulted in a suppressed major party primary vote.

Due to a change in representation entitlements for South Australia, the Redistribution Committee of the Australian Electoral Commission proposed that Port Adelaide be abolished as part of the 2018 boundary redistribution.[2]

In July 2018, this recommendation was adopted, reducing the number of seats in South Australia to ten for the 2019 election.[3] Most of Port Adelaide's electors will join Hindmarsh, which will change from marginal Labor to fairly safe Labor as a result. Smaller portions will transfer to Spence (formerly Wakefield), Adelaide and Makin.[4] Ironically, most of the Port Adelaide area had been part of Hindmarsh for the first half-century after Federation. Butler transferred to Hindmarsh, while Hindmarsh's incumbent Labor MP, Steve Georganas, transferred to Adelaide.

Members

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Image Member Party Term Notes
  Albert Thompson
(1886–1966)
Labor 10 December 1949
1 November 1963
Previously held the Division of Hindmarsh. Retired
  Fred Birrell
(1913–1985)
30 November 1963
11 April 1974
Retired
  Mick Young
(1936–1996)
18 May 1974
12 February 1988
Served as minister under Hawke. Resigned over alleged mishandling of campaign donations
  Rod Sawford
(1944–)
26 March 1988
17 October 2007
Retired
  Mark Butler
(1970–)
24 November 2007
11 April 2019
Served as minister under Rudd and Gillard. Transferred to the Division of Hindmarsh after Port Adelaide was abolished in 2019

Election results

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2016 Australian federal election: Port Adelaide[5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Mark Butler 46,314 48.24 −2.34
Xenophon Michael Slattery 17,970 18.72 +18.72
Liberal Emma Flowerdew 17,884 18.63 −7.69
Greens Matthew Carey 6,683 6.96 −1.65
Family First Bruce Hambour 4,483 4.67 −2.85
Animal Justice Janine Clipstone 2,078 2.16 +2.16
Christian Democrats Jenalie Salt 597 0.62 +0.62
Total formal votes 96,009 94.19 +0.39
Informal votes 5,927 5.81 −0.39
Turnout 101,936 89.93 −2.24
Notional two-party-preferred count
Labor Mark Butler 67,119 69.91 +5.89
Liberal Emma Flowerdew 28,890 30.09 −5.89
Two-candidate-preferred result
Labor Mark Butler 62,274 64.86 +0.84
Xenophon Michael Slattery 33,735 35.14 +35.14
Labor hold Swing N/A

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Federal election guide". News. 24 November 1949.
  2. ^ "AEC proposes scrapping South Australian electorate of Port Adelaide". ABC News. 13 April 2018. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  3. ^ Rogers, Tom (20 July 2018). "Determination of names and boundaries of federal electoral divisions in South Australia". Federal Register of Legislation. Government of Australia. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  4. ^ "2017-18 Federal Redistribution - South Australia". ABC Elections. 26 June 2018.
  5. ^ Port Adelaide, SA, Virtual Tally Room 2016, Australian Electoral Commission.
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34°46′37″S 138°32′46″E / 34.777°S 138.546°E / -34.777; 138.546