Division of Solomon
Solomon Australian House of Representatives Division | |||||||||||||||
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Created | 2000 | ||||||||||||||
MP | Luke Gosling | ||||||||||||||
Party | Labor | ||||||||||||||
Namesake | Vaiben Louis Solomon | ||||||||||||||
Electors | 71,888 (2022) | ||||||||||||||
Area | 337 km2 (130.1 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||
Demographic | Inner metropolitan | ||||||||||||||
Territory electorate(s) | |||||||||||||||
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The Division of Solomon is an Australian Electoral Division in the Northern Territory. It is largely coextensive with the Darwin/Palmerston metropolitan area. The only other division in the territory, the Division of Lingiari, covers the remainder of the territory.
Geography
[edit]Federal electoral division boundaries in Australia are determined at redistributions by a redistribution committee appointed by the Australian Electoral Commission. Redistributions occur for the boundaries of divisions in a particular state or territory, and they occur every seven years, or sooner if a state or territory's representation entitlement changes or when divisions of a state or territory are malapportioned.[1]
History
[edit]The division was one of the two established when the former Division of Northern Territory was redistributed on 21 December 2000. It is named for Hon Vaiben Louis Solomon, a Premier of South Australia, a delegate to the second Constitutional convention and member of the first Australian Parliament. He had represented the Northern Territory in the South Australian House of Assembly, when it was still part of that colony.
The Division was first contested at the 2001 federal election. Although the Darwin/Palmerston area had historically been a stronghold for the Country Liberal Party at the territorial level, recent gains by Labor made it much more competitive by the time the seat was created. It has taken on a character similar to mortgage belt seats. As such, for most of its history, it has been a marginal seat usually held by the party of government.
The CLP's Dave Tollner very narrowly won the seat in 2001, then increased his majority in 2004 before narrowly losing it to Labor's Damian Hale at the 2007 election, where Labor won a landslide victory. At the 2010 election, the CLP's Natasha Griggs won Solomon back with a two-party-preferred margin of 1.75 percent from a 1.94 percent swing. She therefore became the first opposition member in the seat's history. Griggs was re-elected with a reduced two-party margin of 1.4 percent at the 2013 election as the Coalition won government.
A MediaReach seat-level opinion poll in Solomon of 513 voters conducted 22−23 June during the 2016 election campaign unexpectedly found Labor heavily leading the Liberals 61–39 on the two-party vote from a large 12.4 percent swing.[2]
Griggs and the CLP lost Solomon to Labor's Luke Gosling, at the 2016 election held on 2 July, with Gosling becoming the first Labor candidate to win the primary vote and defeating Griggs on a 56–44 two-party vote from a record 7.4 percent swing—in both cases, the strongest result in the seat's history.[3][4] Gosling, who had previously run in 2013, is the second opposition member to hold the seat. This was later seen as a forerunner to the CLP's disastrous performance at the NT general election held later that year, where the party won just 2 seats out of 25, including only one in the Darwin area. Gosling retained the seat in 2019 with a reduced majority, but won in 2022 by a margin just under the threshold for making Solomon a safe Labor seat.
Members
[edit]Image | Member | Party | Term | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dave Tollner (1966–) | Country Liberal | 10 November 2001 – 24 November 2007 | Lost seat. Later elected to the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly seat of Fong Lim in 2008 | ||
Damian Hale (1969–) | Labor | 24 November 2007 – 21 August 2010 | Lost seat | ||
Natasha Griggs (1969–) | Country Liberal | 21 August 2010 – 2 July 2016 | Lost seat | ||
Luke Gosling (1971–) | Labor | 2 July 2016 – present | Incumbent |
Election results
[edit]Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labor | Luke Gosling | 21,775 | 39.50 | −0.54 | |
Country Liberal | Tina Macfarlane | 13,771 | 24.98 | −13.07 | |
Greens | Aiya Goodrich Carttling | 8,164 | 14.81 | +2.97 | |
Liberal Democrats | Kylie Bonanni | 5,839 | 10.59 | +10.59 | |
One Nation | Emily Lohse | 2,948 | 5.35 | +5.35 | |
United Australia | Tayla Selfe | 2,628 | 4.77 | +1.90 | |
Total formal votes | 55,125 | 96.48 | +0.85 | ||
Informal votes | 2,011 | 3.52 | −0.85 | ||
Turnout | 57,136 | 79.53 | −3.55 | ||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Labor | Luke Gosling | 32,726 | 59.37 | +6.29 | |
Country Liberal | Tina Macfarlane | 22,399 | 40.63 | −6.29 | |
Labor hold | Swing | +6.29 |
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org. |
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org. |
References
[edit]- ^ Muller, Damon (14 November 2017). "The process of federal redistributions: a quick guide". Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
- ^ An independent poll shows Solomon MP Natasha Griggs will struggle to retain her seat at the federal election: NT News (News Ltd) 27 June 2016
- ^ Solomon, NT - Tally Room: Australian Electoral Commission Archived 2016-08-12 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Northern Territory residents turn out to vote in federal election". Northern Territory News. 2 July 2016. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
- ^ Solomon, NT, 2022 Tally Room, Australian Electoral Commission.