Election Name: | 2017 Bennelong by-election |
Country: | Australia |
Type: | Parliamentary |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 2016 Australian federal election |
Previous Year: | 2016 |
Next Election: | 2019 Australian federal election |
Next Year: | 2019 |
Turnout: | 85.96% 5.70 |
Registered: | 106,534 |
Seats For Election: | The Division of Bennelong (NSW) in the House of Representatives |
Candidate1: | John Alexander |
Party1: | Liberal Party of Australia |
Popular Vote1: | 37,898 |
Percentage1: | 45.04% |
Swing1: | 5.37 |
Candidate2: | Kristina Keneally |
Party2: | Australian Labor Party |
Popular Vote2: | 30,850 |
Percentage2: | 35.75% |
Swing2: | 7.27 |
1Blank: | TPP |
1Data1: | 54.88% |
1Data2: | 45.12% |
2Blank: | TPP swing |
2Data1: | 4.84 |
2Data2: | 4.84 |
MP | |
Before Election: | John Alexander |
Before Party: | Liberal |
After Election: | John Alexander |
After Party: | Liberal |
A by-election for the Australian House of Representatives seat of Bennelong was held on 16 December 2017.
Previous incumbent and Liberal candidate John Alexander won the by-election despite a 4.8 percentage point two-party swing to Labor candidate Kristina Keneally which made the seat marginal.
Amid the 2017–18 Australian parliamentary eligibility crisis, the trigger for the by-election was the resignation of Liberal incumbent John Alexander effective 11 November 2017. Following the increased media attention on the citizenship status of parliamentarians, Alexander asked British authorities for evidence of his British-born father renouncing British citizenship. They were unable to find any, leaving Alexander unable to demonstrate he was not a British citizen by descent, meaning he would be ineligible under Section 44 of the Constitution to sit in the Parliament of Australia.[1] Alexander subsequently renounced his British citizenship, in order to nominate for election again.
Speaker of the House of Representatives Tony Smith issued the writ for the election on 13 November 2017, the same day that Alexander submitted his resignation.[2]
As at least 33 days must elapse between the issue of a writ and the date of a by-election, the earliest Saturday that the by-election could take place was on 16 December.
12 candidates in ballot paper order[3] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | width=15% | Candidate | width=70% | Background | |
width=3pt | Liberty Alliance | Tony Robinson | Orthopaedic surgeon[4] | ||
width=3pt |
| Wesley Folitarik | Urban planner[5] | ||
width=3pt | Science | James Jansson | Entrepreneur[6] | ||
width=3pt | Liberal | John Alexander | Bennelong MP 2010−2017 and former professional tennis player[7] [8] | ||
width=3pt | Labor | Journalist, NSW state MP for Heffron 2003−2012 and 42nd Premier of New South Wales 2009−2011[9] [10] | |||
width=3pt | People's | James Platter | Former teacher, writer and former Army Reservist[11] | ||
width=3pt | Greens | Justin Alick | Overseas aid and sustainable development advocate[12] | ||
width=3pt | Affordable Housing | Anthony Ziebell | Software engineer and tenancy advocate[13] | ||
width=3pt | Non-Custodial Parents | Anthony Fels | Former member of the Western Australian Legislative Council | ||
width=3pt | Conservatives | Joram Richa | Manager and conservative activist[14] | ||
width=3pt | Christian Democrats | Gui Dong Cao | Pastor | ||
width=3pt | Progressives | Chris Golding | Former policy officer in the NSW Department of Primary Industries[15] | ||
Following the win by Barnaby Joyce in a similarly Section 44 triggered by-election in the Division of New England on 2 December 2017, the Liberal-National coalition maintained its one-seat majority in the Australian House of Representatives.[16] However, a loss in Bennelong would have left the government reliant on crossbench support. Given this unusual opportunity for an Opposition to destabilise the government's position in parliament outside of a general election, the Labor Party chose former New South Wales Premier Kristina Keneally as a high-profile candidate.[17]
In the months prior to the by-election, the 2017 Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey was conducted asking the question, "Should the law be changed to allow same-sex couples to marry?". Bennelong was among 12 of 47 federal electoral divisions in New South Wales and among 17 of 150 seats nationally to record a majority No response; with Yes on 49.8 percent and No on 50.2 percent, compared to the New South Wales result of Yes on 57.8 percent and No on 42.2 percent, and the national result of Yes on 61.6 percent and No on 38.4 percent. Parliament passed legislation to legalise same-sex marriage on 8 December 2017.[18] [19] [20]
On 12 December 2017, Labor Senator Sam Dastyari announced his intention to resign from the Australian Senate, after weeks of controversy over his links and interactions with Chinese donors.[21] Commentary deriving from Dastyari's statement was mixed, with some commentators signalling it might damage the Labor brand with voters right before they headed to the polls while others pointed to the large Chinese-Australian community in the electorate who might have got an impression that the government was pushing a "China-phobic narrative", given the pressure placed on Dastyari to resign in the weeks prior.[22]
On 14 December 2017, it was revealed that Liberal candidate John Alexander had failed the requirement to declare rental income to the parliamentary register of members' interests from his $1440-a-day 100-acre $4.8-million property in the New South Wales Southern Highlands which he had purchased in June 2017.[23] [24] [25]
See also: Electoral results for the Division of Bennelong.
+Bennelong by-election polling | ||||||||||
Date | Firm | Sample | Primary vote | Two-party vote | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LIB | ALP | GRN | OTH | LIB | ALP | |||||
2017 by-election | 45.0% | 35.8% | 6.8% | 12.4% | 54.9% | 45.1% | ||||
13–14 Dec 2017 | Galaxy[31] | 524 | 40% | 38% | 8% | 14% | 51% | 49% | ||
12 Dec 2017 | ReachTEL[32] | 819 | 41.3% | 36.3% | 7.5% | 14.9% | 53% | 47% | ||
9–10 Dec 2017 | Newspoll[33] | 529 | 39% | 39% | 9% | 13% | 50% | 50% | ||
16 Nov 2017 | ReachTEL[34] | 864 | 41.6% | 34.5% | 5.9% | 18.0% | 53% | 47% | ||
15 Nov 2017 | Galaxy | 579 | 42% | 39% | − | − | 50% | 50% | ||
2016 election | 50.4% | 28.5% | 9.1% | 12.0% | 59.7% | 40.3% |