Electoral district of Cheltenham explained

Cheltenham
State:sa
Image Alt:Map of Adelaide, South Australia with electoral district of Cheltenham highlighted
Created:1998
Mp:Joe Szakacs
Namesake:Cheltenham
Electors:26403
Electors Year:2019
Area:17.49
Class:Metropolitan
Coordinates:-34.8783°N 138.5253°W
Near-Nw:Port Adelaide
Near-N:Port Adelaide
Near-Ne:Port Adelaide
Near-E:Croydon
Near-Se:West Torrens
Near-S:West Torrens
Near-Sw:Colton
Near-W:Lee
Footnotes:Electoral District map[1]

Cheltenham is a single-member electoral district for the South Australian House of Assembly. Named after the suburb of the same name, it is a 17.5 km² suburban electorate in Adelaide's north-west, taking in the suburbs of Albert Park, Alberton, Beverley, Cheltenham, Findon, Hendon, Pennington, Queenstown, St Clair, Woodville, Woodville North, Woodville Park, Woodville South, Woodville West, and part of Rosewater. The Cheltenham electorate is inside the federal-level electorate of Hindmarsh.

Cheltenham was created in the 1998 electoral distribution as a safe Labor seat, replacing the abolished seat of Price. In August 2001 the 17-year Price incumbent Murray De Laine was defeated in a factional preselection in favour of future premier Jay Weatherill.[2] De Laine subsequently contested the 2002 election as an independent with 9.7% of the primary vote.

In the 2016 electoral boundary redistribution, the suburbs of Beverley and Woodville Park were added to the seat from Croydon district, while Athol Park was lost to Croydon district, Royal Park was lost to Lee district and portions of Port Adelaide and Rosewater shifted into Port Adelaide district.

The current member is Joe Szakacs of the Labor Party. Szakacs was elected in the 2019 Cheltenham state by-election on 9 February, replacing former premier Jay Weatherill.[3]

Members for Cheltenham

MemberPartyTerm
  2002–2018
  2019–present

Election results

See main article: Electoral results for the district of Cheltenham.

References

Notes and References

  1. Electoral District of Cheltenham . . 2018 . 1 April 2018 .
  2. http://www.abc.net.au/pm/stories/s347015.htm Costly Labor factions in South Australia: ABC 15 August 2001
  3. Web site: Cheltenham and Enfield by-elections: ECSA . 21 January 2019 . 21 January 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190121232620/https://ecsa.sa.gov.au/elections/cheltenham-and-enfield-by-elections?view=article&id=1036 . dead .