Electoral district of Napier explained

Napier
State:sa
Image Alt:Map of Adelaide, South Australia with electoral district of Napier highlighted
Created:1977
Abolished:2018
Namesake:Thomas Napier
Electors:23,653
Electors Year:2014
Area:156.1
Class:Metropolitan
Coordinates:-34.6964°N 138.7519°W

Napier was an electorate in the South Australian Legislative Assembly[1] in the outer northern suburbs of the Adelaide metropolitan area, including the suburbs of Blakeview, Davoren Park, Elizabeth Downs, Evanston South, Kudla, Munno Para, Smithfield and Smithfield Plains, parts of Craigmore, Evanston Park and Munno Para Downs; as well as semi-rural Bibaringa, One Tree Hill, Sampson Flat, Uleybury and Yattalunga, and part of Humbug Scrub.

Napier was named after Sir Mellis Napier, who was Chief Justice of South Australia for 25 years and a total of 43 years in the Supreme Court.

Though typically a safe Labor seat, at the 1993 election landslide Napier was Labor's most marginal seat on a 1.1 percent margin.

Napier ceased to exist at the 2018 state election.[2] because of a redistribution in 2016. Some of the more central urbanized area of Napier east of the Main North Road was merged with Little Para which was renamed Elizabeth. The portion west of Main North Road was transferred to Taylor and Light. The eastern rural portions became part of King, which the Boundaries Commission reported as the renaming of Napier. The last member for Napier, Jon Gee, transferred to Taylor.

Members for Napier

MemberPartyTerm
 Terry HemmingsLabor1977–1993
 Annette HurleyLabor1993–2002
 Michael O'BrienLabor2002–2014
 Jon GeeLabor2014–2018

Election results

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

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Statistical Record of the Legislature, 1836 - 2007 . Parliament of South Australia . 26 January 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190311113513/http://www.parliament.sa.gov.au/AboutParliament/From1836/Documents/StatisticalRecordoftheLegislature1836to20093.pdf . 11 March 2019 . dead .
  2. Web site: Final Redistribution Report . South Australian Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission . 8 December 2016.