Results of the 2019 Australian federal election in New South Wales explained

Election Name:2019 Australian federal election
(New South Wales)
Country:New South Wales
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:Results of the 2016 Australian federal election in New South Wales
Previous Year:2016
Next Election:Results of the 2022 Australian federal election in New South Wales
Next Year:2022
Seats For Election:All 47 New South Wales seats in the Australian House of Representatives
and 6 seats in the Australian Senate
Election Date:18 May 2019
Party1:Liberal/National coalition
Leader1:Scott Morrison
Popular Vote1:1,930,426
Percentage1:42.54%
Swing1: 0.22
Last Election1:23 seats
Seats1:22 seats
Seat Change1: 1
Party2:Australian Labor Party
Leader2:Bill Shorten
Popular Vote2:1,568,223
Percentage2:34.56%
Swing2: 2.37
Last Election2:24 seats
Seats2:24 seats
1Blank:TPP
1Data1:51.78%
1Data2:48.22%
2Blank:TPP swing
2Data1: 1.25
2Data2: 1.25

This is a list of electoral division results for the 2019 Australian federal election in the state of New South Wales.[1]

This election was held using instant-runoff voting. At this election, there were two "turn-overs" in New South Wales. Labor won the seat of Macquarie despite the Liberals finishing first, as well as the seat of Richmond despite the Nationals finishing first.

Overall results

PartyVotes%SwingSeatsChange
Liberal/National Coalition
  Liberal Party of Australia1,461,56032.21−0.4715 1
 National Party of Australia468,86610.33+0.697
Coalition total1,930,42642.54+0.2222 1
 Australian Labor Party1,568,22334.56−2.3724
 Australian Greens395,2388.71−0.24
 United Australia Party153,4773.38+3.38
 Christian Democratic Party97,5132.15−1.74
 Pauline Hanson's One Nation59,4641.31+0.68
 Animal Justice Party29,9810.66+0.19
 Sustainable Australia27,3990.60+0.59
 Liberal Democratic Party19,2910.43−0.03
 Shooters, Fishers and Farmers Party18,1290.40+0.32
 Science Party10,7910.24−0.10
 Fraser Anning's Conservative National Party7,6540.17+0.17
 Australian Better Families2,0720.05+0.05
 Australian Workers Party1,6760.04+0.04
 Socialist Equality Party1,3890.030.00
 Australia First Party1,3720.03−0.04
 Non-Custodial Parents Party (Equal Parenting)1,2130.03−0.05
 Involuntary Medication Objectors1,1790.03+0.03
 The Great Australian Party1,0860.02+0.02
 Independent209,7634.62+0.681 1
Total4,537,33647
Two-party-preferred vote
 Liberal/National Coalition2,349,64151.78+1.25 1
 Labor2,187,69548.22−1.25
Invalid/blank votes342,051 7.01 +0.84
Registered voters/turnout 5,294,468 92.16 +0.67
Source: AEC Tally Room

Results by division

Wentworth

Malcolm Turnbull (Liberal) had won the seat at the 2016 election, however he resigned in 2018 and Kerryn Phelps (Independent) won the seat at the resulting by-election.

Whitlam

Notes and References

  1. Web site: First preferences by party - NSW . AEC Tally Room . Australian Electoral Commission . 19 May 2019.