Results of the 2022 Australian federal election in Tasmania explained

Election Name:2022 Australian federal election
(Tasmania)
Country:Tasmania
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:Results of the 2019 Australian federal election in Tasmania
Previous Year:2019
Seats For Election:All 5 Tasmanian seats in the Australian House of Representatives
and 6 seats in the Australian Senate
Election Date:21 May 2022
Party1:Australian Labor Party
Leader1:Anthony Albanese
Popular Vote1:95,322
Percentage1:27.26%
Swing1: 6.35
Last Election1:2 seats
Seats1:2
Party2:Liberal Party of Australia
Leader2:Scott Morrison
Popular Vote2:115,184
Percentage2:32.94%
Swing2: 2.31
Last Election2:2 seats
Seats2:2
1Blank:TPP
1Data1:54.33%
1Data2:45.67%
2Blank:TPP swing
2Data1: 1.63
2Data2: 1.63

This is a list of electoral division results for the 2022 Australian federal election in the state of Tasmania.

This election was held using instant-runoff voting. In Tasmania in this election, there was one "turn-over". In Lyons, a Labor candidate who did not lead in the first count took the seat in the end, albeit very marginally. The Liberal candidate finished first before the distribution of preferences.

Tasmania was unique at this election in that the Liberal Party, led by previous Prime Minister Scott Morrison, had an increased vote share, while the Labor Party, led by subsequent Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, had a decreased vote share.

Overall results

Party! style="width:70px;"
Votes%Swing (pp)SeatsChange (seats)
 Liberal Party of Australia115,18432.94+2.312
 Australian Labor Party95,32227.26−6.352
 Australian Greens41,97212.00+1.880
 Jacqui Lambie Network23,7306.79+6.790
 Pauline Hanson's One Nation13,9703.99+1.200
 United Australia Party6,4371.84−3.010
 Liberal Democratic Party5,0641.45+1.450
 Animal Justice Party4,7721.36+0.880
 Local Party4,2541.22+1.220
 Independent38,99311.50−1.841
Total349,6985
Invalid/blank votesalign=right 21,734 align=right 5.85 align=right +1.46 align=right align=right
Turnout align=right 371,432 align=right 92.43 align=right –1.91 align=right align=right
Registered voters align=right 401,852 align=right align=right align=right align=right
Two-party-preferred vote
 189,99354.33−1.63
 159,70545.67+1.63
Source: AEC for both votes and seats

Results by division

Lyons

Analysis

Unlike mainland Australia, Tasmania saw the Liberal Party perform better than they did at the last election (where they gained two seats from Labor).

Some have suggested that the Coalition's performance in Tasmania improved due to the state's own Liberal government, which has been in power since 2014 under Will Hodgman, Peter Gutwein and Jeremy Rockliff, with the latter being the incumbent. At the time of the election, there were only two states with Liberal or Coalition governments: New South Wales and Tasmania. Following the defeat of New South Wales' three-term-incumbent Coalition government in 2023 under Dominic Perrottet (which saw Labor returning to power in a minority government for the first time in 12 years), Tasmania is currently the only state or territory in Australia to have a Liberal government.

In the primary vote, Labor had a swing against them of 6.35%, receiving less than 100,000 first preference votes. This was also the biggest swing to or against a major party in any state or territory except Western Australia. The Coalition technically had a swing against them of 1.66% given the fact that both the Liberals and the Nationals fielded candidates in Tasmania at the last election, but the Liberal Party saw a swing to them of 2.31% due to the absence of the Nationals. Labor had swings against them in the primary vote in every Tasmanian seat. While the Liberals did have relatively small swings against them in the primary vote in the seats of Bass, Clark and Franklin, they had a swing of over 8% to them in Braddon and a swing of over 12% to them in Lyons.

The Liberal Party won the seats of Bass and Braddon with increased majorities. In the highly marginal seat of Bass, Liberal MP Bridget Archer broke its trend of flipping at each election and won a second term. Braddon, which was traditionally a marginal seat, returned incumbent MP Gavin Pearce with a greatly increased majority. Labor retained the seat of Franklin with an increased majority, but almost lost Lyons, where the Liberal Party had a higher first-preference vote than Labor. Independent Andrew Wilkie, who was first elected to Clark in 2010, retained the seat with an increased majority.

Tasmania was the only state where the Coalition had a swing to them in the two-party-preferred vote, while Labor had a swing against them.