Division of Melbourne Ports explained

Federal:yes
Melbourne Ports
Created:1901
Abolished:2019
Namesake:Port Melbourne
Electors:102283
Electors Year:2016
Area:40
Class:Inner metropolitan

The Division of Melbourne Ports was an Australian federal electoral division in the inner south-eastern suburbs of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It was located to the south of Melbourne's central business district and covered an area of approximately 40 km2 around the north and north-eastern shores of Port Phillip Bay.

The electorate was created at the time of Australian Federation in 1901 and was one of the original 65 divisions contested at the first federal election. It is named for the fact that, at the time of its creation, it was centred on Port Melbourne and Williamstown, both major ports.

The electorate, formerly working class, was much more demographically diverse on its final boundaries, with rapidly accelerating inner-city gentrification and high-density housing developments in later years. It included Port Melbourne, but also included a number of middle and upper middle class suburbs such as Albert Park, Balaclava, Caulfield, Elwood, Middle Park, Ripponlea, South Melbourne and St Kilda. It was notable for having one of Australia's larger Jewish populations, at 9.9%, much higher than the nationwide 0.4%. It also had a high proportion of atheists and agnostics, with 38.8% of residents answering "No Religion" in the 2016 census, compared to 30.1% nationwide.[1] It also had a large gay and lesbian community.

History

Melbourne Ports was held by the Australian Labor Party from 1906 until 2019, when it was renamed. During this period it was held by only five members, all men, most notably Jack Holloway, a minister who served under John Curtin and Ben Chifley; Frank Crean, Treasurer and then Deputy Prime Minister in the Whitlam government; and Clyde Holding, a minister in the Hawke government who prior to switching to federal politics had served as Victorian Opposition Leader from 1967 to 1977.

Originally, it was anchored in the industrial suburbs in the west of the electorate, which are part of Labor's heartland in west Melbourne. On those boundaries, for decades it was one of the safest Labor seats in the country, and Labor usually easily retained it even when Labor was heavily defeated nationally. The only times Labor's hold on the seat was even remotely threatened during this era came in 1975 and 1977; even then, Labor's primary vote was enough to retain the seat outright.

After it was extended eastwards to Caulfield and other Liberal-voting areas in the 1990 redistribution, it became much less secure for Labor. Continuing the gradual downwards trend in the Labor primary vote, in the 2013 election, Labor was returned with a primary vote of less than 32 percent. In 2016, Labor actually suffered a primary vote swing of four percent and a two-party swing of two percent even as it nearly reduced the Coalition to minority government nationally.

In 2018, the Australian Electoral Commission proposed renaming Melbourne Ports as Macnamara, after medical scientist Dame Jean Macnamara.[2] The new name was gazetted on 13 July 2018, and was first used at the 2019 federal election.[3]

Members

ImageMemberPartyTermNotes
 Samuel Mauger
Protectionistnowrap 29 March 1901
12 December 1906
Previously held the Victorian Legislative Assembly seat of Footscray. Transferred to the Division of Maribyrnong
 James Mathews
Labornowrap 12 December 1906
27 November 1931
Retired
 Jack Holloway
nowrap 19 December 1931
19 March 1951
Previously held the Division of Flinders. Served as minister under Curtin, Forde and Chifley. Retired
 Frank Crean
nowrap 28 April 1951
10 November 1977
Previously held the Victorian Legislative Assembly seat of Prahran. Served as minister and Deputy Prime Minister under Whitlam. Retired
 Clyde Holding
nowrap 10 December 1977
31 August 1998
Previously held the Victorian Legislative Assembly seat of Richmond. Served as minister under Hawke. Retired
 Michael Danby
nowrap 3 October 1998
11 April 2019
Retired after Melbourne Ports was abolished in 2019

Election results

See main article: Electoral results for the Division of Melbourne Ports.

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2016 Census QuickStats: Melbourne Ports . 28 August 2017 . 28 August 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170828103136/http://www.censusdata.abs.gov.au/census_services/getproduct/census/2016/quickstat/CED232?opendocument . live .
  2. News: Victoria gets new seat named after Malcolm Fraser, ACT gains one called Bean. 6 April 2018. ABC News. 6 April 2018. en-AU. 6 April 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180406041331/http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-04-06/federal-electoral-boundaries-redrawn-victoria-act/9626486. live.
  3. Web site: Profile of the electoral division of Macnamara (Vic). 21 September 2018. 9 August 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180809060229/https://www.aec.gov.au/profiles/vic/macnamara.htm. live.