Electoral district of Adelaide explained

Adelaide
State:sa
Image Alt:Map of Adelaide, South Australia with electoral district of Adelaide highlighted
Created:1902
Mp:Lucy Hood
Mp-Party:Labor Party
Namesake:Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen
Electors:27331
Electors Year:2022
Area:22.84
Class:Metropolitan
Coordinates:-34.9078°N 138.6014°W
Near-Nw:Croydon
Near-N:Enfield
Near-Ne:Torrens
Near-E:Dunstan
Near-Se:Unley
Near-S:Unley
Near-Sw:Badcoe
Near-W:West Torrens
Footnotes:Electoral District map[1]

Adelaide is a single-member electoral district for the South Australian House of Assembly. The 22.8 km² state seat of Adelaide currently consists of the Adelaide city centre including North Adelaide and suburbs to the inner north and inner north east: Collinswood, Fitzroy, Gilberton, Medindie, Medindie Gardens, Ovingham, Thorngate, Walkerville, most of Prospect, and part of Nailsworth. The federal division of Adelaide covers the state seat of Adelaide and additional suburbs in each direction.

The electorate's name comes from the city which it encompasses, which is named after the British queen Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen.

History

The six-seat multi-member electoral district of City of Adelaide existed from 1857 to 1862.

The four-member electoral district of Adelaide was created by the Constitution Act Amendment Act, 1901 for the 1902 election from the districts of East Adelaide, West Adelaide and North Adelaide; together with the three-member Port Adelaide and five-member Torrens, the three districts with a total of 12-members covered the whole of the metropolitan area in the 42 member house.[2] The district had four members through to 1915.

Adelaide became a three-member district from the 1915 election, and then changed from a multi-member to single-member district upon the introduction of the Playmander from the 1938 election.[3]

For most of the next half-century, the electorate was comfortably safe for the Labor Party. A significant redistribution in 1983 saw the Labor two-party vote reduced from 66 percent to 47 percent, transforming it into a notional marginal Liberal electorate. However, Labor retained the seat at the 1985 election, albeit as the most marginal seat in parliament. Liberal Michael Armitage narrowly took the seat at the 1989 election – the first time that they or their predecessors, the Liberal and Country League, had won it in its single-member incarnation. The highest Liberal vote in Adelaide occurred at the landslide 1993 election, with the Liberal two-party vote rising to a safe 64.1 percent. However, it once again became a marginal Liberal seat at the 1997 election.

After the redistribution ahead of the 2002 election made the electorate even more marginal, Armitage tried to transfer to the safer Liberal electorate of Bragg, but lost a preselection battle to Vickie Chapman. Labor candidate Jane Lomax-Smith regained the seat for Labor at the 2002 election as a marginal seat, one of two gains that assisted Labor in forming government. It became a safe Labor seat at the landslide 2006 election on a 60.2 percent two-party vote, before the Liberals won Adelaide for the second time at the 2010 election on a two-party swing of over 14 percent, turning it from safe Labor to marginal Liberal. Despite a −1.8 percent two-party swing, the Liberals retained Adelaide at the 2014 election on a 52.4 percent two-party vote.

The 2016 electoral redistribution added the rest of Collinswood to the electorate, and moved the electorate's northern boundary from Regency Road to several blocks south of Regency Road, removing a significant amount of northern Prospect. This increased the Liberal margin from 2.4 percent to an estimated 3.0 percent. The draft of the 2016 Redistribution Report had proposed moving the Liberal-voting suburbs of Walkerville and Gilberton to a neighbouring electorate, but Liberal incumbent Rachel Sanderson proceeded with a concerted campaign, organising the mass letter-box distribution of a pro forma document in the two suburbs, which aimed for residents to use the pro forma document to submit their objection to the commission. Of a record 130 total submissions received in response to the overall draft redistribution, over three-quarters (about 100) were from the two letter-boxed suburbs, Walkerville and Gilberton, which resulted in the proposal not appearing in the final redistribution.[4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10]

Although Sanderson suffered a further 2.0 percent two-party swing, she narrowly retained Adelaide at the 2018 election with a 51.0 percent two-party vote. With the Liberals winning government after 16 years in opposition, Adelaide became the government's second most marginal seat, behind only King. The Greens achieved their highest vote in an electorate at the 2018 election in Adelaide.[11]

Sanderson was defeated at the 2022 South Australian state election by Labor’s Lucy Hood.[12]

Members for Adelaide

Four-member electorate (1902–1915)
MemberPartyTermMemberPartyTermMemberPartyTermMemberPartyTerm
 Lewis CohenNational League1902–1906 Bill DennyIndependent liberal1902–1905 Hugh Dixson1902–1905 Theodor Scherk1902–1905
 William David PonderLabor1905–1915 Ernest RobertsLabor1905–1908 James Zimri SellarLabor1905–1906
 Bill DennyLabor1906–1915
  Reginald BlundellLabor1907–1915
  Edward Alfred AnsteyLabor1908–1915
Three-member electorate (1915–1938)
MemberPartyTermMemberPartyTermMemberPartyTerm
 Bill DennyLabor1915–1933 Reginald BlundellLabor1915–1917 John GunnLabor1915–1917
 National1917–1918 Bert EdwardsLabor1917–1931
 John GunnLabor1918–1926
 Herbert GeorgeLabor1926–1933
 Parliamentary Labor1931–1933  Martin CollatonLang Labor1931–1932
  Labor1932–1933
 Doug BardolphLang Labor1933–1934 Bob DaleLang Labor1933–1933 Tom HowardLang Labor1933–1933
 SA Lang Labor1933–1934 SA Lang Labor1933–1934
 Labor1934–1935 Labor1934–1938 Labor1934–1938
 Independent1935–1938
MemberPartyTerm
  1938–1944
  1944–1947
  1947–1950
  1950–1971
  1971–1985
  1985–1989
  1989–2002
  2002–2010
  2010–2022
  Lucy Hood2022–present

Election results

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

References

Notes and References

  1. Electoral District of Adelaide . . 2018 . 1 April 2018 .
  2. Web site: Parliamentary Electorates . 5 April 1902 . The Adelaide Chronicle . 33 . Trove.
  3. Web site: Statistical Record of the Legislature 1836 to 2009 . Parliament of South Australia . 29 November 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190311113513/http://www.parliament.sa.gov.au/AboutParliament/From1836/Documents/StatisticalRecordoftheLegislature1836to20093.pdf . 11 March 2019 . dead .
  4. Web site: Submissions – (Downloadable list of all 130 submissions to the 2016 Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission) . Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission .
  5. News: Adelaide residents compared to 'Hyacinth Bucket' for lashing out at proposed electoral shift . . Australia . 22 September 2016 .
  6. News: Patrician burghers of Adelaide lament: 'Won't someone think of the rotary clubs?' . InDaily . 22 September 2016 .
  7. News: Libs' last-ditch bid for "electoral fairness" . InDaily . 28 September 2016 .
  8. News: MPs make submissions into South Australian boundary changes . The Advertiser . 22 September 2016 .
  9. Web site: 2016 Draft Report . PDF . Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission . 15 August 2016 .
  10. Web site: 2016 Final Report . PDF . Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission . 8 December 2016 .
  11. http://www.abc.net.au/news/elections/sa-election-2018/guide/adel/ Adelaide
  12. Web site: Adelaide (Key Seat) - SA Electorate, Candidates, Results. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.