Electoral district of Geraldton explained

Geraldton
State:wa
Lifespan:1890–present
Mp:Lara Dalton
Mp-Party:Labor
Namesake:Geraldton
Electors:26767
Electors Year:2021
Area:4229
Class:Provincial
Coordinates:-28.76°N 114.66°W
Near-N:Moore
Near-Ne:Moore
Near-Nw:Indian Ocean
Near-E:Moore
Near-W:Indian Ocean
Near-S:Moore
Near-Se:Moore
Near-Sw:Indian Ocean

Geraldton is an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of Western Australia.

Geraldton was one of the original 30 seats contested at the 1890 colonial election. The district is based on the eponymous regional city.

Labor held throughout most of the twentieth century, Geraldton has since become a seat that has changed hands regularly in the last two decades.

Geography

The district has always been based on the regional coastal city of Geraldton. Electoral reform ahead of the 2008 state election necessitated an increase in the district's enrolment and thus an expansion of its boundaries, as it did for all non-metropolitan districts. This means the district now includes all outlying suburbs of the city, as well as adjacent rural areas. The district's current boundaries are identical with the former City of Geraldton-Greenough, itself a newly formed local government area.

History

Geraldton changed hands frequently between different members and parties during the early history of the seat in the late 19th and early 20th century. After 1914 however, the seat was held by the Labor Party for all but three of the next 77 years. The seat's longest serving and most famous member was John Willcock, member from 1917 to 1947 and Premier of Western Australia from 1936 to 1945.

A fairly safe to safe Labor seat for much of the 20th century, it became somewhat less safe for Labor in the 1980s. The resignation of Labor member Jeff Carr following his sacking as minister in 1991 triggered a by-election that was won by the Liberal Party's Bob Bloffwitch, the seat's first non-Labor member in more than four decades. Bloffwitch held the seat at the subsequent 1993 state election, when the Liberal Party won government. The seat changed hands with the next change of government at the 2001 state election when Labor candidate Shane Hill was elected. Hill held the seat for two terms before Liberal Ian Blayney won it with a change of government at the 2008 state election. In fact the redistribution prior to that election had turned the seat into a notionally Liberal seat.

In 2013, Blayney seemingly consolidated his hold on the seat with Labor falling to third place behind the National Party. Blayney's margin was enough for him to narrowly overcome one of the biggest swings amid Labor's decisive victory at the subsequent election in 2017, with Labor's Lara Dalton paring back his margin from a seemingly insurmountable 22.8 percent to an extremely marginal 1.3 percent. Blayney's victory marked only the second time since World War I (Bloffwitch's 1991 by-election win being the first) that Labor had been in government without holding Geraldton. Blayney defected to the Nationals in 2019, but was heavily defeated by Dalton in 2021. Dalton actually won enough votes on the first count to take the seat outright.

Members for Geraldton

MemberPartyTerm
 Edward Vivien Harvey KeaneNon-aligned1890–1891
 George SimpsonOpposition1891–1899
 Richard RobsonIndependent1899–1900
 Robert HutchinsonOpposition1900–1904
 Henry CarsonMinisterial1904–1906
 Thomas BrownLabor1906–1908
 Henry CarsonMinisterial1908–1911
 Bronte DooleyLabor1911–1913
 Samuel ElliottLiberal1913–1914
 Edward HeitmannLabor1914–1917
 National Labor1917
 Samuel ElliottLiberal1917
 John WillcockLabor1917–1947
 Edmund HallCountry1947–1950
 Bill SewellLabor1950–1974
 Jeff CarrLabor1974–1991
 Bob BloffwitchLiberal1991–2001
 Shane HillLabor2001–2008
 Ian BlayneyLiberal2008–2019
 Independent2019
 National[1] 2019–2021
 Lara DaltonLabor2021–present

Election results

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

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nationals accept Geraldton MP Ian Blayney into fold after Liberal Party defection - ABC News.