Electoral district of Monaro explained

Monaro
State:nsw
Lifespan:1856–1920
1927–present
Mp:Steve Whan
Mp-Party:Labor
Namesake:Monaro Region
Electors:56951
Electors Year:2019
Area:20479.02
Class:Rural
Near-N:Goulburn
Near-Ne:Kiama
Near-Nw:Goulburn
Near-E:South Coast
Bega
Near-W:ACT
Wagga Wagga
Albury
Near-S:Victoria
Near-Se:Victoria
Near-Sw:Victoria

Monaro, also known as Maneroo (1856–1858), Monara (1858–1879) and Manaro (1894–1904) is an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of New South Wales. It is currently represented by Steve Whan of the Labor party since the 2023 New South Wales state election.

Monaro is a regional district in the south of the state. It encompasses the Queanbeyan–Palerang Regional Council and Snowy Monaro Regional Council. Its significant population centres include Queanbeyan, Bungendore, Braidwood, Cooma, Bombala, Captains Flat, Nimmitabel, Delegate, Bredbo, Michelago, Berridale, Jindabyne and Adaminaby.[1]

History

The electorate was created in 1856 for the First Parliament under the name Maneroo, derived from an Aboriginal name for the area, now spelt Monaro. It was renamed Monara for the second Parliament in February 1858. The spelling was changed to Monaro from 1877 until 1894. It elected two members between 1880 and 1894. In 1894, single-member electorates were introduced statewide and part of the electorate, (including Bombala), was absorbed into Eden-Bombala. At this time the spelling was changed to Manaro. The 1903 New South Wales referendum required the number of members of the Legislative Assembly to be reduced from 125 to 90,[2] the district was expanded to include parts of Queanbeyan and the abolished seat of Eden-Bombala and the spelling reverted to Monaro.[3] In 1913, it absorbed much of the electoral district of Queanbeyan, including Queanbeyan, which is its major city. In 1920, with the introduction of proportional representation, it was absorbed into Goulburn, along with Bega. It was recreated in 1927.

Nationals member Nichole Overall made history in 2022 by being elected as the first female representative of the Monaro. Overall's husband was previously mayor of the City of Queanbeyan.

Members for Monaro

First incarnation (1858–1920)
1856–1880, 1 member
MemberPartyTerm
 Daniel EganNone1856–1859
 Alexander HamiltonNone1859–1860
 Thomas GarrettNone1860–1864
 James MartinNone1864–1865
 William GrahameNone1865–1869
 Daniel EganNone1870–1870
 James HartNone1870–1872
 William GrahameNone1872–1874
 Alexander MontagueNone1875–1877
 John MurphyNone1877–1880
1880–1894, 2 members
MemberPartyTermMemberPartyTerm
 Henry BadgeryNone1880–1885 Robert ToothNone1880–1884
 David RyrieNone1884–1885
 Henry DawsonNone1885–1887 Harold StephenNone1885–1887
 1887–1894 Thomas O'Mara1887–1889
 Harold Stephen1889–1889
 Gus Miller1889–1894
1894–1920, 1 member
MemberPartyTerm
 Gus Miller1894–1901
 1901–1918
 John Bailey1918–1920
 
Second incarnation (1927–present)
1927–present 1 member
MemberPartyTerm
 William Hedges1927–1941
 John Seiffert1941–1950
 1950–1953
 1953–1965
 Steve Mauger1965–1976
 John Akister1976–1988
 Peter Cochran1988–1999
 Peter Webb1999–2003
 Steve Whan2003–2011
 John Barilaro2011–2021
 Nichole Overall2022–2023
 Steve Whan2023–present

Election results

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

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Monaro . . 23 November 2019.
  2. Web site: 1904 Redistribution . Atlas of New South Wales . NSW Land & Property Information . https://web.archive.org/web/20150623031821/http://www.atlas.nsw.gov.au/public/nsw/home/topic/article/1904-redistribution.html . 23 June 2015 . dead.
  3. News: Notice of final electoral districts . . 227 . 22 April 1904 . 10 December 2019 . 3251 . Trove.