Electoral district of Mundaring explained

Mundaring
State:wa
Lifespan:1974–1989
Namesake:Mundaring

Mundaring was an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of Western Australia from 1974 to 1989.

The district was located east of Perth.

History

First created for the 1974 state election, the district's first member was Labor's James Moiler, who had at that stage already served one term as the member for Toodyay. The district switched parties at the 1977 state election with the election of Liberal candidate Tom Herzfeld. Herzfeld served two terms in parliament before being defeated by 16 votes by Labor candidate Gavan Troy at the 1983 state election. The result was challenged in the Court of Disputed Returns and the election was declared void, but Troy won the resulting by-election by a larger margin, and went on to serve as a minister in the Burke, Dowding and Lawrence governments from 1986 until 1991.

Mundaring was abolished ahead of the 1989 state election and largely replaced by the new district of Swan Hills. Accordingly, Troy contested and won the new Swan Hills seat.

Members

MemberPartyTerm
 James MoilerLabor1974–1977
 Tom HerzfeldLiberal1977–1983
 Gavan TroyLabor1983–1989

Election results

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