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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{future election}}
{{short description|State election for New South Wales, Australia in March 2007}}
{| class="toccolours" align="right" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="2" style="margin-left: .5em; margin-top: .4em; margin-bottom: 0.4em; font-size: 90%;"
{{Use Australian English|date=June 2020}}
|-
{{Infobox election
! style="text-weight: bold; font-size: 110%;"| 2007 state election major party leaders
| election_name = 2007 New South Wales state election
|-
| country = New South Wales
| valign="top" style="padding-top: 5px; text-align: center; border: solid 1px red;"|]<br />
| type = parliamentary
'''Labor'''<br />
| ongoing = no
''']'''<br />
'''Premier of New South Wales'''<br /> | previous_election = 2003 New South Wales state election
| previous_year = 2003
'''Parliament''': 15 years<br />
| next_election = 2011 New South Wales state election
'''Leader since''': 2005<br />
| next_year = 2011
'''Division''': ]
| seats_for_election = All 93 seats in the ]<br />and ] in the ]<br /><small>47 Assembly seats were needed for a majority</small>
|-
| election_date = {{Start date|df=yes|2007|03|24}}
| style="padding-top: 5px; text-align: center; border: solid 1px #06c;"|]<br />

'''Liberal'''<br />
<!-- Labor -->
''']'''<br />
| image1 = ]
'''Opposition leader'''<br />
| leader1 = ]
'''Parliament''': 12 years<br />
| leader_since1 = 3 August 2005
'''Leader since''': 2005<br />
| party1 = Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch)
'''Division''': ]
| leaders_seat1 = ]
|}
| popular_vote1 = '''1,535,872'''
'''Elections''' to to the 54th ] of ] will be held on Saturday, ] ]. The entire ] and half of the ] will be up for election.
| percentage1 = '''38.98%'''
| swing1 = {{decrease}} 3.70
| last_election1 = 55 seats
| seats_before1 = 54 seats
| seats1 = '''52 seats'''
| seat_change1 = {{decrease}} 2

<!-- Liberal/National coalition -->
| image2 = ]
| leader2 = ]
| leader_since2 = 1 September 2005
| party2 = Liberal/National coalition
| leaders_seat2 = ]
| popular_vote2 = 1,457,296
| percentage2 = 36.99%
| swing2 = {{increase}} 2.63
| last_election2 = 32 seats
| seats_before2 = 30 seats
| seats2 = 35 seats
| seat_change2 = {{increase}} 5

<!-- TPP % -->
| 1blank = ]
| 1data1 = '''52.26%'''
| 1data2 = 47.74%
| 2blank = ] swing
| 2data1 = {{decrease}} 3.92
| 2data2 = {{increase}} 3.92

<!-- Map -->
| map_image = 2007 New South Wales state election.svg
| map_size = 400px
| map_caption = Two-candidate-preferred margin by electorate


| title = ]
The election will see the ] seek a fourth consecutive term in office, and will be the first election since both major parties changed leaders in 2005. ], a former union official, leads Labor while ], a former businessman and naval officer, leads the ].
| before_election = ]
| before_party = Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch)
| posttitle = Elected ]
| after_election = ]
| after_party = Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch)
}}


The '''2007 New South Wales state election''' was held on Saturday, 24 March 2007. The entire ] and half of the ] was up for election. The ] led by ] won a fourth four-year term against the ]-] coalition led by ].
Economic management and infrastructure—in particular roads and water—have been identified as the key issues in the campaign. Labor goes to the polls with a commanding lead in terms of seats and poll numbers, but has been hampered by a string of scandals and the state's lacklustre economic performance. Liberal leader Peter Debnam is widely seen as not yet having made any real impact with voters.

Labor's substantial majority survived the election almost intact going from a large 15 seat majority to a marginally decreased if still sizeable 11 seat majority. The Liberals succeeded in taking two independent-held seats and one Labor-held seat, whilst the Nationals and an independent each took one Labor-held seat. This would be NSW Labor's last state election win until ] It also remains the most recent contest in which NSW Labor formed a majority government.


==Campaign== ==Campaign==
{{main|New South Wales state election campaign, 2007}}
]The government is campaigning on the basis of its plan to secure Sydney's dwindling water supply and attacking the opposition over its plans to cut 20,000 public service jobs and hand industrial relations powers to the Australian Government. The opposition is campaigning on economic management and attacking the government over recent scandals and on road and water infrastructure. Both sides have pledged to increase police numbers.
Labor, running on the slogan "More to do, but we're heading in the right direction," heavily outspent the Liberals, whose slogan was "Let's fix NSW." Though water and infrastructure emerged as key issues in the campaign, much of the parties' advertising focused on the negatives: Debnam's business record and Labor's record in office.


The media concluded that the choice facing voters was in finding the lesser of two evils: the three major newspapers sold in New South Wales endorsed Debnam, though not without criticising his ineptitude on the campaign trail.
To a large extent, the campaign has been overshadowed by scandals involving a number of Labor MPs. Aboriginal Affairs minister ] was charged with over 30 drug and child sex offences in November 2006 and may appear in court during the election campaign. Macquarie Fields MP ] was forced to resign after being convicted of assaulting his girlfriend in January 2007. In October 2006, Police minister ] was forced to quit after repeatedly misleading parliament. The ''Sydney Morning Herald'' greeted Chaytor's conviction with the headline "Labor: the guilty party", an echo of the ] slogan used against the scandal-plagued ] in ] in ].


The result was widely perceived as a foregone conclusion, with opposition leader Peter Debnam conceding as much the week before the poll. Opinion polls consistently put Labor ahead in terms of voting intention and preferred premier.
Peter Debnam, opposition leader, was criticised from both sides of politics for using ] to claim that ] is to blame for recent violent incidents such as the recent clash between 150 ] and ] at the 2007 ] ] tournament in ], as well as the ] in ].


The ALP would eventually lose government at the next election in a landslide defeat in 2011. There has been a view that the party would have suffered a less worse defeat if it had lost government at the 2007 election.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://inside.org.au/how-labor-lost-new-south-wales/|title = How Labor lost New South Wales|date = 29 April 2012}}</ref>
=== Coalition campaign ===
The Coalition campaign began in November 2006 in the wake of a series of scandals involving government ministers, notably ] and ]. Opposition Leader Peter Debnam used print, television and internet media to address voters with the message that "when something is rotten to the core, there is no choice but to get rid of it." The campaign avoided mentioning the scandals specifically, but suggested that the government was distracted from the economic issues and maintaining the state's infrastructure.<ref>Debnam, Peter. When something is rotten, it's rotten. Press ad. </ref>


== Electoral system ==
On ] ], Debnam launched "Get NSW back in front", a campaign designed to remind voters of the state's declining economic performance relative to the other states. The ''Sydney Morning Herald'' quipped that "with the Coalition trailing in the polls, it may equally refer to the Opposition Leader's prospects ... The tour began inauspiciously."<ref> Andrew Clennell and Alan Mascarenhas. Debnam off in race of his life. ''Sydney Morning Herald'' </ref>
{{main|Electoral systems of the Australian states and territories#New South Wales}}


The ] has 93 members elected for four-year terms using ], a form of ]. The voting system is the same as for the ] except that New South Wales has ''optional preferential voting''. This means that while voters may number every candidate if they wish, their vote is still formal if they choose not to. They may vote for one candidate only, or for as many candidates as they choose, provided that they number them in correct sequence.
The "Back in front" tour was marred by allegations that Labor and trade union protesters sent to shadow the campaign jostled the Opposition Leader's wife. On the same day that Labor MP Stephen Chaytor was convicted of assaulting his ex-girlfriend, Debnam told the premier "Mr Iemma, make sure your union thugs stay away from my wife and from my team."


The ] has 42 members who serve eight year terms, one-half of the body being elected every four years. The Council uses the ] method, a form of preferential voting for use with ]. As for the Assembly, the numbering of preferences is optional.
=== Labor campaign ===
The government stepped up its advertising expenditure in the months before the official campaign begins. The November 2006 ] was heavily promoted. "Every day on television now the citizens of NSW can watch their dollars being wasted on advertisements touting the State Plan - advertisements which are neither helpful nor informative, but mere propaganda," the ''Sydney Morning Herald'' wrote, slamming what it called "this blatant use of taxpayers' money to spread a message which advantages only the Labor Party."


After each election, the ], appoints a member of the Legislative Assembly to the position of ]. By convention, the party leader with the largest bloc of votes in the Assembly, is chosen.
Further controversy surrounded changes to arrangements for the opening of the new ], the long-awaited 'missing link' in the city's orbital motorway. The toll road will open one month from election day, and trips until that date will be toll-free. Planned road changes, designed to funnel traffic into the tunnel, will be delayed until well after the election—at an additional cost to taxpayers of $25 million.


==Legislative Assembly==
The ''Herald'' described the payment as a "bribe" and a "political rort". According to a ''Herald'' editorial, "The use of public funds to compensate Connector Motorways for delays to road changes around the tunnel is ... as cynical a piece of political jobbery as Sydney has seen in many a long year."
Government is formed in the ], the lower house of Parliament. The seats for this election resulted from the boundary redistribution conducted in 2004, which did not change the number of seats notionally held by each party.


=== Results ===
Labor launched a website, , to highlight negative aspects of the Opposition Leader and his record. The site attacks plans to cut 20,000 workers from the state bureaucracy and to refer the state's recently diminished industrial relations powers to the federal government. The site claims that the Coalition has made $26 billion in unfunded promises and that Debnam himself has "a record of business failures." The site also reminds visitors that Debnam represents Vaucluse, an electorate covering some of Sydney's richest suburbs.
{{Main|Results of the 2007 New South Wales state election (Legislative Assembly)}}
<section begin=Results />
{{Election results
|electorate=4374029
|image=]
|invalid=112152
|turnoutsw={{increase}} 1.04
|invalidsw={{increase}} 0.14
|party1=]
|colour1=#f00011
|votes1=1535872
|sw1={{decrease}} 3.81
|seats1=52
|sc1={{decrease}} 2
|party2=]
|colour2=#080cab
|votes2=1061273
|sw2={{increase}} 2.14
|seats2=22
|sc2={{increase}} 4
|party3=]
|colour3=#008000
|votes3=396023
|sw3={{increase}} 0.39
|seats3=13
|sc3={{increase}} 1
|party5=]
|colour5=#10c25b
|votes5=352805
|sw5={{increase}} 0.68
|seats5=0
|sc5={{steady}}
|party4=]
|votes4=361866
|sw4={{increase}} 0.97
|seats4=6
|sc4={{decrease}} 2
|party6=]
|colour6=#800080
|votes6=97420
|sw6={{increase}} 0.74
|seats6=0
|sc6={{steady}}
|party7=]
|colour7=#cd5700
|votes7=43292
|sw7={{decrease}} 0.20
|seats7=0
|sc7={{steady}}
|party8=]
|votes8=21099
|sw8={{decrease}} 0.40
|seats8=0
|sc8={{steady}}
|party9=Others
|votes9=81927
|sw9=0.77
|seats9=0
|sc9={{steady}}
|embedded={{Election results
|embed=y
|header1=]
|party2=]
|colour2=#f00011
|votes2=1788142
|sw2={{decrease}} 3.92
|party3=]/]
|colour3=#05557c
|votes3=1633381
|sw3={{increase}} 3.92
}}
|source=
}}


== Electoral System ==
:''See main article: ]
The ] consists of 93 members, elected in ] ] by optional preferential ].


{{bar box<includeonly>|float=right</includeonly>|title=Popular vote|titlebar=#ddd|width=600px|barwidth=410px|bars=
The ] consists of 42 members, elected at large by optional preferential ], with 21 elected at each election to serve two Legislative Assembly terms.
{{bar percent|Labor|{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}|38.98}}
{{bar percent|Liberal|{{party color|Liberal Party of Australia}}|26.94}}
{{bar percent|National|{{party color|National Party of Australia}}|10.05}}
{{bar percent|Independent|{{party color|Independent (politician)}}|9.18}}
{{bar percent|Greens|{{party color|Australian Greens}}|8.95}}
{{bar percent|Christian Democrats|{{party color|Christian Democratic Party (Australia)}}|2.47}}
{{bar percent|Unity|#cd5700|0.90}}
{{bar percent|Democrats|{{party color|Australian Democrats}}|0.54}}
{{bar percent|Others|#303030|1.99}}
{{ bar box break | titlebar=#ddd | title=Two-party-preferred vote }}
{{bar percent|Labor|{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}|52.26}}
{{bar percent|Coalition|{{party color|Coalition (Australia)}}|47.74}}
{{ bar box break | titlebar=#ddd | title=Parliamentary seats }}
{{bar percent|Labor|{{party color|Australian Labor Party}}|55.91}}
{{bar percent|Liberal|{{party color|Liberal Party of Australia}}|23.66}}
{{bar percent|National|{{party color|National Party of Australia}}|13.98}}
{{bar percent|Independent|{{party color|Independent (politician)}}|6.45}}
}}
<section end=Results />


==Legislative Council==
Terms are fixed at four years, with elections being held in late March.
{{see also|Results of the 2007 New South Wales state election (Legislative Council)}}
{{Election results
|electorate=4374029
|invalid=247921
|turnoutsw={{increase}} 0.78
|invalidsw={{increase}} 0.77
|image=]
|seattype1=Not up
|seattype2=Seats won
|seattype3=Seats Total
|party1=]
|colour1=#f00011
|votes1=1491719
|sw1={{decrease}} 4.40
|st1t1=10
|st2t1=9
|st3t1=19
|party2=]/] ]
|colour2=#05557c
|votes2=1304166
|sw2={{increase}} 0.92
|st1t2=7
|st2t2=8
|st3t2=15
|party3=]
|colour3=#10c25b
|votes3=347548
|sw3={{increase}} 0.52
|st1t3=2
|st2t3=2
|st3t3=4
|party4=]
|votes4=168545
|sw4={{increase}} 1.39
|st1t4=1
|st2t4=1
|st3t4=2
|party5=]
|votes5=106513
|sw5={{increase}} 0.74
|st1t5=1
|st2t5=1
|st3t5=2
|party6=]
|votes6=67994
|sw6={{decrease}} 0.21
|st1t6=0
|st2t6=0
|st3t6=0
|party7=]
|votes7=62386
|sw7={{increase}} 0.74
|st1t7=0
|st2t7=0
|st3t7=0
|party8=]
|colour8=#00ffff
|votes8=58340
|sw8={{increase}} 1.53
|st1t8=0
|st2t8=0
|st3t8=0
|party9=]
|votes9=46053
|sw9={{decrease}} 0.21
|st1t9=0
|st2t9=0
|st3t9=0
|party10=]
|colour10=#ff0000
|votes10=35218
|sw10=New
|st1t10=0
|st2t10=0
|st3t10=0
|party11=Others
|votes11=122763
|sw11=*
|st1t11=0
|st2t11=0
|st3t11=0
}}


The Legislative Council, elected by proportional representation, operates as a house of review in the New South Wales parliament. It is rare for parties or coalitions to secure a majority in this house.
== Opinion Polls ==
===Preferred premier===


The count was completed and results for the Legislative Council declared on 10 April.
{| class="toccolours" align="left" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" style="margin-right: .5em; margin-top: .4em;font-size: 90%;"

|-
The Liberal and National parties ran a joint Legislative Council ticket, winning 5 seats for the Liberals and 3 seats for the Nationals and bringing the parties' totals to 10 and 5 respectively.
!style= "background-color:#EBE1E2" rowspan=2 align="center" |]

! colspan=9 bgcolor="#cceeff" align="center"|Preferred premier ratings
Electoral changes made after the 1999 election, which saw seats go to so-called ] through elaborate preference deals, meant that both the major party groups made gains in the 2007 election. The Labor Party with 39.1% of the vote gained 1 seat, to win 9, whilst the Liberal and National Parties with 34.2% gained 1 seat each to make a combined gain of 2, thereby winning 8 seats. The effect of this outcome is that Labor now holds 19 out of 42 council seats, just 3 short of a majority, whilst the Coalition holds 15 seats.
|-
!align="center" style="background-color:red" colspan=1| ]
!style="background-color:red" align="center" colspan=1| Iemma
!align="center" style="background-color:blue" colspan=1| ]
!style="background-color:blue" align="center" colspan=1| Debnam
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" colspan=1|'''Nov - Dec 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="FF6666" colspan=2|45%
| align="center" bgcolor="00BFFF" colspan=2|23%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''Sep - Oct 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="FF6666" colspan=2|45%
| align="center" bgcolor="00BFFF" colspan=2|21%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" colspan=1|'''Jul - Aug 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="FF6666" colspan=2|48%
| align="center" bgcolor="00BFFF" colspan=2|20%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''May - Jun 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="FF6666" colspan=2|42%
| align="center" bgcolor="00BFFF" colspan=2|22%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''Mar - Apr 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="FF6666" colspan=2|42%
| align="center" bgcolor="00BFFF" colspan=2|23%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''Jan - Feb 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="FF6666" colspan=2|42%
| align="center" bgcolor="00BFFF" colspan=2|22%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''Nov - Dec 2005'''
| align="center" bgcolor="FF6666" colspan=2|40%
| align="center" bgcolor="00BFFF" colspan=2|18%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''Sep - Oct 2005'''
| align="center" bgcolor="FF6666" colspan=2|42%
| align="center" bgcolor="00BFFF" colspan=2|17%
|-
| style="font-size: 80%" colspan=10 bgcolor="#cceeff" align="center"|Source: <br>
|}
<br style="clear:both">


The Greens achieved a primary vote of 9.1%, an increase from their result in the 2003 election. This has allowed them to win 2 seats (1 additional seat), bringing their total to 4 seats. This result appears to put them in a favourable position, in which they can exercise the parliamentary balance of power, and potentially provide the Labor government with the necessary majority to get legislation through the upper chamber of Parliament.
===Voting intention===
The tables below list voting intentions for the 2007 election. Conducted by Roy Morgan Research and Newspoll/The Australian, the surveys asked approximately 1000 voters each month: "If a State election were being held today — which party would receive your first preference?" The table also includes the two-party preferred vote.


Fred Nile's Christian Democratic Party (CDP) achieved 4.4% of the vote (↑1.4%), allowing ] to retain his seat, and keeping the CDP's representation at 2 seats. The Shooters Party won the remaining seat, on 2.8% of the vote, thereby increasing their representation to 2 seats.
{| class="toccolours" align="left" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" style="margin-right: .5em; margin-top: .4em;font-size: 90%;"

The losers from the 2007 election were the Australian Democrats, Unity Party, Outdoor Recreation Party (ORP), Human Rights Party (HRP) (formerly Reform the Legal System Party) and One Nation. These five parties lost their single remaining parliamentary seat, which they had won in 1999. The Australian Democrats and Unity Party polled less than 2%, ORP and HRP polled well below 1%, whilst neither One Nation, nor their former representative-turned-Independent, ], contested the 2007 election.


=== Pendulum ===
{{see also|Post-election pendulum for the New South Wales state election, 2003|Post-election pendulum for the New South Wales state election, 2007}}

A majority being 47 seats, the Labor Party had to lose eight seats (a uniform swing of 8.7%) to lose its majority, and the Liberal-National coalition had to gain 16 seats to gain a majority. Had the Liberal-National coalition gained at least one seat from an Independent, a uniform swing of 11.6% would have been sufficient. Otherwise, the necessary uniform swing required would have been 12.3%. Swings of this size are rare in New South Wales politics.

The swings required for the opposing party to take each of the Assembly's 93 seats are often illustrated by means of a ].

=== Marginal seats (pre-election) ===
The following seats were described as marginal (i.e. those with a two-candidate preferred margin of 6% or less) by ] ] and ] after the 2005 redistribution.

{| class="toccolours" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" style="margin: .4em; font-size: 90%"
|- |-
! align="left" width="15%" | Seat
!style= "background-color:#EBE1E2" rowspan=2 align="center" |]
! align="left" width="15%" | MP
! colspan=9 bgcolor="#cceeff" align="center"|New South Wales state voting intention
! align="left" width="10%" | Party
! align="left" width="10%" | Margin
! align="left" width="15%" | Seat
! align="left" width="15%" | MP
! align="left" width="10%" | Party
! align="left" width="10%" | Margin
|- bgcolor="#eeeeff"
|
|
|
|
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" style="color: #060;" | National
| align="left" style="color: #060;" | 5.9%
|- |-
|
!style="background-color:#cccccc" align="center" colspan=5|Political parties
|
!style="background-color:#EBBCE3" align="center" colspan=2|Two-party preferred
|
|
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" style="color: #060;" | National
| align="left" style="color: #060;" | 5.3%
|- bgcolor="#eeeeff"
|
|
|
|
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" style="color: #006;" | Liberal
| align="left" style="color: #006;" | 4.7%
|- |-
| align="left" | ]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |
| align="left" | ]<ref name="ReferenceA">Two-candidate preferred result against Liberal Party</ref>
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
| align="left" style="color: #333;" | Independent
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
| align="left" style="color: #333;" | 5.4%
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
| align="left" | ]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
| align="left" | '']''<ref>Seaton represented the now-abolished seat of Southern Highlands</ref>
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |Others/Inds
| align="left" style="color: #006;" | Liberal
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
| align="left" style="color: #006;" | 4.5%
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
|- bgcolor="#eeeeff"
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" | ''New seat''
| align="left" style="color: #600;" | Labor
| align="left" style="color: #600;" | 4.6%
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" style="color: #006;" | Liberal
| align="left" style="color: #006;" | 4.2%
|- |-
| align="left" | ]
| align="center" bgcolor="B0E9DB" |'''2003 Election'''
| align="center" bgcolor="B0E9DB" |42.7% | align="left" | ]
| align="center" bgcolor="B0E9DB" |24.7% | align="left" style="color: #600;" | Labor
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="B0E9DB" |9.7% | align="left" style="color: #600;" | 4.4%
| align="left" | ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="B0E9DB" |8.2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="B0E9DB" |14.7% | align="left" | ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="B0E9DB" |56.2% | align="left" style="color: #006;" | Liberal
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="B0E9DB" |43.8% | align="left" style="color: #006;" | 4.0%
|- bgcolor="#eeeeff"
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" style="color: #600;" | Labor
| align="left" style="color: #600;" | 4.0%
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" style="color: #006;" | Liberal
| align="left" style="color: #006;" | 2.8%
|- |-
| align="left" | ]
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''November/December 2006'''
| align="left" | ]<ref name="ReferenceB">Two-candidate preferred result against National Party</ref>
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |39%
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |32% | align="left" style="color: #333;" | Independent
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |5% | align="left" style="color: #333;" | 1.9%
| align="left" | ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |7%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |17% | align="left" | ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |53% | align="left" style="color: #006;" | Liberal
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |47% | align="left" style="color: #006;" | 1.6%
|- bgcolor="#eeeeff"
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" | ]<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
| align="left" style="color: #333;" | Independent
| align="left" style="color: #333;" | 1.2%
| align="left" | ]
| align="left" | ]<ref>Notional National Party seat</ref>
| align="left" style="color: #600;" | Labor
| align="left" style="color: #600;" | -1.3%
|- |-
| align="left" | ]
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''September/October 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |41% | align="left" | ]<ref name="ReferenceB"/>
| align="center" bgcolor="" |32% | align="left" style="color: #333;" | Independent
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |5% | align="left" style="color: #333;" | 0.3%
| align="left" | ]<ref>Seat formerly known as Gosford</ref>
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |7%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |15% | align="left" | ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |54% | align="left" style="color: #006;" | Liberal
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |46% | align="left" style="color: #006;" | 0.6%
|}{{clear}}

==Seats changing hands==
{|class="wikitable"
|- |-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''July/August 2006''' | rowspan="2" style="text-align:center"| '''Seat'''
| colspan="4" style="text-align:center"| '''Pre-2007'''
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |41%
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center"| '''Swing'''
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |31%
| colspan="4" style="text-align:center"| '''Post-2007'''
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |6%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |17%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |55%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |45%
|- |-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''May/June 2006''' | colspan="2" style="text-align:center"| '''Party'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |38% | style="text-align:center"| '''Member'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |33% | style="text-align:center"| '''Margin'''
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |6% | style="text-align:center"| '''Margin'''
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |7% | style="text-align:center"| '''Member'''
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center"| '''Party'''
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |16%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |52%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |48%
|- |-
| ]
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''March/April 2006'''
| {{Australian party style|Labor}}|&nbsp;
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |36%
| Labor
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |38%
| '']''
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |6%
| style="text-align:right;"| 7.2
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |6%
| style="text-align:right;"| '''-7.3'''
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |14%
| style="text-align:right;"| 0.1
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |48%
| ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |52%
| Liberal
| {{Australian party style|Liberal}}|&nbsp;
|- |-
| ]
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''January/February 2006'''
| {{Australian party style|Independent}}|&nbsp;
| align="center" bgcolor="" |34%
| Independent
| align="center" bgcolor="" |36%
| ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |7%
| style="text-align:right;"| 1.2
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |6%
| style="text-align:right;"| '''-4.6'''
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |17%
| style="text-align:right;"| 3.4
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |49%
| ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |51%
| Liberal
| {{Australian party style|Liberal}}|&nbsp;
|- |-
| ] {{efn|In ], Labor won ] on a 6.7% margin, however the subsequent redistribution made it notionally National. Labor officially lost the seat at the 2007 election.}}
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''November/December 2005'''
| {{Australian party style|Labor}}|&nbsp;
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |34%
| Labor
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |37%
| ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |6%
| style="text-align:right;"| -1.3
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |7%
| style="text-align:right;"| '''-8.8'''
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |16%
| style="text-align:right;"| 10.1
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |48%
| ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |52%
| National
| {{Australian party style|Nationals}}|&nbsp;
|- |-
| ]
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''September/October 2005'''
| {{Australian party style|Labor}}|&nbsp;
| align="center" bgcolor="" |38%
| Labor
| align="center" bgcolor="" |33%
| ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |5%
| style="text-align:right;"| 4.0
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |8%
| style="text-align:right;"| '''-7.1'''
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |16%
| style="text-align:right;"| 3.0
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |53%
| ]
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |47%
| National
| {{Australian party style|Nationals}}|&nbsp;
|- |-
| ] {{efn|] was won by an Independent in a ] and the shown swing is based on it. At the ] it was won by the Liberals.}}
| style="font-size: 80%" colspan=10 bgcolor="#cceeff" align="center"|Source:
| {{Australian party style|Independent}}|&nbsp;
|}
| Independent
<br style="clear:both">
| ]
{| class="toccolours" align="left" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" style="margin-right: .5em; margin-top: .4em;font-size: 90%;"
| style="text-align:right;"| 5.4
| style="text-align:right;"| '''-14.8'''
| style="text-align:right;"| 9.4
| ]
| Liberal
| {{Australian party style|Liberal}}|&nbsp;
|- |-
| ] {{efn|In ], ] was won by Steve Pringle, representing the Liberals on a 14.6% margin against Labor. In 2006, he defected from the Liberals to become an Independent.}}
!style= "background-color:#909090" rowspan=2 align="center" |]
| {{Australian party style|Independent}}|&nbsp;
! colspan=11 bgcolor="#cceeff" align="center"|New South Wales state voting intention
| Independent
| ]
| style="text-align:right;"| N/A
| style="text-align:right;"| '''-8.6'''
| style="text-align:right;"| 6.0
| ]
| Liberal
| {{Australian party style|Liberal}}|&nbsp;
|- |-
| ]
!style="background-color:#cccccc" align="center" colspan=9|Political parties
| {{Australian party style|Labor}}|&nbsp;
!style="background-color:#EBBCE3" align="center" colspan=2|Two-party preferred
| Labor
| ]
| style="text-align:right;"| 11.6
| style="text-align:right;"| '''-11.7'''
| style="text-align:right;"| 0.1
| ]
| Independent
| {{Australian party style|Independent}}|&nbsp;
|- |-
| colspan="10" |<small>Members whose names are in italics retired at the election.</small>
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |Others/Inds
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
!style="background-color:#" align="center" |]
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''December 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |50.5%
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |31.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |3%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |6%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |0.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |5.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |60.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |39.5%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''November 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |45.5%
| align="center" bgcolor="" |34.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |3.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |6.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |5.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |55.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |44.5%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''October 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |43%
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |35.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |4.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |5.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |0.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |7.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |53%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |47%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''September 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |48%
| align="center" bgcolor="" |32.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |6.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |5.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |59%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |41%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''August 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |49.5%
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |30.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |3.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |6%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |0.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |0.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |6%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |60%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |40%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''July 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |42.5%
| align="center" bgcolor="" |37%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |4%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |6.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |4.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |54%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |46%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''June 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |46%
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |32.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |7%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |0.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |2.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |58%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |42%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''May 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |42.5%
| align="center" bgcolor="" |34%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |4.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |7%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |5.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |55.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |44.5%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''April 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |42.5%
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |35%
| align="center" width="e9e9e9" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |2.5%
| align="center" width="e9e9e9" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |2%
| align="center" width="e9e9e9" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |8.5%
| align="center" width="e9e9e9" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1%
| align="center" width="e9e9e9" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="e9e9e9" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |0.5%
| align="center" width="e9e9e9" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |6.5%
| align="center" width="e9e9e9" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |55.5%
| align="center" width="e9e9e9" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |44.5%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''March 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |43%
| align="center" bgcolor="" |36.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |3.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |8.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |4.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |54.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |45.5%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''February 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |39%
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |36%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |7%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |6.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |52%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |48%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''January 2006'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |43%
| align="center" bgcolor="" |32%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |4.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |8.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |6%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |56%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |44%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''December 2005'''
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |43.5%
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |32%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |4%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |0.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |10.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |6%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |57.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |42.5%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''November 2005'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |43%
| align="center" bgcolor="" |33%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |4%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |7.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |6%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |55.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |44.5%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |'''October 2005'''
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |43.5%
| align="center" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |33.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |3%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |9%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |2%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |56.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="e9e9e9" |43.5%
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="" |'''September 2005'''
| align="center" bgcolor="" |43.5%
| align="center" bgcolor="" |32%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |8%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |1.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |~
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |7.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |55.5%
| align="center" width="" bgcolor="" |44.5%
|-
| style="font-size: 80%" colspan=10 bgcolor="#cceeff" align="center"|Source: <br>
|} |}
<br style="clear:both">


{{Notelist}}
==Candidates==

{{dablink|For a list of candidates, see ].}}
==High-profile seats==
=== Sydney ===


], in Sydney's inner-western suburbs, was with Marrickville one of two seats considered potentially winnable for the Greens. Labor incumbent ] suffered a 2.9% primary and 3.2% two-candidate preferred swing against the Greens, to finish on 39.2% and 53.8% respectively.
== Prospects ==
===Legislative Assembly===


The Liberals held on to ] despite an independent challenge from ], the disendorsed Liberal incumbent. Pringle won 28.0% of the primary vote, at the expense of Labor and other independent candidates. Liberal candidate ] saw his primary vote dip by just 1.0%.
to view electoral boundaries.]]
The Legislative Assembly currently consists of:
* 55 members of the ]
* 19 members of the ] (originally 20)
* 12 members of ]
* 7 independents (originally 6)


In ], high-profile Liberal candidate ] achieved a 12% swing in two-party-preferred terms compared to the 2003 poll. The incumbent, Labor's ], had bowed out of the contest after being convicted for assaulting his girlfriend. Local issues such as hospital scandals and the ] may have also contributed to the high Liberal vote. Labor candidate ] won Macquarie Fields comfortably.
The Liberal Party lost one of its 20 seats to an independent at the ] in 2005. The seats for this election will follow the boundary redistribution conducted in 2005, which did not change the number of seats notionally held by each party.


The Liberals won ] from the independents for the first time since the 1980s. Sitting MP ] lost to future Premier ], who increased the Liberals' primary vote by 4.4%.
A majority being 47 seats, the Labor Party must lose nine seats (a uniform swing of 8.7%) to lose its majority, and the Liberal-National coalition must gain 16 seats to gain a majority. If the Liberal-National coalition gains at least one seat from an Independent, a uniform swing of 11.6% will be sufficient. Otherwise, the necessary uniform swing will be 12.3%.


In the very safe Labor seat of ] Liberal candidate Mark Spencer managed to gain a higher than average swing against incumbent ] who then retired at the next election.
====Key Seats====
The following seats are notionally held by the Labor Party with a margin of less than 14%:
* ] - 4% - Held by ].
* ] - 4.4% - Held by ].
* ] - 4.6% - A new seat, created out of parts of the seats of ], ] and ].
* ] - 6.6% - Held by ].
* ] - 7.2% - Held by ].
* ] - 8.3% - Held by ].
* ] - 8.6% - The Labor-held seat of ] has been renamed as Gosford, while the Liberal-held seat of Gosford has been renamed as ]. Labor's ] holds the seat of Peats, while the current seat of Gosford is held by Liberal member ].
* ] - 8.7% - Held by ], the former Mayor of ], the seat was won off the Liberal Party at the 2003 election.
* ] - 8.7% - Held by ].
* ] - 8.9% - Held by ].
* ] - 9.1% - Held by ].
* ] - 9.7% - Held by ].
* ] - 10.3% - Held by ].
* ] - 10.9% - Held by ].
* ] - 11.6% - Held by ].
* ] - 12.3% - Held by ].
* ] - 12.3% - Held by ].
* ] - 13.1% - Held by ].
* ] - 13.3% - Held by ].
* ] - 13.4% - Held by ].
* ] - 13.6% - Held by ].
* ] - 13.6% - Held by ].


], in Sydney's inner west, was with Balmain the other seat considered potentially winnable for the Greens. Labor's ] suffered a 1.1% primary and 2.6% two-candidate preferred swing against the Greens, to finish on 46.6% and 57.5% respectively. Tebbutt won the seat in a ] after quitting the Legislative Council, and is a senior member of the party's left wing and has a strong personal following in the area.
The following seats are notionally held by the Liberal-National coalition with a margin of less than 5%:
* ] - 0.6% - A new seat, it is currently named ], which is held by Liberal MP ].
* ] - 1.4% - Currently held by Labor, this seat has become notionally ] following the redistribution.
* ] - 1.6% - Held by Liberal ].
* ] - 2.8% - Held by Liberal ].
* ] - 4.0% - Held by Liberal ].
* ] - 4.2% - Held by Liberal ].
* ] - 4.5% - Newly created in the recent redistribution, Goulburn covers parts of ] (Liberal) and ] (National). This could lead to a potential conflict for electoral coverage between the coalition partners, or a three-cornered contest, which has been a past problem in the overlapping federal electorate of ]. It is considered notionally Liberal.
* ] - 4.7% - Held by ].


The Liberals lost ] to independent ] at a by-election called after the resignation of ]. The Liberals' ] won the seat back on primaries, taking 50.5% of the vote.
The following Independent seats are also significant:
* ] - This seat was won by ] at the 2004 ], following the death of Independent MP ]. Following the redistribution, the margin was cut from 5% to 0.3%, meaning that this seat will be a target of the Nationals in 2007.
* ]
* ]
* ]


=== Rural and regional ===
The following seats may see serious challenges by the ]:
* ] - Notional 7.1% - Held by Sandra Nori, ALP. Before the 2005 redistribution, this seat was called ].
* ] - 5.6% since ].


Independent ] MP ] fought off a challenge from the Nationals to retain her seat. The Nationals lost ground slightly, but the seat remains one of the state's most marginal.
====By-elections====
There have been five by-elections during the current term of the Legislative Assembly:
* ''']''', 2004 - Held following the death of Independent MP ]. Won by Independent candidate ] against the ]. No Labor candidate.
* ''']''', 2005 - Held following the retirement of Labor's ]. Won by local councillor ] (Labor), against former whistleblower nurse ] (Liberal).
* ''']''', 2005 - Held following the retirement of Premier ]. No Liberal candidate contested the by-election, with the seat being retained by the ALP.
* ''']''', 2005 - Held following the retirement of Deputy Premier ]. The contest was between Labor's Education Minister ] and the Greens' Deputy Mayor ]. Labor retained the seat with 55% of the two-party-preferred vote.
* ''']''', 2005 - Held following the resignation of Liberal leader ]. Won by independent Mayor ], against Liberal candidate ].


Star Liberal candidate ] beat off a tough fight in ] with independent candidate Paul Stephenson capturing a quarter of the vote. Goward was helped by the Nationals' decision not to run in the seat but both Labor and the Coalition lost ground. Allegations surfaced during the campaign that Labor was assisting Stephenson's campaign.
===Legislative Council===
The ] is not elected in one general election. Rather, half the house is elected at each general election. Those Members of the Legislative Council elected at the 1999 election, and those who have been elected to fill vacancies from members elected in 1999, will vacate their seats at the 2007 election.


Independent ] won the safe seat of ] from Labor's ]. Labor and the Liberals lost 10.4% and 15.7% of their primary vote respectively.
At the 1999 election, 8 ] MLCs were elected, along with 4 ], 2 ], and one each from the ], ] (CDP), ], ], the ], ] and ].


Sitting Labor MP ] chose to stand as an independent after being disendorsed by his party in the seat of ]. Gaudry and another independent, John Tate, both outpolled the Greens and the Liberals. Labor's ] suffered a 17.1% swing against her but won the seat on preferences.
At the 2003 election, the following parties won seats:
* 10 Labor
* 5 Liberal
* 2 National
* 2 Greens
* 1 CDP (])
* 1 ] (]}


] Incumbent Labor MP ] retired at this election. The Liberals' ] added 8.7% to his party's primary vote in the seat to outpoll Labor, and narrowly defeat ALP candidate Jim Arneman.
====Major Parties====
A quota for the Legislative Council is roughly 4.5% of the vote. According to recent opinion polls, the absolute minimum number of MLCs elected by each major party (the Liberals and Nationals running a single ticket in Legislative Council elections) would be 7 each, adding up to 31.5% in quotas. While it is difficult to predict the number of seats won by each party, recent polls indicate the Liberal-National coalition would gain seats. The lowest result in 2005 opinion polls for the Coalition, conducted at the same time as the resignation of Liberal leader ] and the election of his successor, gave the Coalition 38% of the vote, which would give them a likely 9 MLCs, three more than their current complement.


The Labor member for ], ], resigned from parliament after being charged with a number of child-sex and drug offenses. An expected backlash against the ALP materialised in the form of an 11.3% swing, with independent candidate Laurie Coghlan the main beneficiary. Nonetheless, Labor candidate ] was able to hold the seat with a comfortable majority.
With a very low number of major party MLCs elected in 1999, it does not necessarily follow that the Labor Party must lose seats if the Coalition gains seats. At its lowest point in polls, the Labor Party only stands to lose one seat, and could quite easily retain its 8 seats while suffering a swing against it, compared to the 2003 result.


], Labor's most marginal seat, fell to the Nationals' ]. Labor incumbent ] had previously served two terms (six years) in the federal seat of ] before his two terms (eight years) in the State Parliament. A swing of 7.8% meant that the seat changed from being a marginal seat for Labor to a National Party marginal.
====Minor Parties====
The 1999 election saw a number of small parties win a single seat in the Legislative Council, with seven parties winning one seat each. With the exception of the Greens and the Christian Democrats, none of those parties were able to repeat that success in 2003, following the introduction of a new electoral system which made it more difficult for small parties to win seats.


The Liberals lost primary votes in the seat of ], bucking the statewide swing to the party. The Liberals had disendorsed candidate Brenton Pavier after details emerged of a sex joke he had sent to friends via SMS. The Liberals' new candidate, Ben Morton, managed a 5.4% swing in two-party-preferred terms, not enough to take victory from Labor candidate ]. Incumbent Labor MP ] retired at the election.
The Outdoor Recreation Party, Unity Party, and Reform the Legal System have not shown any chances of retaining their seats, not running in the 2003 election, whilst One Nation NSW (the breakaway party led by NSW MLC ]) and the Democrats have lost most of their party organisation and electoral support in recent years, and are unlikely to retain their seats.


=== High profile candidates ===
The Greens, who have generally polled 7-8% in opinion polls, will almost certainly retain their seat, currently held by ], and are likely to gain a second seat. As the only minor party to poll more than a single quota, there is potential for the Greens to win three seats, which could be achieved with as little as 11.5% of the vote.
* ], a champion swimmer, headed her own independent ticket for the Legislative Council, but was unsuccessful in getting elected.
* ], a former federal Sex Discrimination Commissioner, won ] for the Liberals
* ], a former ] inmate, ran as an independent in ]
* ], the state's ] chief, won ] for Labor
* ], a former ] newsreader, won ] for Labor
* June Dally Watkins, head of the eponymous deportment school, was a Legislative Council candidate for the Christian Democrats


=== Retiring ===
The Christian Democratic Party's leader, ], is up for re-election in 2007, and will likely win re-election. Rev. Nile resigned from the Legislative Council in 2004 to contest a seat in the ], and was re-appointed to his seat following his Senate defeat. Winning 3% in 2003, and 2.6% in the 2004 federal election, the CDP is likely to retain their seat in 2007. The CDP vote is also likely to be bolstered and more concentrated by the decision of the ] not to run cadidates in the election .
A number of MPs did not seek re-election in 2007. Liberal MPs ] (]) and ], (]) retired. ] (]) lost preselection and did not contest his seat. Nationals MP ] (]) also retired.


The Labor MPs retiring at the 2007 election were ] (]), ] (]), ] (]), ] (]), ] (]) and ] (]). ] (]) and ] (]), each arrested for violent crimes in late 2006, pulled out of the election. ] (]), dumped from the ministry for misleading parliament, chose not to recontest his seat. Attorney-General ] (]) did not seek re-election, in anticipation of a move to federal politics.
==Parties==
*]
*] / ] coalition
*]
*]
*]


== Independents == == See also ==
* ]
*], Member for ]
*]
*], Member for ], elected at the ] following the death of ]
*], Member for ], elected at the ] following the resignation of Liberal leader ]
*], Member for ] and Lord Mayor of Sydney
*]
*], Member for ], elected as a Liberal MP, he resigned from the Liberal Party in 2006 after losing preselection and will contest the seat as an independent.
*], member for ].


== References == == References ==
{{reflist}}
* - Tunnel launch branded as an opportunistic election ploy
* - Iemma's $25m election bribe
* - Editorial: Public money down the tunnel


{{New South Wales elections}}
{{Government of New South Wales}} {{Government of New South Wales}}
{{Politics of Australia}}


] ]
] ]
] ]
]

Latest revision as of 22:12, 28 November 2024

State election for New South Wales, Australia in March 2007

2007 New South Wales state election

← 2003 24 March 2007 (2007-03-24) 2011 →

All 93 seats in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
and 21 (of the 42) seats in the New South Wales Legislative Council
47 Assembly seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Leader Morris Iemma Peter Debnam
Party Labor Liberal/National coalition
Leader since 3 August 2005 1 September 2005
Leader's seat Lakemba Vaucluse
Last election 55 seats 32 seats
Seats before 54 seats 30 seats
Seats won 52 seats 35 seats
Seat change Decrease 2 Increase 5
Popular vote 1,535,872 1,457,296
Percentage 38.98% 36.99%
Swing Decrease 3.70 Increase 2.63
TPP 52.26% 47.74%
TPP swing Decrease 3.92 Increase 3.92

Two-candidate-preferred margin by electorate

Premier before election

Morris Iemma
Labor

Elected Premier

Morris Iemma
Labor

The 2007 New South Wales state election was held on Saturday, 24 March 2007. The entire Legislative Assembly and half of the Legislative Council was up for election. The Labor Party led by Morris Iemma won a fourth four-year term against the Liberal-National coalition led by Peter Debnam.

Labor's substantial majority survived the election almost intact going from a large 15 seat majority to a marginally decreased if still sizeable 11 seat majority. The Liberals succeeded in taking two independent-held seats and one Labor-held seat, whilst the Nationals and an independent each took one Labor-held seat. This would be NSW Labor's last state election win until 2023. It also remains the most recent contest in which NSW Labor formed a majority government.

Campaign

Main article: New South Wales state election campaign, 2007

Labor, running on the slogan "More to do, but we're heading in the right direction," heavily outspent the Liberals, whose slogan was "Let's fix NSW." Though water and infrastructure emerged as key issues in the campaign, much of the parties' advertising focused on the negatives: Debnam's business record and Labor's record in office.

The media concluded that the choice facing voters was in finding the lesser of two evils: the three major newspapers sold in New South Wales endorsed Debnam, though not without criticising his ineptitude on the campaign trail.

The result was widely perceived as a foregone conclusion, with opposition leader Peter Debnam conceding as much the week before the poll. Opinion polls consistently put Labor ahead in terms of voting intention and preferred premier.

The ALP would eventually lose government at the next election in a landslide defeat in 2011. There has been a view that the party would have suffered a less worse defeat if it had lost government at the 2007 election.

Electoral system

Main article: Electoral systems of the Australian states and territories § New South Wales

The New South Wales Legislative Assembly has 93 members elected for four-year terms using instant-runoff voting, a form of preferential voting. The voting system is the same as for the Australian House of Representatives except that New South Wales has optional preferential voting. This means that while voters may number every candidate if they wish, their vote is still formal if they choose not to. They may vote for one candidate only, or for as many candidates as they choose, provided that they number them in correct sequence.

The New South Wales Legislative Council has 42 members who serve eight year terms, one-half of the body being elected every four years. The Council uses the Single Transferable Vote method, a form of preferential voting for use with proportional representation. As for the Assembly, the numbering of preferences is optional.

After each election, the Governor of New South Wales, appoints a member of the Legislative Assembly to the position of Premier of New South Wales. By convention, the party leader with the largest bloc of votes in the Assembly, is chosen.

Legislative Assembly

Government is formed in the Legislative Assembly, the lower house of Parliament. The seats for this election resulted from the boundary redistribution conducted in 2004, which did not change the number of seats notionally held by each party.

Results

Main article: Results of the 2007 New South Wales state election (Legislative Assembly)
PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
Labor1,535,87238.87Decrease 3.8152Decrease 2
Liberal1,061,27326.86Increase 2.1422Increase 4
National396,02310.02Increase 0.3913Increase 1
Independents361,8669.16Increase 0.976Decrease 2
Greens352,8058.93Increase 0.680Steady
Christian Democrats97,4202.47Increase 0.740Steady
Unity43,2921.10Decrease 0.200Steady
Democrats21,0990.53Decrease 0.400Steady
Others81,9272.070.770Steady
Total3,951,577100.0093
Valid votes3,951,57797.24
Invalid/blank votes112,1522.76Increase 0.14
Total votes4,063,729100.00
Registered voters/turnout4,374,02992.91Increase 1.04
Source: NSW Elections - 2007 Results
Two-party-preferred
Labor1,788,14252.26Decrease 3.92
Liberal/National1,633,38147.74Increase 3.92
Total3,421,523100.00


Popular vote
Labor 38.98%
Liberal 26.94%
National 10.05%
Independent 9.18%
Greens 8.95%
Christian Democrats 2.47%
Unity 0.90%
Democrats 0.54%
Others 1.99%
Two-party-preferred vote
Labor 52.26%
Coalition 47.74%
Parliamentary seats
Labor 55.91%
Liberal 23.66%
National 13.98%
Independent 6.45%


Legislative Council

See also: Results of the 2007 New South Wales state election (Legislative Council)
PartyVotes%+/–Seats
Not upSeats wonSeats Total
Labor1,491,71939.14Decrease 4.4010919
Liberal/National Coalition1,304,16634.22Increase 0.927815
Greens347,5489.12Increase 0.52224
Christian Democrats168,5454.42Increase 1.39112
Shooters106,5132.79Increase 0.74112
Democrats67,9941.78Decrease 0.21000
Against Further Immigration62,3861.64Increase 0.74000
Fishing58,3401.53Increase 1.53000
Unity46,0531.21Decrease 0.21000
Restore Workers' Rights35,2180.92New000
Others122,7633.22*000
Total3,811,245100.00212142
Valid votes3,811,24593.89
Invalid/blank votes247,9216.11Increase 0.77
Total votes4,059,166100.00
Registered voters/turnout4,374,02992.80Increase 0.78

The Legislative Council, elected by proportional representation, operates as a house of review in the New South Wales parliament. It is rare for parties or coalitions to secure a majority in this house.

The count was completed and results for the Legislative Council declared on 10 April.

The Liberal and National parties ran a joint Legislative Council ticket, winning 5 seats for the Liberals and 3 seats for the Nationals and bringing the parties' totals to 10 and 5 respectively.

Electoral changes made after the 1999 election, which saw seats go to so-called microparties through elaborate preference deals, meant that both the major party groups made gains in the 2007 election. The Labor Party with 39.1% of the vote gained 1 seat, to win 9, whilst the Liberal and National Parties with 34.2% gained 1 seat each to make a combined gain of 2, thereby winning 8 seats. The effect of this outcome is that Labor now holds 19 out of 42 council seats, just 3 short of a majority, whilst the Coalition holds 15 seats.

The Greens achieved a primary vote of 9.1%, an increase from their result in the 2003 election. This has allowed them to win 2 seats (1 additional seat), bringing their total to 4 seats. This result appears to put them in a favourable position, in which they can exercise the parliamentary balance of power, and potentially provide the Labor government with the necessary majority to get legislation through the upper chamber of Parliament.

Fred Nile's Christian Democratic Party (CDP) achieved 4.4% of the vote (↑1.4%), allowing Nile to retain his seat, and keeping the CDP's representation at 2 seats. The Shooters Party won the remaining seat, on 2.8% of the vote, thereby increasing their representation to 2 seats.

The losers from the 2007 election were the Australian Democrats, Unity Party, Outdoor Recreation Party (ORP), Human Rights Party (HRP) (formerly Reform the Legal System Party) and One Nation. These five parties lost their single remaining parliamentary seat, which they had won in 1999. The Australian Democrats and Unity Party polled less than 2%, ORP and HRP polled well below 1%, whilst neither One Nation, nor their former representative-turned-Independent, David Oldfield, contested the 2007 election.


Pendulum

See also: Post-election pendulum for the New South Wales state election, 2003 and Post-election pendulum for the New South Wales state election, 2007

A majority being 47 seats, the Labor Party had to lose eight seats (a uniform swing of 8.7%) to lose its majority, and the Liberal-National coalition had to gain 16 seats to gain a majority. Had the Liberal-National coalition gained at least one seat from an Independent, a uniform swing of 11.6% would have been sufficient. Otherwise, the necessary uniform swing required would have been 12.3%. Swings of this size are rare in New South Wales politics.

The swings required for the opposing party to take each of the Assembly's 93 seats are often illustrated by means of a Mackerras pendulum.

Marginal seats (pre-election)

The following seats were described as marginal (i.e. those with a two-candidate preferred margin of 6% or less) by psephologists Malcolm Mackerras and Antony Green after the 2005 redistribution.

Seat MP Party Margin Seat MP Party Margin
Orange Russell Turner National 5.9%
Clarence Steve Cansdell National 5.3%
Bega Andrew Constance Liberal 4.7%
Pittwater Alex McTaggart Independent 5.4% Goulburn Peta Seaton Liberal 4.5%
Wollondilly New seat Labor 4.6% Hornsby Judy Hopwood Liberal 4.2%
Monaro Steve Whan Labor 4.4% Baulkham Hills Wayne Merton Liberal 4.0%
Tweed Neville Newell Labor 4.0% Lane Cove Anthony Roberts Liberal 2.8%
Tamworth Peter Draper Independent 1.9% South Coast Shelley Hancock Liberal 1.6%
Manly David Barr Independent 1.2% Murray-Darling Peter Black Labor -1.3%
Dubbo Dawn Fardell Independent 0.3% Terrigal Chris Hartcher Liberal 0.6%

Seats changing hands

Seat Pre-2007 Swing Post-2007
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Port Stephens   Labor John Bartlett 7.2 -7.3 0.1 Craig Baumann Liberal  
Manly   Independent David Barr 1.2 -4.6 3.4 Mike Baird Liberal  
Murray-Darling   Labor Peter Black -1.3 -8.8 10.1 John Williams National  
Tweed   Labor Neville Newell 4.0 -7.1 3.0 Geoff Provest National  
Pittwater   Independent Alex McTaggart 5.4 -14.8 9.4 Rob Stokes Liberal  
Hawkesbury   Independent Steven Pringle N/A -8.6 6.0 Ray Williams Liberal  
Lake Macquarie   Labor Jeff Hunter 11.6 -11.7 0.1 Greg Piper Independent  
Members whose names are in italics retired at the election.
  1. In 2003, Labor won Murray Darling on a 6.7% margin, however the subsequent redistribution made it notionally National. Labor officially lost the seat at the 2007 election.
  2. Pittwater was won by an Independent in a 2005 by-election and the shown swing is based on it. At the 2003 election it was won by the Liberals.
  3. In 2003, Hawkesbury was won by Steve Pringle, representing the Liberals on a 14.6% margin against Labor. In 2006, he defected from the Liberals to become an Independent.

High-profile seats

Sydney

Balmain, in Sydney's inner-western suburbs, was with Marrickville one of two seats considered potentially winnable for the Greens. Labor incumbent Verity Firth suffered a 2.9% primary and 3.2% two-candidate preferred swing against the Greens, to finish on 39.2% and 53.8% respectively.

The Liberals held on to Hawkesbury despite an independent challenge from Steven Pringle, the disendorsed Liberal incumbent. Pringle won 28.0% of the primary vote, at the expense of Labor and other independent candidates. Liberal candidate Ray Williams saw his primary vote dip by just 1.0%.

In Macquarie Fields, high-profile Liberal candidate Nola Fraser achieved a 12% swing in two-party-preferred terms compared to the 2003 poll. The incumbent, Labor's Steven Chaytor, had bowed out of the contest after being convicted for assaulting his girlfriend. Local issues such as hospital scandals and the 2005 Macquarie Fields riots may have also contributed to the high Liberal vote. Labor candidate Andrew McDonald won Macquarie Fields comfortably.

The Liberals won Manly from the independents for the first time since the 1980s. Sitting MP David Barr lost to future Premier Mike Baird, who increased the Liberals' primary vote by 4.4%.

In the very safe Labor seat of Blacktown Liberal candidate Mark Spencer managed to gain a higher than average swing against incumbent Paul Gibson who then retired at the next election.

Marrickville, in Sydney's inner west, was with Balmain the other seat considered potentially winnable for the Greens. Labor's Carmel Tebbutt suffered a 1.1% primary and 2.6% two-candidate preferred swing against the Greens, to finish on 46.6% and 57.5% respectively. Tebbutt won the seat in a 2005 by-election after quitting the Legislative Council, and is a senior member of the party's left wing and has a strong personal following in the area.

The Liberals lost Pittwater to independent Alex McTaggart at a by-election called after the resignation of John Brogden. The Liberals' Rob Stokes won the seat back on primaries, taking 50.5% of the vote.

Rural and regional

Independent Dubbo MP Dawn Fardell fought off a challenge from the Nationals to retain her seat. The Nationals lost ground slightly, but the seat remains one of the state's most marginal.

Star Liberal candidate Pru Goward beat off a tough fight in Goulburn with independent candidate Paul Stephenson capturing a quarter of the vote. Goward was helped by the Nationals' decision not to run in the seat but both Labor and the Coalition lost ground. Allegations surfaced during the campaign that Labor was assisting Stephenson's campaign.

Independent Greg Piper won the safe seat of Lake Macquarie from Labor's Jeff Hunter. Labor and the Liberals lost 10.4% and 15.7% of their primary vote respectively.

Sitting Labor MP Bryce Gaudry chose to stand as an independent after being disendorsed by his party in the seat of Newcastle. Gaudry and another independent, John Tate, both outpolled the Greens and the Liberals. Labor's Jodi McKay suffered a 17.1% swing against her but won the seat on preferences.

Port Stephens Incumbent Labor MP John Bartlett retired at this election. The Liberals' Craig Baumann added 8.7% to his party's primary vote in the seat to outpoll Labor, and narrowly defeat ALP candidate Jim Arneman.

The Labor member for Swansea, Milton Orkopoulos, resigned from parliament after being charged with a number of child-sex and drug offenses. An expected backlash against the ALP materialised in the form of an 11.3% swing, with independent candidate Laurie Coghlan the main beneficiary. Nonetheless, Labor candidate Robert Coombs was able to hold the seat with a comfortable majority.

Tweed, Labor's most marginal seat, fell to the Nationals' Geoff Provest. Labor incumbent Neville Newell had previously served two terms (six years) in the federal seat of Richmond before his two terms (eight years) in the State Parliament. A swing of 7.8% meant that the seat changed from being a marginal seat for Labor to a National Party marginal.

The Liberals lost primary votes in the seat of Wyong, bucking the statewide swing to the party. The Liberals had disendorsed candidate Brenton Pavier after details emerged of a sex joke he had sent to friends via SMS. The Liberals' new candidate, Ben Morton, managed a 5.4% swing in two-party-preferred terms, not enough to take victory from Labor candidate David Harris. Incumbent Labor MP Paul Crittenden retired at the election.

High profile candidates

Retiring

A number of MPs did not seek re-election in 2007. Liberal MPs Andrew Tink (Epping) and Peta Seaton, (Southern Highlands) retired. Andrew Humpherson (Davidson) lost preselection and did not contest his seat. Nationals MP Ian Slack-Smith (Barwon) also retired.

The Labor MPs retiring at the 2007 election were John Bartlett (Port Stephens), Paul Crittenden (Wyong), John Mills (Wallsend), Sandra Nori (Port Jackson), John Price (Maitland) and Kim Yeadon (Granville). Steven Chaytor (Macquarie Fields) and Milton Orkopoulos (Swansea), each arrested for violent crimes in late 2006, pulled out of the election. Carl Scully (Smithfield), dumped from the ministry for misleading parliament, chose not to recontest his seat. Attorney-General Bob Debus (Blue Mountains) did not seek re-election, in anticipation of a move to federal politics.

See also

References

  1. "How Labor lost New South Wales". 29 April 2012.
  2. ^ Two-candidate preferred result against Liberal Party
  3. Seaton represented the now-abolished seat of Southern Highlands
  4. ^ Two-candidate preferred result against National Party
  5. Notional National Party seat
  6. Seat formerly known as Gosford
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