Misplaced Pages

2007 New South Wales state election

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Timeshift9 (talk | contribs) at 07:32, 1 February 2007 (revert MPL table - hiding your MPL revert within a different editing reason is considered deceitful and could land you in trouble with admins if you keep doing so). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 07:32, 1 February 2007 by Timeshift9 (talk | contribs) (revert MPL table - hiding your MPL revert within a different editing reason is considered deceitful and could land you in trouble with admins if you keep doing so)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Template:Future election

2007 New South Wales state election major party leaders
Labor Liberal
Morris Iemma
Morris Iemma
Peter Debnam
Peter Debnam
Morris Iemma
Premier of New South Wales
Peter Debnam
Opposition Leader
Parliament 15 years Parliament 12 years
Leader since 2005 Leader since 2005
District Lakemba District Vaucluse

Elections to to the 54th Parliament of New South Wales will be held on Saturday, 24 March 2007. The entire Legislative Assembly and half of the Legislative Council will be up for election.

The election will see the Australian Labor Party seek a fourth consecutive term in office, and will be the first election since both major parties changed leaders in 2005. Morris Iemma, a former union official, leads Labor while Peter Debnam, a former businessman and naval officer, leads the Liberal-National Coalition.

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.

Campaign

File:Debnam Something is rotten.jpg
Liberal leader Peter Debnam appears in the campaign's first TV ad, "Something is rotten".

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.

To a large extent, the campaign has been overshadowed by scandals involving a number of Labor MPs. Aboriginal Affairs minister Milton Orkopoulos 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 Steven Chaytor was forced to resign after being convicted of assaulting his girlfriend in January 2007. In October 2006, Police minister Carl Scully 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 Liberal campaign slogan used against the scandal-plagued Labor government in Victoria in 1992.

Coalition campaign

The Coalition campaign began in November 2006 in the wake of a series of scandals involving government ministers, notably Carl Scully and Milton Orkopoulos. 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.

On 8 January 2007, 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."

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."

Debnam drew criticism for outlining his vision for "practical multiculturalism" during a citizenship ceremony on January 26, Australia Day. Referring to the recent race-related violence at Cronulla and at the Australian Open in Melbourne, Debnam told the audience that multiculturalism had to become "a policy for inclusion, not separation". His use of the citizenship ceremony to make a campaign speech was criticised by his host, Sutherland Shire mayor David Redmond, as well as by Iemma.

Labor campaign

The government stepped up its advertising expenditure in the months before the official campaign begins. The November 2006 New South Wales State Plan 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."

Further controversy surrounded changes to arrangements for the opening of the new Lane Cove Tunnel, 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.

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."

Labor launched a website, debnamrecord.com, 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.

Electoral System

See main article: Electoral systems of the Australian states and territories#New South Wales

In 2007, elections to each of the 93 single-member electoral districts (seats) that make up the New South Wales Legislative Assembly will be held. Voting is optional preferential: electors may choose only one candidate to support, or may number two or more candidates in order of their preference. Terms are fixed at four years.

Elections to half of the seats in the 42-member New South Wales Legislative Council will be held. Council seats are filled using a system of optional preferential proportional representation. Terms are fixed at eight years.

Opinion Polls

Preferred premier

File:Newspoll logo2.JPG Preferred premier ratings
File:Morris Iemma.jpg Iemma File:Peter Debnam.jpg Debnam
Nov - Dec 2006 45% 23%
Sep - Oct 2006 45% 21%
Jul - Aug 2006 48% 20%
May - Jun 2006 42% 22%
Mar - Apr 2006 42% 23%
Jan - Feb 2006 42% 22%
Nov - Dec 2005 40% 18%
Sep - Oct 2005 42% 17%
Source: Newspoll/The Australian


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.

File:Newspoll logo2.JPG New South Wales state voting intention
Political parties Two-party preferred
Australian Labor Party Liberal Party of Australia National Party of Australia NSW Greens Others/Inds Australian Labor Party Liberal/National Coalition
2003 Election 42.7% 24.7% 9.7% 8.2% 14.7% 56.2% 43.8%
November/December 2006 39% 32% 5% 7% 17% 53% 47%
September/October 2006 41% 32% 5% 7% 15% 54% 46%
July/August 2006 41% 31% 5% 6% 17% 55% 45%
May/June 2006 38% 33% 6% 7% 16% 52% 48%
March/April 2006 36% 38% 6% 6% 14% 48% 52%
January/February 2006 34% 36% 7% 6% 17% 49% 51%
November/December 2005 34% 37% 6% 7% 16% 48% 52%
September/October 2005 38% 33% 5% 8% 16% 53% 47%
Source: Newspoll/The Australian


File:Roymorgan logo.JPG New South Wales state voting intention
Political parties Two-party preferred
Australian Labor Party Liberal Party of Australia National Party of Australia Australian Democrats Victorian Greens One Nation Party Family First Party Christian Democratic Party Others/Inds Australian Labor Party Liberal/National Coalition
December 2006 50.5% 31.5% 3% 1% 6% 0.5% 1% 1% 5.5% 60.5% 39.5%
November 2006 45.5% 34.5% 3.5% 1% 6.5% 1% 1.5% 1% 5.5% 55.5% 44.5%
October 2006 43% 35.5% 4.5% 1.5% 5.5% 0.5% 1% 1% 7.5% 53% 47%
September 2006 48% 32.5% 2% 1.5% 6.5% 1% 2% 1% 5.5% 59% 41%
August 2006 49.5% 30.5% 3.5% 1.5% 6% 0.5% 2% 0.5% 6% 60% 40%
July 2006 42.5% 37% 4% 1.5% 6.5% 1% 1.5% 1.5% 4.5% 54% 46%
June 2006 46% 32.5% 2% 7% 0.5% 1.5% 2.5% 1.5% 5% 58% 42%
May 2006 42.5% 34% 4.5% 2% 7% 1% 2% 1.5% 5.5% 55.5% 44.5%
April 2006 42.5% 35% 2.5% 2% 8.5% 1% 1.5% 0.5% 6.5% 55.5% 44.5%
March 2006 43% 36.5% 3.5% 1% 8.5% 1% 1% 1% 4.5% 54.5% 45.5%
February 2006 39% 36% 5% 1.5% 7% 1.5% 1.5% 2% 6.5% 52% 48%
January 2006 43% 32% 4.5% 1.5% 8.5% 1% 2% 1.5% 6% 56% 44%
December 2005 43.5% 32% 4% 0.5% 10.5% 1% 1.5% 1% 6% 57.5% 42.5%
November 2005 43% 33% 4% 1.5% 7.5% 1.5% 1.5% 2% 6% 55.5% 44.5%
October 2005 43.5% 33.5% 3% 1.5% 9% 1% 2% 1.5% 5% 56.5% 43.5%
September 2005 43.5% 32% 5% 1.5% 8% 1% 1.5% ~ 7.5% 55.5% 44.5%
Source: Roy Morgan Research


Candidates

For a list of candidates, see Candidates of the New South Wales legislative election, 2007.

Prospects

Legislative Assembly

Seat pendulum following the 2005 redistribution. Click here to view electoral boundaries.

The Legislative Assembly currently consists of:

The Liberal Party lost one of its 20 seats to an independent at the Pittwater by-election 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.

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%.

Key Seats

The following seats are notionally held by the Labor Party with a margin of less than 14%:

The following seats are notionally held by the Liberal-National coalition with a margin of less than 5%:

The following Independent seats are also significant:

The following seats may see serious challenges by the Greens:

By-elections

There have been five by-elections during the current term of the Legislative Assembly:

Legislative Council

The New South Wales Legislative Council 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.

At the 1999 election, 8 Labor MLCs were elected, along with 4 Liberals, 2 Nationals, and one each from the Greens, Christian Democratic Party (CDP), Australian Democrats, Unity, the Outdoor Recreation Party, One Nation and Reform the Legal System.

At the 2003 election, the following parties won seats:

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 John Brogden 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.

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.

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 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 David Oldfield) and the Democrats have lost most of their party organisation and electoral support in recent years, and are unlikely to retain their seats.

The Greens, who have generally polled 7-8% in opinion polls, will almost certainly retain their seat, currently held by Lee Rhiannon, 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.

The Christian Democratic Party's leader, Fred Nile, 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 Australian Senate, 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 Family First Party not to run cadidates in the election .

Parties

Independents

References

Government of New South Wales
Executive Coat of arms New South Wales
Legislative
Judicial
Elections
Political parties
Politics of Australia
Commonwealth
State/territory
governments
Local
government
Political
parties
Political
terminology
  1. Debnam, Peter. When something is rotten, it's rotten. Press ad.
  2. Andrew Clennell and Alan Mascarenhas. Debnam off in race of his life. Sydney Morning Herald
Categories: