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2005 Northern Territory general election

A general election was held in the Northern Territory, Australia, on 18 June 2005. The centre-left Labor Party, led by Chief Minister Clare Martin, won a second term with a landslide victory, winning six of the ten seats held by the opposition Country Liberal Party in the 25-member Northern Territory Legislative Assembly, bringing their total to 19. It was the second largest victory in any Northern Territory election. The only larger majority in the history of the Territory was in the first election, in 1974. In that contest, the CLP won 17 of the 19 seats in the chamber, and faced only two independents as opposition.

2005 Northern Territory general election

← 2001 18 June 2005 (2005-06-18) 2008 →

All 25 seats of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly
13 seats needed for a majority
Turnout80.07 ( 0.49 pp)
  First party Second party
 
Leader Clare Martin Denis Burke
Party Labor Country Liberal
Leader since 3 February 1999 7 February 2005
Leader's seat Fannie Bay Brennan
(lost seat)
Last election 13 seats 10 seats
Seats won 19 4
Seat change 6 6
Popular vote 44,822 30,827
Percentage 51.9% 35.7%
Swing 11.3 9.7
TPP 59.1% 40.9%
TPP 11.1 11.1


The most notable casualty was Opposition Leader Denis Burke's loss of his own seat of Brennan. It was only the second time a party leader in the Territory had been defeated in his own electorate, after Majority Leader Goff Letts losing his seat of Victoria River in 1977.

Overall result edit

19 2 4
Labor Ind CLP
Results of the 2005 Northern Territory general election, Legislative Assembly[1]
 
PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
Labor44,82251.94  11.3419+6
Country Liberal30,82735.73  9.654-6
Independents7,0458.16  2.392±0
Greens3,5944.17  4.170±0
Total86,288100.0025
Valid votes86,28896.25
Invalid/blank votes3,3583.75-0.52
Total votes89,646100.00
Registered voters/turnout111,95480.07-0.49
Popular vote
Labor
51.94%
Country Liberal
35.73%
Greens
4.17%
Independents
8.16%
Two-party-preferred vote
Labor
59.10%
Country Liberal
40.90%
Seats
Labor
76.00%
Country Liberal
16.00%
Independents
8.00%

The Labor Party won 52.5% of the primary vote, which was an increase of 11.9% over the 2001 election. The opposition Country Liberal Party polled 35.3%, a drop of 10.1% from 2001. The two party preferred result was Labor on 59.1% to the CLP on 40.9%, a swing to Labor of 11.1% from the previous election.[2] It was the first time that Labor had won a majority of the two-party vote at a Territory election; the CLP had won a narrow majority of the two-party vote four years earlier. The Northern Territory Greens ran an increased number of candidates, and managed to increase their vote through much of Darwin, but had very little effect on the outcome of the election.

Labor won 19 seats against the CLP's four seats. Two independent members, Loraine Braham and Gerry Wood, were also re-elected. While Labor had been favoured to win a second term, most commentators had predicted a gain of one or two seats at best. The size of the Labor landslide took even the most optimistic Labor observers by surprise. Labor took six seats off the CLP. Five of them – Brennan, Daly, Drysdale, Goyder and Port Darwin – were formerly safely conservative seats that Labor had never won before in the history of the Assembly. The ALP also retrieved the seat of MacDonnell, which had been a comfortably safe Labor seat until its shock fall to the CLP in 1997. The CLP also very narrowly failed to win back the formerly safe seat of Braitling from independent Loraine Braham, despite a strong challenge from CLP candidate Michael Jones.

Amidst what was their worst ever result, the CLP did have some good news in two seats which the ALP had been openly hoping to win. The ALP had run Fran Kilgariff, the very high-profile Mayor of Alice Springs and daughter of CLP founder Bernie Kilgariff as their candidate in Greatorex, against CLP Deputy Leader Dr Richard Lim. Despite Kilgariff's profile and the massive swing against the CLP elsewhere in the Territory, Lim managed to very narrowly retain his seat. There was a swing to the CLP in only one seat – Araluen, where leadership aspirant Jodeen Carney comfortably retained what had been the most marginal CLP-held seat.

The severity of the landslide result was all the more surprising considering that the ALP had never before been in government until 2001. The Legislative Assembly had been created in 1974, and the CLP had held government for an unbroken stretch of 27 years before Clare Martin won the ALP's first victory in 2001. The victory was seen in many cases not only as an endorsement of Martin's leadership, but also an endorsement of Labor's ability to govern. The CLP had consistently alleged that the ALP was unfit to govern the Territory, and had used this as a key tactic during election campaigns many times in the past. However, it was also seen as being a vote of no-confidence in the opposition, and in the days after the election result, conservative Prime Minister John Howard strongly criticised the CLP for what he saw as their poor performance in opposition. Furthermore, the reduction of the CLP to just four seats raised questions as to whether it was viable for them to continue to be separate from the Liberal-National Coalition, which operates at federal level and in every other state and territory.

There were several prominent casualties of the election, but none was more significant or surprising than the defeat of Opposition Leader Denis Burke in the Palmerston-area seat of Brennan. Brennan was the CLP's safest seat anywhere in the Territory, with a CLP majority of 19 percent. The ALP had never come close to winning any seats in Palmerston before. There had been no suggestion from any major commentators or opinion polls that Burke was even remotely under threat, but he was swept aside on election day with a swing against him of more than 21%. The ALP candidate, James Burke, a virtually unknown labor lawyer, expressed shock at his own win, and became a party legend overnight. Denis Burke had already stated that he would resign as party leader if he lost the election, but the loss of his seat forced the party to find a new leader immediately. The four remaining CLP members unanimously replaced Burke with Shadow Attorney-General and Shadow Health Minister Jodeen Carney.[3] Another shock result came in Daly in the remote northern portion of the Territory. It had previously been a reasonably safe CLP seat; retiring member Tim Baldwin held it with a majority of 9.5 percent. However, Labor challenger Rob Knight took the seat on an unheard-of swing of 24 percent, turning it into a safe Labor seat in one stroke.

While the loss of Burke was a major shock, the defeat of three other CLP sitting members, Sue Carter (Port Darwin) Stephen Dunham (Drysdale) and John Elferink (MacDonnell) also posed major problems for the party. Elferink had been the Leader of Opposition Business, Opposition Whip and Shadow Minister for Community Development, Housing, Local Government, Sport and Recreation, Regional Development, and Indigenous Affairs, Dunham had been the Shadow Minister for Transport and Infrastructure, Lands and Planning, Parks and Wildlife and Essential Services, and Carter had been the Shadow Minister for Family and Community Services, Environment and Heritage, Arts and Museums and Women's Policy. In the aftermath of their defeat, all of these portfolios had to be redistributed among the four remaining CLP members, Carney (Araluen), Dr Richard Lim (Greatorex) Fay Miller (Katherine) and Terry Mills (Blain). This has raised concerns from both sides of politics about the CLP's ability to mount any form of effective opposition in the new parliament.

The two independent members of the outgoing parliament, disendorsed former CLP minister Loraine Braham and former Litchfield Mayor Gerry Wood both managed to retain their seats. In the lead-up to the election, there had been some suggestion that Wood may have some difficulty retaining his seat, but Braham had been widely expected to win another term. The final result turned out to be the opposite; Wood cruised to victory with a massive 15 percent swing in his favour, whereas Braham very narrowly retained her seat in a result that was not known for several days after the election. The election was a disappointment for other independent candidates; Wood's successor as Litchfield Mayor, Mary Walshe, fell well short of expectations in Goyder, and Wadeye councillor Dale Seaniger failed to make much impact in Daly.

As in past elections, minor parties failed to make much impact at the 2005 election. While the Northern Territory Greens ran an increased number of candidates and increased their votes, none of their candidates, including leader Ilana Eldridge came close to winning a seat, and their preferences had comparatively little effect on the outcome of any seats, let alone the election. The Network Against Prohibition ran in several seats, but did noticeably poorly. The Australian Democrats ran candidates in only two seats, a significant decrease from 2001, and barely rated at all. The Socialist Alliance chose not to run any candidates for financial reasons, instead endorsing the Green and NAP candidates.

Issues edit

Law and order has always been a prominent issue in the Northern Territory, and the Country Liberal Party campaigned on this heavily during their 27-year unbroken stint in government. Perhaps in acknowledgment of this, the Labor Party is also attempting to present itself as being harsh on antisocial behaviour. Mandatory sentencing is an issue in the background; there is some dispute as to its popularity in the Territory, and it is likely that a CLP government would reintroduce the policy, whereas it will almost definitely remain abolished under an ALP government.

The campaign edit

 
Election campaign, 2005
Government Opposition
Party Labor Country Liberals
Leader Martin Burke
Leader since 1999 1999
Seats held 13 10
Seats needed 0 3

While there had been a form of unofficial campaign going on for some months, due to the persistent rumours of a coming election, there had been comparatively little in the way of policy announcements or major developments. Both parties began trading accusations that the other was being overly influenced by "southerners", with the ALP noting that the CLP had hired controversial federal Liberal staffer Ian Hanke and taking advantage of Burke's statements that he had had assistance from the federal Liberals in drafting his economic policies. At the same time, the CLP has been trying to link Martin's fortunes to those of less popular federal Labor leader Kim Beazley, and has suggested that she is being overly influenced by the federal party. (Where the CLP exists only in the Northern Territory, but is allied with the federal Liberals, the ALP is an entirely federal party.)

The CLP has also suffered due to a damaging row between Burke and former Shadow Minister Peter Maley, culminating in Maley's expulsion from the party on 19 May 2005. While Maley had once been touted as a potential leadership contender, he was later dumped from the ministry, and soon after announced his intention to retire at the 2005 election. Maley had reportedly not told Burke of his decision to retire before telling the media, and combined with his earlier axing, this aggravated tensions between the two. When the story broke on that Maley's wife had taken out a court order against him over domestic violence issues (although this was quickly withdrawn), Burke abruptly expelled Maley from the party. Maley served out the last weeks of his term as an independent, and briefly threatened to run for re-election, before deciding to publicly endorse the ALP candidate in his seat.

With the official announcement of the election on 30 May, the campaign began in earnest. Both parties made their first major policy launch on 1 June, with the ALP announcing plans to introduce laws cracking down on habitual drunks involved in antisocial behaviour, forcing them to undergo treatment or face jail, with a special alcohol court planned to deal with these offences. In contrast, the CLP concentrated on the economy, launching its "Territory 2020" plan to encourage business growth in the Territory, which amongst other things, would involve setting up a fund to encourage innovation and providing assistance to the armoured vehicle maintenance industry (Due to its location, Darwin, the Territory's capital, is a major defence hub, and defence industries are particularly important to the city's economy).

Retiring Members edit

Labor edit

CLP edit

Independent edit

Candidates edit

Sitting members are listed in bold. Successful candidates are highlighted in the relevant colour.

Electorate Held by Labor candidate CLP candidate Greens candidate Independent candidates
 
Arafura Labor Marion Scrymgour August Stevens George Pascoe
Araluen CLP John Gaynor Jodeen Carney Alan Tyley
Arnhem Labor Barbara McCarthy Djuwalpi Marika Lance Lawrence
Barkly Labor Elliot McAdam Val Dyer Janeen Bulsey
Blain CLP Brendan Cabry Terry Mills Sue McKinnon Duncan Dean
Braitling Independent Sue West Michael Jones Loraine Braham
Brennan CLP James Burke Denis Burke Nelly Riley
Casuarina Labor Kon Vatskalis Wendy Green Gary Mills
Scott White
Daly CLP Rob Knight Debbi Aloisi Elke Stegemann Dale Seaniger
Drysdale CLP Chris Natt Stephen Dunham
Fannie Bay Labor Clare Martin Edward Fry Fiona Clarke
Goyder CLP Ted Warren Keith Phasey Diana Rickard Andrew Blackadder
Mary Walshe
Greatorex CLP Fran Kilgariff Richard Lim David Mortimer
Johnston Labor Chris Burns Ross Connolly Kate Neely Gary Meyerhoff
Steve Saint
Karama Labor Delia Lawrie Trevor Sellick
Katherine CLP Sharon Hillen Fay Miller
Macdonnell CLP Alison Anderson John Elferink Andrew Longmire David Chewings
Vincent Forrester
Millner Labor Matthew Bonson Paul Mossman Rob Hoad Rob Inder-Smith
Phil Mitchell
Nelson Independent Lisa McKinney-Smith Chris Lugg Gerry Wood
Nhulunbuy Labor Syd Stirling Peter Manning
Nightcliff Labor Jane Aagaard Anthony Reiter Ilana Eldridge Andrew Arthur
Stuart Highway
Port Darwin CLP Kerry Sacilotto Sue Carter
Sanderson Labor Len Kiely Peter Styles
Stuart Labor Peter Toyne Anna Machado
Wanguri Labor Paul Henderson Kerrie Kyriacou

Unregistered parties and groups edit

Two parties that did not hold registration with the Northern Territory Electoral Commission at the time of the election nevertheless endorsed candidates.

Seats changing hands edit

Seat Pre-2005 Swing Post-2005
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Brennan   Country Liberal Denis Burke 19.0 20.8 1.8 James Burke Labor  
Daly   Country Liberal Tim Baldwin 9.5 24.4 14.8 Rob Knight Labor  
Drysdale   Country Liberal Stephen Dunham 15.7 16.9 1.3 Chris Natt Labor  
Goyder   Country Liberal Peter Maley 14.8 16.4 1.6 Ted Warren Labor  
Macdonnell   Country Liberal John Elferink 11.8 20.3 8.5 Alison Anderson Labor  
Port Darwin   Country Liberal Sue Carter 7.3 8.4 1.1 Kerry Sacilotto Labor  
  • Members listed in italics did not contest their seats at this election.

Party leaders edit

  • Clare Martin has been an MLA since 1995, leader of the Northern Territory ALP since 1997, and Chief Minister since 2001. A former journalist, she had overseen the ALP's first election victory in the history of the Territory in 2001. Martin had gained a reputation for being an effective communicator and economic manager, having also served a stint as treasurer. She campaigned largely on issues of law and order, and took some flak from her own party faithful for her policies, but would likely feel vindicated by the election result.
  • Denis Burke had been an MLA since 1994 and had served as Chief Minister from 1999 to 2001. He had continued as Opposition Leader after being defeated by Martin, but was dumped in favour of Terry Mills in mid-2003, only to regain the leadership in February 2005 after Mills' sudden resignation. The former army officer is a strong social conservative, but had specifically emphasised law and order issues throughout his career, culminating in his controversial maintenance of the CLP's mandatory detention policy during his time as Chief Minister. His campaign was marred by several gaffes and a bold plan to solve the territory's electricity problems which was badly sold to the electorate and was not well received. He had already stated his intention to step down if the CLP lost the election before ultimately losing his own seat.
  • Ilana Eldridge has been the leader of the Northern Territory Greens since their formation in the early 1990s. She has never held elected office, but has developed some profile from unsuccessful campaigns for the Senate in 1990 and 1996 and the Australian House of Representatives in 1998 and 2004. While again failing to win the seat of Nightcliff, she oversaw the only major third party campaign in the election, with the Greens substantially increasing both their number of candidates and their overall vote.

Electoral pendulum edit

The following pendulum is known as the Mackerras pendulum, invented by psephologist Malcolm Mackerras. The pendulum works by lining up all of the seats held in the Legislative Assembly according to the percentage point margin they are held by on a two-party-preferred basis. This is also known as the swing required for the seat to change hands. Given a uniform swing to the opposition or government parties, the number of seats that change hands can be predicted.[4][5]

Pre-election pendulum edit

Incumbent members who have become and remained an independent since the 2012 election are indicated in grey.

Members listed in italics did not re-contest their seat at the election.

Country Liberal seats
Marginal
Araluen Jodeen Carney CLP 2.0
Fairly safe
Port Darwin Sue Carter CLP 7.3
Macdonnell John Elferink CLP 8.5
Greatorex Richard Lim CLP 9.0
Daly Tim Baldwin CLP 9.5
Safe
Goyder Peter Maley CLP 14.8
Katherine Fay Miller CLP 15.3
Drysdale Stephen Dunham CLP 15.7
Blain Terry Mills CLP 16.7
Brennan Denis Burke CLP 19.0
Independent seats
Nelson Gerry Wood IND 1.1 v CLP
Braitling Loraine Braham IND 5.5 v CLP

Post-election pendulum edit

Country Liberal seats
Marginal
Greatorex Matt Conlan CLP 1.4
Katherine Fay Miller CLP 2.6
Fairly safe
Blain Terry Mills CLP 7.2
Araluen Jodeen Carney CLP 7.3
Independent seats
Braitling Loraine Braham IND 0.9 v CLP
Nelson Gerry Wood IND 16.2 v CLP

References edit

  1. ^ "Details of NT 2005 Election" (PDF). ABC.
  2. ^ "Election Preview – 2008 Northern Territory Election". Abc.net.au. 9 August 2008. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  3. ^ [1] 31 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "2005 Redistribution". ABC.
  5. ^ "Details of NT 2005 Election" (PDF). ABC.

External links edit

Electoral sites edit

  • ABC's coverage of the Northern Territory election
  • Antony Green's election summary
  • Northern Territory Electoral Commission website

Party sites edit

  • Australian Labor Party (NT) website
  • Northern Territory Greens website
  • Network Against Prohibition website

2005, northern, territory, general, election, general, election, held, northern, territory, australia, june, 2005, centre, left, labor, party, chief, minister, clare, martin, second, term, with, landslide, victory, winning, seats, held, opposition, country, li. A general election was held in the Northern Territory Australia on 18 June 2005 The centre left Labor Party led by Chief Minister Clare Martin won a second term with a landslide victory winning six of the ten seats held by the opposition Country Liberal Party in the 25 member Northern Territory Legislative Assembly bringing their total to 19 It was the second largest victory in any Northern Territory election The only larger majority in the history of the Territory was in the first election in 1974 In that contest the CLP won 17 of the 19 seats in the chamber and faced only two independents as opposition 2005 Northern Territory general election 2001 18 June 2005 2005 06 18 2008 All 25 seats of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly13 seats needed for a majorityTurnout80 07 0 49 pp First party Second party Leader Clare Martin Denis Burke Party Labor Country Liberal Leader since 3 February 1999 7 February 2005 Leader s seat Fannie Bay Brennan lost seat Last election 13 seats 10 seats Seats won 19 4 Seat change 6 6 Popular vote 44 822 30 827 Percentage 51 9 35 7 Swing 11 3 9 7 TPP 59 1 40 9 TPP 11 1 11 1Chief Minister before election Clare Martin Labor Elected Chief Minister Clare Martin Labor The most notable casualty was Opposition Leader Denis Burke s loss of his own seat of Brennan It was only the second time a party leader in the Territory had been defeated in his own electorate after Majority Leader Goff Letts losing his seat of Victoria River in 1977 Contents 1 Overall result 2 Issues 3 The campaign 4 Retiring Members 4 1 Labor 4 2 CLP 4 3 Independent 5 Candidates 5 1 Unregistered parties and groups 6 Seats changing hands 7 Party leaders 8 Electoral pendulum 8 1 Pre election pendulum 8 2 Post election pendulum 9 References 10 External links 10 1 Electoral sites 10 2 Party sitesOverall result editSee also Results of the Northern Territory general election 2005 19 2 4 Labor Ind CLP Results of the 2005 Northern Territory general election Legislative Assembly 1 nbsp PartyVotes Seats Labor44 82251 94 nbsp 11 3419 6Country Liberal30 82735 73 nbsp 9 654 6Independents7 0458 16 nbsp 2 392 0Greens3 5944 17 nbsp 4 170 0Total86 288100 00 25 Valid votes86 28896 25Invalid blank votes3 3583 75 0 52Total votes89 646100 00 Registered voters turnout111 95480 07 0 49Popular vote Labor 51 94 Country Liberal 35 73 Greens 4 17 Independents 8 16 Two party preferred vote Labor 59 10 Country Liberal 40 90 Seats Labor 76 00 Country Liberal 16 00 Independents 8 00 The Labor Party won 52 5 of the primary vote which was an increase of 11 9 over the 2001 election The opposition Country Liberal Party polled 35 3 a drop of 10 1 from 2001 The two party preferred result was Labor on 59 1 to the CLP on 40 9 a swing to Labor of 11 1 from the previous election 2 It was the first time that Labor had won a majority of the two party vote at a Territory election the CLP had won a narrow majority of the two party vote four years earlier The Northern Territory Greens ran an increased number of candidates and managed to increase their vote through much of Darwin but had very little effect on the outcome of the election Labor won 19 seats against the CLP s four seats Two independent members Loraine Braham and Gerry Wood were also re elected While Labor had been favoured to win a second term most commentators had predicted a gain of one or two seats at best The size of the Labor landslide took even the most optimistic Labor observers by surprise Labor took six seats off the CLP Five of them Brennan Daly Drysdale Goyder and Port Darwin were formerly safely conservative seats that Labor had never won before in the history of the Assembly The ALP also retrieved the seat of MacDonnell which had been a comfortably safe Labor seat until its shock fall to the CLP in 1997 The CLP also very narrowly failed to win back the formerly safe seat of Braitling from independent Loraine Braham despite a strong challenge from CLP candidate Michael Jones Amidst what was their worst ever result the CLP did have some good news in two seats which the ALP had been openly hoping to win The ALP had run Fran Kilgariff the very high profile Mayor of Alice Springs and daughter of CLP founder Bernie Kilgariff as their candidate in Greatorex against CLP Deputy Leader Dr Richard Lim Despite Kilgariff s profile and the massive swing against the CLP elsewhere in the Territory Lim managed to very narrowly retain his seat There was a swing to the CLP in only one seat Araluen where leadership aspirant Jodeen Carney comfortably retained what had been the most marginal CLP held seat The severity of the landslide result was all the more surprising considering that the ALP had never before been in government until 2001 The Legislative Assembly had been created in 1974 and the CLP had held government for an unbroken stretch of 27 years before Clare Martin won the ALP s first victory in 2001 The victory was seen in many cases not only as an endorsement of Martin s leadership but also an endorsement of Labor s ability to govern The CLP had consistently alleged that the ALP was unfit to govern the Territory and had used this as a key tactic during election campaigns many times in the past However it was also seen as being a vote of no confidence in the opposition and in the days after the election result conservative Prime Minister John Howard strongly criticised the CLP for what he saw as their poor performance in opposition Furthermore the reduction of the CLP to just four seats raised questions as to whether it was viable for them to continue to be separate from the Liberal National Coalition which operates at federal level and in every other state and territory There were several prominent casualties of the election but none was more significant or surprising than the defeat of Opposition Leader Denis Burke in the Palmerston area seat of Brennan Brennan was the CLP s safest seat anywhere in the Territory with a CLP majority of 19 percent The ALP had never come close to winning any seats in Palmerston before There had been no suggestion from any major commentators or opinion polls that Burke was even remotely under threat but he was swept aside on election day with a swing against him of more than 21 The ALP candidate James Burke a virtually unknown labor lawyer expressed shock at his own win and became a party legend overnight Denis Burke had already stated that he would resign as party leader if he lost the election but the loss of his seat forced the party to find a new leader immediately The four remaining CLP members unanimously replaced Burke with Shadow Attorney General and Shadow Health Minister Jodeen Carney 3 Another shock result came in Daly in the remote northern portion of the Territory It had previously been a reasonably safe CLP seat retiring member Tim Baldwin held it with a majority of 9 5 percent However Labor challenger Rob Knight took the seat on an unheard of swing of 24 percent turning it into a safe Labor seat in one stroke While the loss of Burke was a major shock the defeat of three other CLP sitting members Sue Carter Port Darwin Stephen Dunham Drysdale and John Elferink MacDonnell also posed major problems for the party Elferink had been the Leader of Opposition Business Opposition Whip and Shadow Minister for Community Development Housing Local Government Sport and Recreation Regional Development and Indigenous Affairs Dunham had been the Shadow Minister for Transport and Infrastructure Lands and Planning Parks and Wildlife and Essential Services and Carter had been the Shadow Minister for Family and Community Services Environment and Heritage Arts and Museums and Women s Policy In the aftermath of their defeat all of these portfolios had to be redistributed among the four remaining CLP members Carney Araluen Dr Richard Lim Greatorex Fay Miller Katherine and Terry Mills Blain This has raised concerns from both sides of politics about the CLP s ability to mount any form of effective opposition in the new parliament The two independent members of the outgoing parliament disendorsed former CLP minister Loraine Braham and former Litchfield Mayor Gerry Wood both managed to retain their seats In the lead up to the election there had been some suggestion that Wood may have some difficulty retaining his seat but Braham had been widely expected to win another term The final result turned out to be the opposite Wood cruised to victory with a massive 15 percent swing in his favour whereas Braham very narrowly retained her seat in a result that was not known for several days after the election The election was a disappointment for other independent candidates Wood s successor as Litchfield Mayor Mary Walshe fell well short of expectations in Goyder and Wadeye councillor Dale Seaniger failed to make much impact in Daly As in past elections minor parties failed to make much impact at the 2005 election While the Northern Territory Greens ran an increased number of candidates and increased their votes none of their candidates including leader Ilana Eldridge came close to winning a seat and their preferences had comparatively little effect on the outcome of any seats let alone the election The Network Against Prohibition ran in several seats but did noticeably poorly The Australian Democrats ran candidates in only two seats a significant decrease from 2001 and barely rated at all The Socialist Alliance chose not to run any candidates for financial reasons instead endorsing the Green and NAP candidates Issues editLaw and order has always been a prominent issue in the Northern Territory and the Country Liberal Party campaigned on this heavily during their 27 year unbroken stint in government Perhaps in acknowledgment of this the Labor Party is also attempting to present itself as being harsh on antisocial behaviour Mandatory sentencing is an issue in the background there is some dispute as to its popularity in the Territory and it is likely that a CLP government would reintroduce the policy whereas it will almost definitely remain abolished under an ALP government The campaign edit nbsp Election campaign 2005 Government Opposition Party Labor Country Liberals Leader Martin Burke Leader since 1999 1999 Seats held 13 10 Seats needed 0 3 While there had been a form of unofficial campaign going on for some months due to the persistent rumours of a coming election there had been comparatively little in the way of policy announcements or major developments Both parties began trading accusations that the other was being overly influenced by southerners with the ALP noting that the CLP had hired controversial federal Liberal staffer Ian Hanke and taking advantage of Burke s statements that he had had assistance from the federal Liberals in drafting his economic policies At the same time the CLP has been trying to link Martin s fortunes to those of less popular federal Labor leader Kim Beazley and has suggested that she is being overly influenced by the federal party Where the CLP exists only in the Northern Territory but is allied with the federal Liberals the ALP is an entirely federal party The CLP has also suffered due to a damaging row between Burke and former Shadow Minister Peter Maley culminating in Maley s expulsion from the party on 19 May 2005 While Maley had once been touted as a potential leadership contender he was later dumped from the ministry and soon after announced his intention to retire at the 2005 election Maley had reportedly not told Burke of his decision to retire before telling the media and combined with his earlier axing this aggravated tensions between the two When the story broke on that Maley s wife had taken out a court order against him over domestic violence issues although this was quickly withdrawn Burke abruptly expelled Maley from the party Maley served out the last weeks of his term as an independent and briefly threatened to run for re election before deciding to publicly endorse the ALP candidate in his seat With the official announcement of the election on 30 May the campaign began in earnest Both parties made their first major policy launch on 1 June with the ALP announcing plans to introduce laws cracking down on habitual drunks involved in antisocial behaviour forcing them to undergo treatment or face jail with a special alcohol court planned to deal with these offences In contrast the CLP concentrated on the economy launching its Territory 2020 plan to encourage business growth in the Territory which amongst other things would involve setting up a fund to encourage innovation and providing assistance to the armoured vehicle maintenance industry Due to its location Darwin the Territory s capital is a major defence hub and defence industries are particularly important to the city s economy Retiring Members editLabor edit Jack Ah Kit MLA Arnhem CLP edit Tim Baldwin MLA Daly Independent edit Peter Maley MLA Goyder elected as CLPCandidates editSitting members are listed in bold Successful candidates are highlighted in the relevant colour Electorate Held by Labor candidate CLP candidate Greens candidate Independent candidates Arafura Labor Marion Scrymgour August Stevens George Pascoe Araluen CLP John Gaynor Jodeen Carney Alan Tyley Arnhem Labor Barbara McCarthy Djuwalpi Marika Lance Lawrence Barkly Labor Elliot McAdam Val Dyer Janeen Bulsey Blain CLP Brendan Cabry Terry Mills Sue McKinnon Duncan Dean Braitling Independent Sue West Michael Jones Loraine Braham Brennan CLP James Burke Denis Burke Nelly Riley Casuarina Labor Kon Vatskalis Wendy Green Gary MillsScott White Daly CLP Rob Knight Debbi Aloisi Elke Stegemann Dale Seaniger Drysdale CLP Chris Natt Stephen Dunham Fannie Bay Labor Clare Martin Edward Fry Fiona Clarke Goyder CLP Ted Warren Keith Phasey Diana Rickard Andrew BlackadderMary Walshe Greatorex CLP Fran Kilgariff Richard Lim David Mortimer Johnston Labor Chris Burns Ross Connolly Kate Neely Gary MeyerhoffSteve Saint Karama Labor Delia Lawrie Trevor Sellick Katherine CLP Sharon Hillen Fay Miller Macdonnell CLP Alison Anderson John Elferink Andrew Longmire David ChewingsVincent Forrester Millner Labor Matthew Bonson Paul Mossman Rob Hoad Rob Inder SmithPhil Mitchell Nelson Independent Lisa McKinney Smith Chris Lugg Gerry Wood Nhulunbuy Labor Syd Stirling Peter Manning Nightcliff Labor Jane Aagaard Anthony Reiter Ilana Eldridge Andrew ArthurStuart Highway Port Darwin CLP Kerry Sacilotto Sue Carter Sanderson Labor Len Kiely Peter Styles Stuart Labor Peter Toyne Anna Machado Wanguri Labor Paul Henderson Kerrie Kyriacou Unregistered parties and groups edit Two parties that did not hold registration with the Northern Territory Electoral Commission at the time of the election nevertheless endorsed candidates The Australian Democrats endorsed Janeen Bulsey in Barkly and Duncan Dean in Blain The Network Against Prohibition endorsed Scott White in Casuarina Fiona Clarke in Fannie Bay Gary Meyerhoff in Johnston Rob Inder Smith in Millner and Stuart Highway in Nightcliff Seats changing hands editSeat Pre 2005 Swing Post 2005 Party Member Margin Margin Member Party Brennan Country Liberal Denis Burke 19 0 20 8 1 8 James Burke Labor Daly Country Liberal Tim Baldwin 9 5 24 4 14 8 Rob Knight Labor Drysdale Country Liberal Stephen Dunham 15 7 16 9 1 3 Chris Natt Labor Goyder Country Liberal Peter Maley 14 8 16 4 1 6 Ted Warren Labor Macdonnell Country Liberal John Elferink 11 8 20 3 8 5 Alison Anderson Labor Port Darwin Country Liberal Sue Carter 7 3 8 4 1 1 Kerry Sacilotto Labor Members listed in italics did not contest their seats at this election Party leaders editClare Martin has been an MLA since 1995 leader of the Northern Territory ALP since 1997 and Chief Minister since 2001 A former journalist she had overseen the ALP s first election victory in the history of the Territory in 2001 Martin had gained a reputation for being an effective communicator and economic manager having also served a stint as treasurer She campaigned largely on issues of law and order and took some flak from her own party faithful for her policies but would likely feel vindicated by the election result Denis Burke had been an MLA since 1994 and had served as Chief Minister from 1999 to 2001 He had continued as Opposition Leader after being defeated by Martin but was dumped in favour of Terry Mills in mid 2003 only to regain the leadership in February 2005 after Mills sudden resignation The former army officer is a strong social conservative but had specifically emphasised law and order issues throughout his career culminating in his controversial maintenance of the CLP s mandatory detention policy during his time as Chief Minister His campaign was marred by several gaffes and a bold plan to solve the territory s electricity problems which was badly sold to the electorate and was not well received He had already stated his intention to step down if the CLP lost the election before ultimately losing his own seat Ilana Eldridge has been the leader of the Northern Territory Greens since their formation in the early 1990s She has never held elected office but has developed some profile from unsuccessful campaigns for the Senate in 1990 and 1996 and the Australian House of Representatives in 1998 and 2004 While again failing to win the seat of Nightcliff she oversaw the only major third party campaign in the election with the Greens substantially increasing both their number of candidates and their overall vote Electoral pendulum editThe following pendulum is known as the Mackerras pendulum invented by psephologist Malcolm Mackerras The pendulum works by lining up all of the seats held in the Legislative Assembly according to the percentage point margin they are held by on a two party preferred basis This is also known as the swing required for the seat to change hands Given a uniform swing to the opposition or government parties the number of seats that change hands can be predicted 4 5 Pre election pendulum edit Incumbent members who have become and remained an independent since the 2012 election are indicated in grey Members listed in italics did not re contest their seat at the election Labor seats Marginal Millner Matthew Bonson ALP 1 2 Johnston Chris Burns ALP 2 9 Sanderson Len Kiely ALP 3 0 Casuarina Kon Vatskalis ALP 3 5 Karama Delia Lawrie ALP 3 7 Fairly safe Nightcliff Jane Aagaard ALP 7 1 Wanguri Paul Henderson ALP 7 2 Arafura Marion Scrymgour ALP 8 9 Fannie Bay Clare Martin ALP 9 8 Safe Arnhem Jack Ah Kit ALP 11 4 Barkly Elliot McAdam ALP 13 4 Nhulunbuy Syd Stirling ALP 16 1 Stuart Peter Toyne ALP 17 8 Country Liberal seats Marginal Araluen Jodeen Carney CLP 2 0 Fairly safe Port Darwin Sue Carter CLP 7 3 Macdonnell John Elferink CLP 8 5 Greatorex Richard Lim CLP 9 0 Daly Tim Baldwin CLP 9 5 Safe Goyder Peter Maley CLP 14 8 Katherine Fay Miller CLP 15 3 Drysdale Stephen Dunham CLP 15 7 Blain Terry Mills CLP 16 7 Brennan Denis Burke CLP 19 0 Independent seats Nelson Gerry Wood IND 1 1 v CLP Braitling Loraine Braham IND 5 5 v CLP Post election pendulum edit Labor seats Marginal Port Darwin Kerry Sacilotto ALP 1 1 Drysdale Chris Natt ALP 1 3 Goyder Ted Warren ALP 1 6 Brennan James Burke ALP 1 8 Fairly safe Sanderson Len Kiely ALP 8 4 Safe Macdonnell Alison Anderson ALP 11 8 Millner Matthew Bonson ALP 12 8 v IND Daly Robert Knight ALP 14 8 Nightcliff Jane Aagaard ALP 15 5 Johnston Chris Burns ALP 15 6 Karama Delia Lawrie ALP 17 0 Fannie Bay Clare Martin ALP 18 6 Casuarina Kon Vatskalis ALP 19 0 Very safe Wanguri Paul Henderson ALP 20 8 Stuart Karl Hampton ALP 21 0 Barkly Elliot McAdam ALP 23 0 Arafura Marion Scrymgour ALP 23 6 Arnhem Malarndirri McCarthy ALP 23 9 Nhulunbuy Syd Stirling ALP 26 1 Country Liberal seats Marginal Greatorex Matt Conlan CLP 1 4 Katherine Fay Miller CLP 2 6 Fairly safe Blain Terry Mills CLP 7 2 Araluen Jodeen Carney CLP 7 3 Independent seats Braitling Loraine Braham IND 0 9 v CLP Nelson Gerry Wood IND 16 2 v CLPReferences edit Details of NT 2005 Election PDF ABC Election Preview 2008 Northern Territory Election Abc net au 9 August 2008 Retrieved 27 January 2012 1 Archived 31 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine 2005 Redistribution ABC Details of NT 2005 Election PDF ABC External links editElectoral sites edit ABC s coverage of the Northern Territory election Antony Green s election summary The Mackerras Pendulum PDF document Northern Territory Electoral Commission website Complete list of candidates in the election Party sites edit Australian Labor Party NT website Country Liberal Party website Northern Territory Greens website Network Against Prohibition website Australian Democrats NT website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2005 Northern Territory general election amp oldid 1213114803, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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