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2006 South Australian state election

The state election for the 51st Parliament of South Australia was held in the Australian state of South Australia on 18 March 2006 to elect all members of the South Australian House of Assembly and 11 members of the South Australian Legislative Council. The election was conducted by the independent State Electoral Office.

2006 South Australian state election

← 2002 18 March 2006 (2006-03-18) 2010 →

All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly
24 seats were needed for a majority
11 (of the 22) seats in the South Australian Legislative Council
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Mike Rann Rob Kerin Karlene Maywald
Party Labor Liberal National
Leader since 5 November 1994 22 October 2001 11 October 1997
Leader's seat Ramsay Frome Chaffey
Last election 23 seats 20 seats 1 seat
Seats won 28 15 1
Seat change 5 5
Popular vote 424,715 319,041 19,636
Percentage 45.22% 33.97% 2.09%
Swing 8.88 6.00 0.64
TPP 56.78% 43.22%
TPP swing 7.71pp 7.71pp

Results by electorate

Premier before election

Mike Rann
Labor

Elected Premier

Mike Rann
Labor

In the 47-seat South Australian House of Assembly, the Labor government was returned in a landslide with 28 seats from a 56.8 per cent two-party-preferred vote, winning six seats from the Liberal Party. The Liberals were reduced to just 15 seats, the worst result in their history.

In the 22-seat South Australian Legislative Council, the balance of power has been continuously held by the crossbench since the 1985 election. With half of the seats up for election, Labor gained an additional seat at the expense of the Liberals, Nick Xenophon and No Pokies rose to prominence after unexpectedly winning a historic fifth of the entire statewide vote, the Greens won their first seat, Family First won their second seat to hold two seats, while the faltering Democrats failed to win a seat for the first time in their history.

Key dates edit

  • Issue of writ: 20 February 2006
  • Close of electoral rolls: 27 February 2006
  • Close of nominations: Thursday 2 March 2006, at noon
  • O: Monday 6 March 2006
  • Polling day: 18 March 2006
  • Return of writ: On or before 28 April 2006 (actually returned 6 April)

Results summary edit

House of Assembly edit

The centre-left Australian Labor Party, elected in 2002 and led by Premier Mike Rann of the Rann government, gained six Liberal-held seats and a 7.7 per cent statewide two-party preferred swing,[1] resulting in a net gain of five seats and the first Labor majority government since the 1985 election with 28 of the 47 House of Assembly (lower house) seats.[2]

The centre-right South Australian Division of the Liberal Party of Australia, led by Leader of the Opposition Rob Kerin, regained a former independent seat while losing other seats – a net loss of five seats. The Liberals were left with only 15 of 47 seats, the worst result for the Liberals in South Australian electoral history.[3]

Independent members Bob Such and Rory McEwen were re-elected. Kris Hanna, elected in 2002 representing Labor, was re-elected as an independent member. The sitting Nationals SA member Karlene Maywald was also re-elected.

Legislative Council edit

With 11 of the 22-member Legislative Council (upper house) standing for election, both major parties finished with a total of eight of the 22 seats, with Labor winning four of the 11 and the Liberals winning three. No Pokies independent Nick Xenophon polled 20.5 per cent, an unprecedented result for an independent or minor party, which resulted in both Xenophon and his running mate, Ann Bressington, being elected. Xenophon's third running mate, John Darley, was later appointed to the vacancy created by Xenophon's resignation. Family First had a second member elected. The Democrats vote collapsed with no candidate elected, leaving them with one remaining member in the upper house. The SA Greens won a seat for the first time.

Leadership changes edit

Following the outcome of the election, the member for Davenport, Iain Evans, replaced Rob Kerin as leader of the Liberal Party and thus as Leader of the Opposition.[4]

Party backgrounds edit

Australian Labor Party edit

The Australian Labor Party is Australia's oldest political party, founded in 1891. It is a centre-left social democratic party which is formally linked to the trade union labour movement.[5] At a state level, the South Australian Branch of the Australian Labor Party had been in government since the previous election in 2002, having been in opposition from 1993 to 2002.[6] Since the 1970 election ending decades of electoral malapportionment of the Playmander,[7][8] nine of the 12 elections since have been won by Labor.[6] Labor's most notable premiers in South Australia include Thomas Price in the 1900s, reformist Don Dunstan in the 1970s,[9] John Bannon in the 1980s and the factionally nonaligned and pragmatic Mike Rann.[10] The party's deputy leader, and therefore the Deputy Premier, was Kevin Foley.[11]

Liberal Party of Australia edit

The South Australian Division of the Liberal Party of Australia is a centre-right conservative liberal party with close links to business and advocating free markets.[12] Whilst primarily a socially conservative party, there exists a more socially liberal wing, colloquially known as 'wet', 'moderate' or small-l liberals, highlighted by the short-lived Liberal Movement who first contested the 1975 election as a separate party led by Steele Hall.[13] At state level, in 1973 the South Australian Division of the Liberal Party of Australia emerged from the Liberal and Country League (LCL), which in turn had resulted from a merger between the Liberal Federation and the Country Party in 1932.[14] The state opposition leader at the 2006 election, Rob Kerin, was seen as being largely aloof from factional disputes.[15]

Nationals SA edit

The Nationals SA is a sub-division of the conservative National Party of Australia (formerly the Country Party). First contesting the 1965 election, they have only held two seats: Flinders (1973–1993) and Chaffey (1997–2010).[16] Former member Karlene Maywald, representing the Riverland district of Chaffey, accepted a cabinet position in 2004 as part of the Rann Labor government, as Minister for the River Murray, Minister for Regional Development, Minister for Small Business, and later Minister for Water Security.[17] This informal ALP-NAT coalition (the first since 1935) caused an uproar, with the federal Liberal member for the SA seat of Sturt, Christopher Pyne, calling for Maywald's expulsion from the Nationals, and Patrick Secker calling for a corruption enquiry into the appointment. Neither eventuated.[18] As the Liberal Party in South Australia is descended from a historical merger from an earlier Country Party,[14] the SA Nationals are not as dominant in rural areas as their eastern state counterparts.

SA Greens edit

The SA Greens, founded in 1995, are a sub-division of the left-wing Australian Greens. They are based on green politics and consider themselves a new politics party with strong beliefs in ecology, democracy and social justice amongst other issues.[19] Federally and locally they have seen a continued rise in primary votes, in part due to the demise of the Australian Democrats.[20] The 2007 federal election saw 77.28% of the Greens' preferences flow to Labor over the Liberal Party in SA. The party's parliamentary leader is Mark Parnell.

Family First Party edit

The Family First Party, founded immediately before the 2002 state election, has a political ideology based on Christian-influenced conservatism. Although officially a secular party, it has close links to the Pentecostal movement,[21] and in particular the Assemblies of God denomination.[22] Its social policies generally mirror conservative Christian values (but not necessarily politically conservative values). The 2007 federal election saw 57.10% of their preferences flow to the Liberals over the Labor Party in SA. The party's leader at the time of the election was Andrew Evans.

Australian Democrats edit

The Australian Democrats were originally a centrist party, with most current policies based on social liberalism. Federally, the party was founded in 1977 by Liberal splinter groups known as the Liberal Movement, which had split from its parent over electoral reform,[23] and the Australia Party, which had rebelled against Australia's involvement in the Vietnam War. The Australian Democrats were founded by Don Chipp, who had also left the Liberal Party, citing dissatisfaction with the increasing underrepresentation of small-l liberals within the party.

At the state level, it is descended from the New Liberal Movement (New LM) of Robin Millhouse, who held the Democrats' only lower house seats,[24] Mitcham and its successor seat Waite.[25] The Democrats had suffered internal problems and leadership scuffles since 1997. The 2007 federal election saw 65.79% of Democrat preferences flow to Labor over the Liberal Party in SA. The party's leader at the election was Sandra Kanck.

Electoral system edit

 
The disproportionality of the 2006 election was 12.50 according to the Gallagher Index.

South Australia is governed by the principles of the Westminster system, a form of parliamentary government based on the model of the United Kingdom. Legislative power rests with the Parliament of South Australia, which consists of The Sovereign (represented by the Governor of South Australia), the House of Assembly (lower house) which forms the government, and the Legislative Council (upper house) as a house of review. Forty-seven members of the lower house represent single-member electorates and are elected under the full-preference Instant-runoff voting (IRV) system for fixed four-year terms.[26] The independent State Electoral Office, which conducts elections, is responsible for a mandatory redistricting of boundaries before each election to ensure one vote one value.[27] At each election, voters choose half of the 22 upper house members, each of whom serves eight-year terms in a single statewide electorate.[28]

The Legislative Council is elected under the preferential Single Transferable Vote (STV) system through a means of Group voting tickets. Voters can choose to vote for a ticket by placing the number '1' in one of the ticket boxes "above the line" or can vote for individual candidates by numbering all the boxes "below the line" (54 in the 2006 election).[28] In above the line voting, ticket votes are distributed according to the party or group voting ticket registered before the election with the election management body. As more than 95% of ballot papers are above the line, this form of voting often leads to pre-election trading between parties on how each party will allocate later preferences to other parties and candidates.[29]

Voting is compulsory once enrolled in South Australian elections,[3] which results in turnout rates above 90 per cent. Informal voting, which occurs when a voting slip is not valid, is at a rate of under five per cent. Voting slips are informal when they are not filled out correctly, such examples are not numbering subsequent numbers, not filling out all the candidate boxes with numbers (except the last candidate), or in some other way that is verified by the State Electoral Office as illegible. South Australian elections have some features that are unique to the rest of Australia.[30]

As elections have fixed four-year terms, the election date of 18 March 2006 was known well ahead of time. The Electoral Act stipulates that the election is to be held on the third Saturday in March every four years. The election campaign must run for a minimum of 25 days or a maximum of 55 days, therefore the Governor would have needed to issue writs for the election by 21 February 2006 at the latest.[31] On 20 February, Premier Mike Rann invited Governor Marjorie Jackson-Nelson to issue writs for the election.[32] In accordance with electoral regulations, the Electoral Commissioner then advertised key dates for the election of the House of Assembly and half of the Legislative Council – close of rolls on 27 February 2006 at noon, nominations to be received by 2 March 2006 at noon, polling day on 18 March 2006,[31] and the return of writs on or before 28 April 2006.

Election background edit

In the 2002 election, Labor won 23 seats, the Liberals 20, Nationals 1, and conservative Independents won three. As 24 seats are required to govern, the Liberal Party was expected to retain government with the support of all four independents. However, in a surprise decision, one of the conservative independents, Peter Lewis, decided to support Labor in exchange for holding a constitutional convention, making him speaker of the House of Assembly,[33] and concessions for his electorate including the phasing out of commercial fishing in the River Murray, prioritising the eradication of the branched broomrape weed, changing water rates for irrigation, fast-tracking a feasibility study for a weir and lock at Wellington, and improving rural roads.[34] Lewis resigned as speaker in April 2005[35] after controversy over allegations of paedophilia he had made about a serving MP.[36] However, by this time, Labor had already gained the support of independents Bob Such[37] and Rory McEwen[38] in 2002, as well as Nationals SA member Karlene Maywald[39] in 2004. Such was given the position of speaker for the remainder of the government's term.[40]

Campaign edit

The Labor campaign was heavily based around Premier Mike Rann with Labor's advertising swapping between the mottos "Building South Australia" and, to a greater extent, "RANN Gets Results".[41] Some commentators also argued that the "presidential" style of campaign, common in modern Australian politics, could be seen in Labor's formal campaign launch at the Norwood Town Hall the Sunday before the election, which had some similarities to the nomination conventions that the major parties hold in the United States.[42]

Another facet of the Labor campaign was extensive negative campaigning against Liberal leader Rob Kerin, including an advertisement featuring an excerpt of an interview that Kerin had with FIVEaa presenter Keith Conlon, who asked Kerin why he wanted to be leader of the Liberal Party. Kerin stammered for a few seconds and gave the impression that he was uncertain. The advertisement concluded with the question, "Does Rob Want The Job?". Conlon complained that the advertisement gave the false impression that he was endorsing Labor, but Labor campaign director David Feeney dismissed his concerns.[43] Other negative advertisements run by Labor revolved around the actions of the previous Liberal government—one advertisement and leaflet reminded voters that while in power, the previous Liberal government closed 65 schools,[44] closed hospital wards,[45] and privatised the Electricity Trust of South Australia.[46]

Considered "strapped for cash",[47] the Liberal Party ran a very limited television and radio campaign. Businessman Robert Gerard was forced to resign from his Federal Liberal Party-appointed position on the board of the Reserve Bank of Australia due to the party appointing him to the position despite the known fact that he had outstanding tax avoidance issues being dealt with by the Australian Taxation Office, and had thus subsequently pulled out of his traditional role of bankrolling the state division of the party, leaving the party with "only enough funds for the most basic campaign".[48] Kerin indicated people would have to "wait and see" if there would be any campaign, even asking trade unions for donations, no matter how small.[49] The advertisements that did run argued that Labor was wasting record tax receipts from the GST.[50] A number of embarrassments for the Liberal Party surrounded their television advertisement—in an early version released to journalists, Labor was spelt "Labour" (Labor cabinet minister King O'Malley dropped the 'u' in 1912 to "modernise" it as per American English)[51] and the advertisement alleged that South Australia's hospital waiting lists were the worst in the nation, which Labor successfully disputed to the Electoral Commissioner.[52] During the election campaign, David Pisoni, the Liberal candidate for Unley, made allegations in his advertising that Labor and their candidate Michael Keenan supported controversial urban infill programmes, which Labor flatly denied. Electoral Commissioner Kay Mousley investigated and ordered that the advertisements be withdrawn and corrections be run at Pisoni's expense.[53]

The Labor minority government sought to win a majority in the House of Assembly. Opinion polls indicated that this was likely and ABC elections expert Antony Green said that the "Labor government looks set to be returned with an increased majority".[54] Centrebet had Labor at odds of $1.01 and the Liberals at $12.00 for a majority government.[55]

Most commentators agreed that the Liberal Party had little chance of winning government, and that Kerin would step down from the leadership after the election,[56] a suspicion confirmed in Kerin's concession speech.[57] Martin Hamilton-Smith was considering mounting a leadership challenge, however, he withdrew on 14 October 2005 (probably for the sake of the impression of party unity) and subsequently resigned or was pushed from the opposition frontbench.[58]

Issues edit

 
Labor website header during the election campaign. Similar designs were used on ALP stationery and posters

One of the most publicised issues prior to the election was the tram extension from Victoria Square to the Adelaide railway station[59] which the Liberals, despite having proposed the idea in their previous transport plan, now opposed.[60] Construction began in April 2007[61] and was operational as of October 2007.[62] The Adelaide Airport expansion suffered fuel delivery related delays that Labor was criticised for.[63] A perennial election issue, lack of safety improvement of the Britannia Roundabout was focused on by the Norwood Liberal candidate.[64] Land and payroll tax cuts worth $1.5 billion were announced by Labor, the largest in the state's history.[65] The tax cuts coincided with South Australia achieving an economic "Triple A" rating under the current Labor government.[66] Business SA chief executive Peter Vaughan "praised" Labor's economic management.[67]

The Advertiser revealed details of "the biggest project of its kind in South Australia's history", a $1.5 billion redevelopment on the western bank of the inner harbour. The development will include 2000 new homes on government-owned land and new buildings as high as 12 storeys. This followed the awarding of a $6 billion air warfare destroyer contract to ASC Pty Ltd, based in the electorate at Osborne.[68]

The future of the River Murray has come under threat due to falling water levels, and in an unprecedented move, Nationals MP Karlene Maywald was given a cabinet position as Minister for the River Murray in 2004.[69] Possible nuclear waste dumps were of concern to many Adelaide residents; Premier Rann successfully lobbied against any federal government proposals.[70]

Law and order was another key issue, with Labor promising extra police.[71] Tough drink and drug driving laws had also been introduced[72] which included zero tolerance roadside testing for Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and Methamphetamine, and later MDMA.[73] Labor introduced speed limit reduction legislation which took effect in March 2003 which saw non-arterial non-main roads and most Adelaide CBD roads reduce from 60 km/h to 50 km/h.[74] The Liberals proposed to increase the speed limit back to 60 km/h for several roads, concentrated mainly around the Adelaide Park Lands.

Allegations were made over the condition of the state's health system and the capacity to deal with mental health issues.[75] Labor pledged to buy back Modbury Hospital located in the district of Florey, privatised under the Liberal government to alleviate the effect of the State Bank collapse.[76]

The need for homosexual law reform was acknowledged by both major parties, but progress had been delayed, causing disquiet among Labor members.[77][78] In December 2006, the Domestic Partners bill was passed, providing greater recognition to same-sex relationships on a range of issues such as superannuation. The bill was initially supported by all parties after much negotiation, but in the end was voted against by members of Family First, as well as Liberal Terry Stephens.[79]

Electoral reform policies received little attention,[80] as did the eventually shelved referendum proposal by the Rann government to abolish or reform the Legislative Council.[81] WorkCover underfunded liability increases also received little attention, despite the fact that the liability had climbed from a disputed $67 to $85 million to $700 million since Labor came into government in 2002 due to a more generous compensation scheme. Labor also considered reforming the scheme, including cutting payments to injured workers.[82][83][84]

There were claims that federal industrial relations reform, WorkChoices, was an influential issue in the election.[85] The Liberals announced 4,000 public service job cuts to fund their election promises.[86]

Polling edit

Newspoll polling is conducted via random telephone number selection in city and country areas. Roy Morgan polling is conducted face-to-face Australia-wide. Sampling sizes consist of 500–1000 electors, Roy Morgan has a sampling tolerance (the Margin of error) of ±3.2 per cent for a 40 to 60 per cent rating in a sample size of 1000 electors, and ±4.5 for 500 electors. The sampling tolerance rate is lower for high and low percentages.

Preferred premier ratings^
Date Rann Kerin
Jan – Mar 2007 64% *14%
Oct – Dec 2006 61% *14%
15–16 March 2006 63% 21%
Jan – Feb 2006 59% 19%
Oct – Dec 2005 60% 16%
Jul – Sep 2005 60% 16%
Apr – Jun 2005 60% 17%
Jan – Mar 2005 61% 15%
Pre 2002 election 30% 50%
Source:
^ Remainder were "uncommitted"
to either leader. * Iain Evans
South Australian state voting intention (Roy Morgan Research)
Political parties Two party preferred
Labor Liberal Democrats Family
First
SA
Greens
One
Nation
Other Labor Liberal
December 2006 55.5% 27.0% 3% 4% 4% 0.5% 6% 66% 34%
March 2006 ¹ 50.5% 30.5% 2% 2% 8% 0.5% 6.5% 61.5% 38.5%
February 2006 ² 50.5% 31.5% 5% 3.5% 4% 0% 5.5% 61.5% 38.5%
January 2006 50.5% 33% 3% 3.5% 4.5% 0.5% 5% 60.5% 39.5%
December 2005 49% 32% 4% 5.5% 4% 1% 4.5% 60.5% 39.5%
October 2005 50% 33% 3.5% 3.5% 4.5% 0.5% 5% 62.5% 37.5%
August 2005 53% 32% 3% 4% 3.5% 1% 3.5% 62% 38%
June 2005 54% 33% 1% 4% 4% 0.5% 3.5% 62% 38%
2002 election 36.3% 40% 7.5% 2.6% 2.4% 2.4% 8.8% 49.1% 50.9%
Source: – ¹ Post-election announcement – ² Pre-election announcement
South Australian state voting intention (Newspoll Market Research)
Political parties Two party preferred
Labor Liberal National Democrats Family
First
SA
Greens
One
Nation
Other Labor Liberal
Jan – Mar 2007 48% 29% 1% 4% 2% 6% 0% 10% 61% 39%
Oct – Dec 2006 47% 33% 1% 2% 3% 4% 0% 10% 58% 42%
15–16 March 2006 46% 33% 1.5% 1.5% 3% 4% 0% 11% 57% 43%
Jan – Feb 2006 44% 37% 2% 2% 2% 3% 0% 10% 54% 46%
Oct – Dec 2005 46% 35% 2% 1% 2% 4% 0% 10% 56% 44%
Jul – Sep 2005 45% 38% 2% 1% 1% 4% 0% 10% 54% 46%
2002 election 36.3% 40% 1.5% 7.5% 2.6% 2.4% 2.4% 7.3% 49.1% 50.9%
Source:

Results edit

House of Assembly edit

South Australian state election, 18 March 2006[87][88]
House of Assembly
<< 20022010 >>

Enrolled voters 1,055,347
Votes cast 974,190 Turnout 92.31 –1.28
Informal votes 35,029 Informal 3.60 +0.48
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes % Swing Seats Change
  Labor 424,715 45.22 +8.88 28 + 5
  Liberal 319,041 33.97 –6.00 15 – 5
  Greens 60,949 6.49 +4.13 0 0
  Family First 55,192 5.88 +3.24 0 0
  Democrats 27,179 2.89 –4.60 0 0
  National 19,636 2.09 +0.64 1 0
  Dignity for Disabled 3,974 0.42 +0.42 0 0
  One Nation 2,591 0.28 –2.13 0 0
  No Rodeo 2,131 0.23 +0.23 0 0
  Independent 23,753 2.53 –1.72 3 0
Total 939,161     47  
Two-party-preferred
  Labor 533,290 56.78 +7.71
  Liberal 405,871 43.22 –7.71
Popular vote
Labor
45.22%
Liberal
33.97%
Greens
6.49%
Family First
5.88%
Democrats
2.89%
Independents
2.53%
National
2.09%
Others
0.93%
Two-party-preferred vote
Labor
56.78%
Liberal
43.22%
Seats
Labor
59.57%
Liberal
31.91%
Independents
6.38%
National
2.13%

The final results for the House of Assembly seats were 28 Labor, 15 Liberal, three independents and one National.[89] First preference and two party preferred statistics for each district are available through the South Australian House of Assembly electoral districts article.

Labor won six of eight key seats, the Liberals one of three.[90] Labor's wins included the previously marginal Liberal seats of Hartley, Light, Morialta, Mawson, Bright and Newland.[89] The Liberals regained Peter Lewis' seat of Hammond.[91]

SA Nationals MP Karlene Maywald and independent MPs Bob Such, Rory McEwen and Kris Hanna were all re-elected.[40][92][93][94] Hanna was elected at the 2002 election as a Labor candidate; this counted as a loss for Labor,[94] giving Labor a net gain of five seats.

Labor, the Liberals and the Greens ran in all 47 seats, the Democrats ran in all but Giles which resulted in a contested seat vote of three per cent, Family First ran in all but Ramsay and Croydon with a contested seat vote of 6.1 per cent. The Nationals ran in Chaffey, Flinders, Finniss, and MacKillop, averaging 24.8 per cent in those seats. Dignity for Disabled, No Rodeo and One Nation ran in 10, 7 and 6 six seats respectively.[95]

Jack Snelling became speaker of the House of Assembly.[96]

Key Liberal seats edit

The outer southern suburbs district of Mawson was first won by former Liberal Police Minister Robert Brokenshire in the 1993 state election. He was defeated by former radio presenter Leon Bignell, who gained a 5.7 per cent two party preferred swing for Labor.[97]

The other outer suburbs district that fell to Labor was Bright, which had been held since 1989 by former Liberal energy minister Wayne Matthew, who decided to retire at this election. The seat was contested for the Liberals by Legislative Council member Angus Redford, who faced a tougher fight than expected.[98] He was defeated by Labor's Chloë Fox, who received a 14.4 per cent swing on a two party preferred basis, the largest in the state.[99]

The inner southern suburbs district of Unley was won in 2002 by outspoken Liberal Mark Brindal who failed to win preselection for the seat and moved to contest the marginal Labor seat of Adelaide, but was shrouded in a controversy concerning a sexual relationship that Brindal had with a mentally ill man, forcing him to withdraw.[100][101] The Liberal candidate was businessman David Pisoni, while Labor fielded Unley Mayor Michael Keenan. Despite a 7.9 per cent two party preferred swing against him, Pisoni hung onto the seat by 1.1 per cent.[102]

The inner north eastern suburbs district of Hartley had been won by Joe Scalzi in 1993 and held by a very narrow margin in each subsequent election. The district has a very high proportion of Italian migrants and the ability to speak the language is considered by many commentators as being vital for a candidate to win the seat.[103] This was a factor in Labor's preselection of political staffer Grace Portolesi, who defeated Scalzi with a 5.9 per cent two party preferred swing.[103]

The neighbouring district of Morialta had been held by former Liberal Tourism Minister Joan Hall since 1993. She was defeated by Labor's Lindsay Simmons, who received a 12 per cent two party preferred swing, reclaiming the seat for Labor for the first time since 1975.[104]

In the outer north-east, the district of Newland had been won by Liberal Dorothy Kotz since 1989. After her decision to retire, the Liberals preselected police officer and local councillor Mark Osterstock. He was defeated by Labor's Tom Kenyon, who recorded a 12.5 per cent two party preferred swing.[105]

Light, which contains Gawler and the outer northern suburbs, was recontested by sitting Liberal member and former Education Minister Malcolm Buckby. He was defeated by Labor candidate and Gawler Mayor Tony Piccolo, who received a 4.9 per cent two party preferred swing. This was the first time since 1944 that Labor had won the seat.[106]

The rural and outback district of Stuart was first won in 1997 by Liberal Graham Gunn, a 40-year member of parliament and former Speaker.[107] As in 2002, he was challenged by Labor ministerial adviser Justin Jarvis. Unlike the Adelaide metropolitan area and the neighbouring seat of Giles, there was only a small swing of 0.7 per cent to Labor, so Gunn managed to hang on with a margin of 0.6 per cent.[108]

Key Labor seats edit

The inner eastern suburbs district of Norwood, held for Labor by former Norwood mayor Vini Ciccarello, was expected to be a tough contest, particularly after the Liberal preselection of former Adelaide Crows footballer Nigel Smart.[90] Ciccarello retained the seat picking up a 3.7 per cent swing on the two party preferred vote.[109]

The other Labor seat considered vulnerable was the neighbouring inner city district of Adelaide where high-profile Education Minister and former Lord Mayor Jane Lomax-Smith was challenged by Liberal Diana Carroll.[90] Lomax-Smith comprehensively defeated Carroll with a 9.2 per cent swing to Labor on the two-party preferred vote.[101]

Key independent seats edit

The southern suburbs district of Mitchell was won at the 2002 election by Labor's Kris Hanna. After the election, Hanna defected to the Greens and subsequently left and became an independent on 8 February 2006. Hanna faced a tough contest against by Labor's Rosemary Clancy. Despite pre-election expectations of a safe Labor win, Hanna defeated Clancy by 0.6 per cent with the aid of Liberal preferences.[94][110] Labor won a 65.2 per cent two-party vote against the Liberals.[2]

The district of Fisher, located in Adelaide's south, was held by independent MP Bob Such. Late in the campaign, there was some speculation that Fisher may have been a closer contest than commentators initially expected,[40] but Such comfortably defeated Labor's Amanda Rishworth and the Liberals' Andy Minnis with an independent candidate election best 45.2 per cent of the primary vote, picking up a 4.6 per cent two candidate preferred swing. The election outcome saw Such facing the Labor candidate on the two party preferred vote as opposed to the Liberal candidate in 2002.[40] Labor won a 59.4 per cent two-party vote against the Liberals.[2]

The Riverland-based district of Chaffey was the only seat held by Nationals SA. River Murray Minister Karlene Maywald easily defeated Liberal Anna Baric. Maywald received a 3.2 per cent swing on the two party preferred vote.[92] The Liberals won a 71.8 per cent two-party vote against Labor.[2]

The district of Mount Gambier (which also includes much of South Australia's south east) was a close contest between independent and Agriculture Minister Rory McEwen and Liberal Peter Gandolfi. McEwen prevailed despite a 20.4 per cent swing against him on the two party preferred vote.[93] The Liberals won a 55.6 per cent two-party vote against Labor.[2]

The Murray Bridge based district of Hammond was won in 2002 by independent MP Peter Lewis who then cut a deal to deliver government to Labor. Facing almost certain defeat, he declined to recontest the district and his attempt to win a seat in the Legislative Council failed.[1][111] Hammond was won comfortably by Liberal Adrian Pederick.[91]

With Mitchell and Fisher included, Labor won the two-party vote in 30 of 47 seats.[2]

Seats changing hands edit

Seat Pre-2006 Swing Post-2006
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Bright   Liberal Wayne Matthew 5.0 14.3 9.4 Chloë Fox Labor  
Hammond   Independent Peter Lewis 2.0 N/A 12.0* Adrian Pederick Liberal  
Hartley   Liberal Joe Scalzi 2.2 6.8 4.6 Grace Portolesi Labor  
Light   Liberal Malcolm Buckby 2.3 4.4 2.1 Tony Piccolo Labor  
Mawson   Liberal Robert Brokenshire 3.6 5.8 2.2 Leon Bignell Labor  
Morialta   Liberal Joan Hall 3.3 11.2 7.9 Lindsay Simmons Labor  
Newland   Liberal Dorothy Kotz 5.5 12.3 6.8 Tom Kenyon Labor  
  • Members listed in italics did not contest their seat at this election.
  • *Hammond's second margin figure is Liberal vs. Labor.

Post-election pendulum edit

The following pendulum[112] is known as the Mackerras pendulum after its inventor, the psephologist Malcolm Mackerras. The pendulum works by lining up all of the seats held in the House of 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. The seats are classified as follows: marginal 0–5.99 per cent, fairly safe 6–10 per cent, safe over 10 per cent.[1]

Labor seats (32)
Marginal
Mitchell Kris Hanna IND 0.6% v ALP
Light Tony Piccolo ALP 2.1%
Mawson Leon Bignell ALP 2.2%
Norwood Vini Ciccarello ALP 4.2%
Hartley Grace Portolesi ALP 4.6%
Fairly safe
Mount Gambier Rory McEwen IND 6.2% v LIB
Newland Tom Kenyon ALP 6.8%
Morialta Lindsay Simmons ALP 7.9%
Bright Chloë Fox ALP 9.4%
Safe
Adelaide Jane Lomax-Smith ALP 10.2%
Florey Frances Bedford ALP 12.1%
Giles Lyn Breuer ALP 14.4%
Elder Pat Conlon ALP 14.9%
Wright Jennifer Rankine ALP 15.3%
Ashford Steph Key ALP 16.1%
Colton Paul Caica ALP 16.3%
Fisher Bob Such IND 16.7% v ALP
Little Para Lea Stevens ALP 16.7%
Chaffey Karlene Maywald NAT 17.2% v LIB
Reynell Gay Thompson ALP 17.6%
West Torrens Tom Koutsantonis ALP 18.3%
Torrens Robyn Geraghty ALP 19.1%
Lee Michael Wright ALP 19.3%
Kaurna John Hill ALP 22.0%
Napier Michael O'Brien ALP 24.3%
Enfield John Rau ALP 24.5%
Cheltenham Jay Weatherill ALP 25.4%
Port Adelaide Kevin Foley ALP 25.7%
Playford Jack Snelling ALP 25.8%
Croydon Michael Atkinson ALP 26.0%
Taylor Trish White ALP 27.4%
Ramsay Mike Rann ALP 28.5%
Liberal seats (15)
Marginal
Stuart Graham Gunn LIB 0.6%
Unley David Pisoni LIB 1.1%
Heysen Isobel Redmond LIB 3.0%
Frome Rob Kerin LIB 3.4%
Waite Martin Hamilton-Smith LIB 4.0%
Morphett Duncan McFetridge LIB 5.4%
Fairly safe
Schubert Ivan Venning LIB 6.4%
Davenport Iain Evans LIB 6.4%
Finniss Michael Pengilly LIB 6.5%
Goyder Steven Griffiths LIB 9.1%
Kavel Mark Goldsworthy LIB 9.4%
Safe
Flinders Liz Penfold LIB 10.1% v NAT
Hammond Adrian Pederick LIB 12.0%
Bragg Vickie Chapman LIB 12.8%
MacKillop Mitch Williams LIB 22.2%
 
Metro SA (1.1 mil): Click here[113] for boundary names.
 
Rural SA (0.4 mil): Click here[114] for boundary names.
 
2007 federal election map containing South Australia's 11 of the 150 Australian lower house seats; six Labor and five Liberal. Kingston, Makin, and Wakefield were Liberal prior to the election. From July 2008 to June 2011, South Australia had five Labor, five Liberal, one Green, and independent Nick Xenophon in the 76 member upper house. Prior to the election, South Australia had six Liberal, five Labor, and one Democrat.

Legislative Council edit

South Australian state election, 18 March 2006[115]
Legislative Council
<< 20022010 >>

Enrolled voters 1,055,347
Votes cast 981,658 Turnout 93.0 −1.1
Informal votes 50,789 Informal 5.2 -0.2
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes % Swing Seats
won
Seats
held
  Labor 340,632 36.6 +3.7 4 8
  Liberal 241,740 26.0 −14.1 3 8
  No Pokies 190,958 20.5 +19.2 2 2
  Family First 46,328 5.0 +1.0 1 2
  Greens 39,852 4.3 +1.5 1 1
  Democrats 16,412 1.8 –5.5 0 1
  One Nation 7,559 0.8 -1.0 0 0
  HEMP 6,617 0.7 –0.2 0 0
  National 6,237 0.7 +0.2 0 0
  Shooters 5,991 0.6 +0.6 0 0
  Dignity for Disability 5,615 0.6 +0.6 0 0
  Other 22,928 2.5 * 0 0
Total 930,869     11 22

In the South Australian Legislative Council, Labor won 4 seats, the Liberals won 3 seats, both No Pokies member Nick Xenophon and his running mate Ann Bressington were elected and Family First and the Greens won a seat each. Almost 40 per cent of voters deserted the major parties for No Pokies Nick Xenophon and the minor parties; this percentage had been steadily increasing over time.[116][117]

Labor received a 3.7 per cent swing, electing four councillors as in the previous election. Carmel Zollo, Bob Sneath, Russell Wortley and Ian Hunter were all elected, with 4.39 quotas[117] Bob Sneath was elected president of the Legislative Council.

On the other hand, the Liberal vote collapsed with a 14.1 per cent swing against the Liberal Party. Having received five councillors in 2002, at this election the Liberal Party had just three councillors elected. Rob Lucas, John Dawkins and Michelle Lensink were elected on 3.12 quotas.[117]

Before the election, No Pokies member Nick Xenophon was popular with the media and in opinion polls,[118] but he faced a tough campaign as a result of both major parties preferencing in favour of other independents and the minor parties.[119] No Pokies received 20.5 per cent of the vote, yielding 2.46 quotas and thus seats for both Xenophon and his running mate Ann Bressington.[117] Having been elected at the 1997 election with 2.9 per cent of the vote and other independent candidates at the 2002 election on 1.3 per cent of the vote (Xenophon being a sitting member at that election),[120] the No Pokies ticket received a swing of 19.2 per cent.[1]

The Family First Party's first member, Andrew Evans MLC, was elected in 2002. Family First won 5 per cent of vote with only a small swing of 0.98 per cent, allowing candidate Dennis Hood to be elected on preferences.[117]

The SA Greens won 4.3 per cent of the upper house vote meaning a swing of 1.5 per cent, narrowly securing Mark Parnell for the last upper house seat on preferences.[117] This is the first time The Greens have won a seat in South Australia. Having secured second spot on the ticket at this election, Sarah Hanson-Young was successful in gaining the first spot on the ticket at the 2007 federal election, which saw the Greens secure their first federal upper house seat in South Australia.

The Australian Democrats fell to just one seat in the Legislative Council held by Sandra Kanck, after Kate Reynolds was defeated in her bid for re-election after being appointed in 2003. The Democrats gained only 1.8 per cent after a 5.5 per cent swing against them.[117] Kanck has since announced that she would not recontest her seat at the next election, placing serious clouds over the future of the party in the state.[121]

Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party gained 0.8 per cent of the upper house vote and won none of the six lower house seats they contested. Their highest vote was 4.1 per cent in the district of Hammond,[91] followed by 2.7 per cent in Goyder,[122] and the other four hovering around 1 per cent.

Dignity for Disabled ran for the first time and won 0.6 per cent of the upper house vote;[117] they won none of the 10 lower house seats they contested. Their best results were in Wright and Bright, with 2.4 per cent in each (506 and 492 votes respectively).[99][123]

Labor-turned-independent Terry Cameron and Liberal-turned-independent Peter Lewis both failed in their bids for re-election.[117]

Aftermath edit

After the election, Rob Kerin vacated the position of opposition leader. The Liberals selected conservative Iain Evans (son of former politician Stan Evans) for the role, with moderate Vickie Chapman (daughter of former politician Ted Chapman) as deputy leader. The only other contestant had been Isobel Redmond, who ran because she was concerned by some speculation that the Evans deal may have been stitched up by federal Liberal counterparts Christopher Pyne and Nick Minchin.[4] Preferred premier ratings in July 2006 showed Rann on 71 per cent with Evans on 15 per cent. Only 27 per cent of Liberal Party supporters saw Evans as the preferred premier.[124] Continuing low support for the new Liberal leadership saw Martin Hamilton-Smith replace Evans in April 2007, however this move saw Liberal support decline further to a three-year low according to an Advertiser poll conducted a month after the leadership change. Over half of polling respondents were unable to name the leader of the Liberal Party.[125] This contradicted Newspolls quarterly polling[126] indicating the Rann Labor government slipping to a two-party preferred figure of 57 per cent down four per cent, with a preferred premier rating of 52 per cent down 14 per cent for Rann and a first-time rating of 21 per cent for Martin Hamilton-Smith. Poll results also show Rann's satisfaction rating was below 60 per cent for the first time since coming to office at 58 per cent, with Hamilton-Smith receiving a 33 per cent satisfaction rate.

Previously unknown quantity Ann Bressington, elected on the back of Nick Xenophon's No Pokies popularity, has proposed mainly conservative social policies such as raising the legal drinking age from 18 to 21,[127] zero tolerance of illicit drugs, mandatory twice-annual drug tests of every school student over the age of 14 regardless of whether parents give their consent,[128][129] and making the sale of "drug-taking equipment" illegal.[130][131] However, she remains undecided on voluntary euthanasia, calling it "a personal struggle".[132]

Setting a precedent, Sandra Kanck's pro-euthanasia speech which contained suicide methods was censored from the internet version of Hansard in August 2006 as a result of an upper house motion, with Labor, Family First, Nick Xenophon and Ann Bressington voting for, and the Liberals and SA Greens member Mark Parnell voting against.[133] Despite this, the speech was published on a non-Australian website.[134]

The state's budget was released on 21 September 2006.[135] It included 1,600 public service job axings despite an election pledge of only 400, however none of the redundancies will be forced. It also included increases in some fees and charges such as victims of crime levies and Technical and Further Education (TAFE) charges. There were increases in funding for health, schools, police and prisons, and the Department of Public Prosecutions.[136][137][138] The 2007–2008 budget released on 13 June 2007 saw additional spending on Transport, Energy and Infrastructure, Health, Families and Communities, and Justice portfolios such as transport initiatives including revitalisation of the rail network, commencement of the $1.7 billion Marjorie Jackson-Nelson Hospital to replace the Royal Adelaide Hospital, funding for mental health reform including the delivery of health services, and funding for new commitments to law and order policies.[139]

No Pokies MP Nick Xenophon resigned from parliament in early October 2007 in a successful attempt to win a seat in the Australian Senate at the 2007 federal election, which according to the South Australian result, he retained 72 per cent of his 2006 vote, on 14.78 per cent. His replacement is his third candidate on the 2006 ticket, former Valuer-General John Darley, and was appointed by a joint sitting on 21 November 2007, where second candidate and upper house MP Ann Bressington also took the opportunity to accuse Xenophon of lacking integrity and suitability for federal parliament.[140][141] Xenophon was re-elected to the Senate at the 2013 federal election with a record 25 per cent vote.

A record-breaking 13-hour Parnell-Bressington filibuster occurred in May 2008 in crossbench opposition to WorkCover cuts being passed by the major parties due to the increasing underfunded liability in the workers' compensation scheme.

Former Liberal Premier Rob Kerin resigned in November 2008, which triggered a 2009 Frome by-election. Independent Geoff Brock won the seat, reducing the Liberals to 14 of 47 seats. Brock's parliamentary presence would later be pivotal to the outcome of the 2014 election.

See also edit

Notes edit

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References edit

  • Jaensch, Dean, ed. (1986). The Flinders History of South Australia: Political History. Netley, South Australia: Wakefield Press. ISBN 0-949268-52-6.
  • Warhurst, John, ed. (1997). Keeping the Bastards Honest: The Australian Democrats' First Twenty Years. St Leonards, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86448-420-9.

External links edit

  • Parliament of South Australia
  • ABC election guide – South Australia 2006 election
  • State and federal election results since 1890
  • Poll Bludger federal and state election guides

2006, south, australian, state, election, local, government, elections, held, november, 2006, south, australian, local, elections, state, election, 51st, parliament, south, australia, held, australian, state, south, australia, march, 2006, elect, members, sout. For the local government elections held in November see 2006 South Australian local elections The state election for the 51st Parliament of South Australia was held in the Australian state of South Australia on 18 March 2006 to elect all members of the South Australian House of Assembly and 11 members of the South Australian Legislative Council The election was conducted by the independent State Electoral Office 2006 South Australian state election 2002 18 March 2006 2006 03 18 2010 All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly24 seats were needed for a majority11 of the 22 seats in the South Australian Legislative Council First party Second party Third party Leader Mike Rann Rob Kerin Karlene Maywald Party Labor Liberal National Leader since 5 November 1994 22 October 2001 11 October 1997 Leader s seat Ramsay Frome Chaffey Last election 23 seats 20 seats 1 seat Seats won 28 15 1 Seat change 5 5 Popular vote 424 715 319 041 19 636 Percentage 45 22 33 97 2 09 Swing 8 88 6 00 0 64 TPP 56 78 43 22 TPP swing 7 71pp 7 71ppResults by electoratePremier before election Mike Rann Labor Elected Premier Mike Rann Labor In the 47 seat South Australian House of Assembly the Labor government was returned in a landslide with 28 seats from a 56 8 per cent two party preferred vote winning six seats from the Liberal Party The Liberals were reduced to just 15 seats the worst result in their history In the 22 seat South Australian Legislative Council the balance of power has been continuously held by the crossbench since the 1985 election With half of the seats up for election Labor gained an additional seat at the expense of the Liberals Nick Xenophon and No Pokies rose to prominence after unexpectedly winning a historic fifth of the entire statewide vote the Greens won their first seat Family First won their second seat to hold two seats while the faltering Democrats failed to win a seat for the first time in their history Contents 1 Key dates 2 Results summary 2 1 House of Assembly 2 2 Legislative Council 2 3 Leadership changes 3 Party backgrounds 3 1 Australian Labor Party 3 2 Liberal Party of Australia 3 3 Nationals SA 3 4 SA Greens 3 5 Family First Party 3 6 Australian Democrats 4 Electoral system 5 Election background 6 Campaign 7 Issues 8 Polling 9 Results 9 1 House of Assembly 9 1 1 Key Liberal seats 9 1 2 Key Labor seats 9 1 3 Key independent seats 9 1 4 Seats changing hands 9 1 5 Post election pendulum 9 2 Legislative Council 10 Aftermath 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksKey dates editIssue of writ 20 February 2006 Close of electoral rolls 27 February 2006 Close of nominations Thursday 2 March 2006 at noon O Monday 6 March 2006 Polling day 18 March 2006 Return of writ On or before 28 April 2006 actually returned 6 April Results summary editHouse of Assembly edit The centre left Australian Labor Party elected in 2002 and led by Premier Mike Rann of the Rann government gained six Liberal held seats and a 7 7 per cent statewide two party preferred swing 1 resulting in a net gain of five seats and the first Labor majority government since the 1985 election with 28 of the 47 House of Assembly lower house seats 2 The centre right South Australian Division of the Liberal Party of Australia led by Leader of the Opposition Rob Kerin regained a former independent seat while losing other seats a net loss of five seats The Liberals were left with only 15 of 47 seats the worst result for the Liberals in South Australian electoral history 3 Independent members Bob Such and Rory McEwen were re elected Kris Hanna elected in 2002 representing Labor was re elected as an independent member The sitting Nationals SA member Karlene Maywald was also re elected Legislative Council edit With 11 of the 22 member Legislative Council upper house standing for election both major parties finished with a total of eight of the 22 seats with Labor winning four of the 11 and the Liberals winning three No Pokies independent Nick Xenophon polled 20 5 per cent an unprecedented result for an independent or minor party which resulted in both Xenophon and his running mate Ann Bressington being elected Xenophon s third running mate John Darley was later appointed to the vacancy created by Xenophon s resignation Family First had a second member elected The Democrats vote collapsed with no candidate elected leaving them with one remaining member in the upper house The SA Greens won a seat for the first time Leadership changes edit Following the outcome of the election the member for Davenport Iain Evans replaced Rob Kerin as leader of the Liberal Party and thus as Leader of the Opposition 4 Party backgrounds editAustralian Labor Party edit The Australian Labor Party is Australia s oldest political party founded in 1891 It is a centre left social democratic party which is formally linked to the trade union labour movement 5 At a state level the South Australian Branch of the Australian Labor Party had been in government since the previous election in 2002 having been in opposition from 1993 to 2002 6 Since the 1970 election ending decades of electoral malapportionment of the Playmander 7 8 nine of the 12 elections since have been won by Labor 6 Labor s most notable premiers in South Australia include Thomas Price in the 1900s reformist Don Dunstan in the 1970s 9 John Bannon in the 1980s and the factionally nonaligned and pragmatic Mike Rann 10 The party s deputy leader and therefore the Deputy Premier was Kevin Foley 11 Liberal Party of Australia edit The South Australian Division of the Liberal Party of Australia is a centre right conservative liberal party with close links to business and advocating free markets 12 Whilst primarily a socially conservative party there exists a more socially liberal wing colloquially known as wet moderate or small l liberals highlighted by the short lived Liberal Movement who first contested the 1975 election as a separate party led by Steele Hall 13 At state level in 1973 the South Australian Division of the Liberal Party of Australia emerged from the Liberal and Country League LCL which in turn had resulted from a merger between the Liberal Federation and the Country Party in 1932 14 The state opposition leader at the 2006 election Rob Kerin was seen as being largely aloof from factional disputes 15 Nationals SA edit The Nationals SA is a sub division of the conservative National Party of Australia formerly the Country Party First contesting the 1965 election they have only held two seats Flinders 1973 1993 and Chaffey 1997 2010 16 Former member Karlene Maywald representing the Riverland district of Chaffey accepted a cabinet position in 2004 as part of the Rann Labor government as Minister for the River Murray Minister for Regional Development Minister for Small Business and later Minister for Water Security 17 This informal ALP NAT coalition the first since 1935 caused an uproar with the federal Liberal member for the SA seat of Sturt Christopher Pyne calling for Maywald s expulsion from the Nationals and Patrick Secker calling for a corruption enquiry into the appointment Neither eventuated 18 As the Liberal Party in South Australia is descended from a historical merger from an earlier Country Party 14 the SA Nationals are not as dominant in rural areas as their eastern state counterparts SA Greens edit The SA Greens founded in 1995 are a sub division of the left wing Australian Greens They are based on green politics and consider themselves a new politics party with strong beliefs in ecology democracy and social justice amongst other issues 19 Federally and locally they have seen a continued rise in primary votes in part due to the demise of the Australian Democrats 20 The 2007 federal election saw 77 28 of the Greens preferences flow to Labor over the Liberal Party in SA The party s parliamentary leader is Mark Parnell Family First Party edit The Family First Party founded immediately before the 2002 state election has a political ideology based on Christian influenced conservatism Although officially a secular party it has close links to the Pentecostal movement 21 and in particular the Assemblies of God denomination 22 Its social policies generally mirror conservative Christian values but not necessarily politically conservative values The 2007 federal election saw 57 10 of their preferences flow to the Liberals over the Labor Party in SA The party s leader at the time of the election was Andrew Evans Australian Democrats edit The Australian Democrats were originally a centrist party with most current policies based on social liberalism Federally the party was founded in 1977 by Liberal splinter groups known as the Liberal Movement which had split from its parent over electoral reform 23 and the Australia Party which had rebelled against Australia s involvement in the Vietnam War The Australian Democrats were founded by Don Chipp who had also left the Liberal Party citing dissatisfaction with the increasing underrepresentation of small l liberals within the party At the state level it is descended from the New Liberal Movement New LM of Robin Millhouse who held the Democrats only lower house seats 24 Mitcham and its successor seat Waite 25 The Democrats had suffered internal problems and leadership scuffles since 1997 The 2007 federal election saw 65 79 of Democrat preferences flow to Labor over the Liberal Party in SA The party s leader at the election was Sandra Kanck Electoral system edit nbsp The disproportionality of the 2006 election was 12 50 according to the Gallagher Index South Australia is governed by the principles of the Westminster system a form of parliamentary government based on the model of the United Kingdom Legislative power rests with the Parliament of South Australia which consists of The Sovereign represented by the Governor of South Australia the House of Assembly lower house which forms the government and the Legislative Council upper house as a house of review Forty seven members of the lower house represent single member electorates and are elected under the full preference Instant runoff voting IRV system for fixed four year terms 26 The independent State Electoral Office which conducts elections is responsible for a mandatory redistricting of boundaries before each election to ensure one vote one value 27 At each election voters choose half of the 22 upper house members each of whom serves eight year terms in a single statewide electorate 28 The Legislative Council is elected under the preferential Single Transferable Vote STV system through a means of Group voting tickets Voters can choose to vote for a ticket by placing the number 1 in one of the ticket boxes above the line or can vote for individual candidates by numbering all the boxes below the line 54 in the 2006 election 28 In above the line voting ticket votes are distributed according to the party or group voting ticket registered before the election with the election management body As more than 95 of ballot papers are above the line this form of voting often leads to pre election trading between parties on how each party will allocate later preferences to other parties and candidates 29 Voting is compulsory once enrolled in South Australian elections 3 which results in turnout rates above 90 per cent Informal voting which occurs when a voting slip is not valid is at a rate of under five per cent Voting slips are informal when they are not filled out correctly such examples are not numbering subsequent numbers not filling out all the candidate boxes with numbers except the last candidate or in some other way that is verified by the State Electoral Office as illegible South Australian elections have some features that are unique to the rest of Australia 30 As elections have fixed four year terms the election date of 18 March 2006 was known well ahead of time The Electoral Act stipulates that the election is to be held on the third Saturday in March every four years The election campaign must run for a minimum of 25 days or a maximum of 55 days therefore the Governor would have needed to issue writs for the election by 21 February 2006 at the latest 31 On 20 February Premier Mike Rann invited Governor Marjorie Jackson Nelson to issue writs for the election 32 In accordance with electoral regulations the Electoral Commissioner then advertised key dates for the election of the House of Assembly and half of the Legislative Council close of rolls on 27 February 2006 at noon nominations to be received by 2 March 2006 at noon polling day on 18 March 2006 31 and the return of writs on or before 28 April 2006 Election background editFor previous results see List of elections in South Australia In the 2002 election Labor won 23 seats the Liberals 20 Nationals 1 and conservative Independents won three As 24 seats are required to govern the Liberal Party was expected to retain government with the support of all four independents However in a surprise decision one of the conservative independents Peter Lewis decided to support Labor in exchange for holding a constitutional convention making him speaker of the House of Assembly 33 and concessions for his electorate including the phasing out of commercial fishing in the River Murray prioritising the eradication of the branched broomrape weed changing water rates for irrigation fast tracking a feasibility study for a weir and lock at Wellington and improving rural roads 34 Lewis resigned as speaker in April 2005 35 after controversy over allegations of paedophilia he had made about a serving MP 36 However by this time Labor had already gained the support of independents Bob Such 37 and Rory McEwen 38 in 2002 as well as Nationals SA member Karlene Maywald 39 in 2004 Such was given the position of speaker for the remainder of the government s term 40 Campaign editThe Labor campaign was heavily based around Premier Mike Rann with Labor s advertising swapping between the mottos Building South Australia and to a greater extent RANN Gets Results 41 Some commentators also argued that the presidential style of campaign common in modern Australian politics could be seen in Labor s formal campaign launch at the Norwood Town Hall the Sunday before the election which had some similarities to the nomination conventions that the major parties hold in the United States 42 Another facet of the Labor campaign was extensive negative campaigning against Liberal leader Rob Kerin including an advertisement featuring an excerpt of an interview that Kerin had with FIVEaa presenter Keith Conlon who asked Kerin why he wanted to be leader of the Liberal Party Kerin stammered for a few seconds and gave the impression that he was uncertain The advertisement concluded with the question Does Rob Want The Job Conlon complained that the advertisement gave the false impression that he was endorsing Labor but Labor campaign director David Feeney dismissed his concerns 43 Other negative advertisements run by Labor revolved around the actions of the previous Liberal government one advertisement and leaflet reminded voters that while in power the previous Liberal government closed 65 schools 44 closed hospital wards 45 and privatised the Electricity Trust of South Australia 46 Considered strapped for cash 47 the Liberal Party ran a very limited television and radio campaign Businessman Robert Gerard was forced to resign from his Federal Liberal Party appointed position on the board of the Reserve Bank of Australia due to the party appointing him to the position despite the known fact that he had outstanding tax avoidance issues being dealt with by the Australian Taxation Office and had thus subsequently pulled out of his traditional role of bankrolling the state division of the party leaving the party with only enough funds for the most basic campaign 48 Kerin indicated people would have to wait and see if there would be any campaign even asking trade unions for donations no matter how small 49 The advertisements that did run argued that Labor was wasting record tax receipts from the GST 50 A number of embarrassments for the Liberal Party surrounded their television advertisement in an early version released to journalists Labor was spelt Labour Labor cabinet minister King O Malley dropped the u in 1912 to modernise it as per American English 51 and the advertisement alleged that South Australia s hospital waiting lists were the worst in the nation which Labor successfully disputed to the Electoral Commissioner 52 During the election campaign David Pisoni the Liberal candidate for Unley made allegations in his advertising that Labor and their candidate Michael Keenan supported controversial urban infill programmes which Labor flatly denied Electoral Commissioner Kay Mousley investigated and ordered that the advertisements be withdrawn and corrections be run at Pisoni s expense 53 The Labor minority government sought to win a majority in the House of Assembly Opinion polls indicated that this was likely and ABC elections expert Antony Green said that the Labor government looks set to be returned with an increased majority 54 Centrebet had Labor at odds of 1 01 and the Liberals at 12 00 for a majority government 55 Most commentators agreed that the Liberal Party had little chance of winning government and that Kerin would step down from the leadership after the election 56 a suspicion confirmed in Kerin s concession speech 57 Martin Hamilton Smith was considering mounting a leadership challenge however he withdrew on 14 October 2005 probably for the sake of the impression of party unity and subsequently resigned or was pushed from the opposition frontbench 58 Issues edit nbsp Labor website header during the election campaign Similar designs were used on ALP stationery and posters One of the most publicised issues prior to the election was the tram extension from Victoria Square to the Adelaide railway station 59 which the Liberals despite having proposed the idea in their previous transport plan now opposed 60 Construction began in April 2007 61 and was operational as of October 2007 62 The Adelaide Airport expansion suffered fuel delivery related delays that Labor was criticised for 63 A perennial election issue lack of safety improvement of the Britannia Roundabout was focused on by the Norwood Liberal candidate 64 Land and payroll tax cuts worth 1 5 billion were announced by Labor the largest in the state s history 65 The tax cuts coincided with South Australia achieving an economic Triple A rating under the current Labor government 66 Business SA chief executive Peter Vaughan praised Labor s economic management 67 The Advertiser revealed details of the biggest project of its kind in South Australia s history a 1 5 billion redevelopment on the western bank of the inner harbour The development will include 2000 new homes on government owned land and new buildings as high as 12 storeys This followed the awarding of a 6 billion air warfare destroyer contract to ASC Pty Ltd based in the electorate at Osborne 68 The future of the River Murray has come under threat due to falling water levels and in an unprecedented move Nationals MP Karlene Maywald was given a cabinet position as Minister for the River Murray in 2004 69 Possible nuclear waste dumps were of concern to many Adelaide residents Premier Rann successfully lobbied against any federal government proposals 70 Law and order was another key issue with Labor promising extra police 71 Tough drink and drug driving laws had also been introduced 72 which included zero tolerance roadside testing for Tetrahydrocannabinol THC and Methamphetamine and later MDMA 73 Labor introduced speed limit reduction legislation which took effect in March 2003 which saw non arterial non main roads and most Adelaide CBD roads reduce from 60 km h to 50 km h 74 The Liberals proposed to increase the speed limit back to 60 km h for several roads concentrated mainly around the Adelaide Park Lands Allegations were made over the condition of the state s health system and the capacity to deal with mental health issues 75 Labor pledged to buy back Modbury Hospital located in the district of Florey privatised under the Liberal government to alleviate the effect of the State Bank collapse 76 The need for homosexual law reform was acknowledged by both major parties but progress had been delayed causing disquiet among Labor members 77 78 In December 2006 the Domestic Partners bill was passed providing greater recognition to same sex relationships on a range of issues such as superannuation The bill was initially supported by all parties after much negotiation but in the end was voted against by members of Family First as well as Liberal Terry Stephens 79 Electoral reform policies received little attention 80 as did the eventually shelved referendum proposal by the Rann government to abolish or reform the Legislative Council 81 WorkCover underfunded liability increases also received little attention despite the fact that the liability had climbed from a disputed 67 to 85 million to 700 million since Labor came into government in 2002 due to a more generous compensation scheme Labor also considered reforming the scheme including cutting payments to injured workers 82 83 84 There were claims that federal industrial relations reform WorkChoices was an influential issue in the election 85 The Liberals announced 4 000 public service job cuts to fund their election promises 86 Polling editSee also South Australian state election 2010 Polling Newspoll polling is conducted via random telephone number selection in city and country areas Roy Morgan polling is conducted face to face Australia wide Sampling sizes consist of 500 1000 electors Roy Morgan has a sampling tolerance the Margin of error of 3 2 per cent for a 40 to 60 per cent rating in a sample size of 1000 electors and 4 5 for 500 electors The sampling tolerance rate is lower for high and low percentages Preferred premier ratings Date Rann Kerin Jan Mar 2007 64 14 Oct Dec 2006 61 14 15 16 March 2006 63 21 Jan Feb 2006 59 19 Oct Dec 2005 60 16 Jul Sep 2005 60 16 Apr Jun 2005 60 17 Jan Mar 2005 61 15 Pre 2002 election 30 50 Source Newspoll The Australian Remainder were uncommitted to either leader Iain Evans South Australian state voting intention Roy Morgan Research Political parties Two party preferred Labor Liberal Democrats FamilyFirst SAGreens OneNation Other Labor Liberal December 2006 55 5 27 0 3 4 4 0 5 6 66 34 March 2006 50 5 30 5 2 2 8 0 5 6 5 61 5 38 5 February 2006 50 5 31 5 5 3 5 4 0 5 5 61 5 38 5 January 2006 50 5 33 3 3 5 4 5 0 5 5 60 5 39 5 December 2005 49 32 4 5 5 4 1 4 5 60 5 39 5 October 2005 50 33 3 5 3 5 4 5 0 5 5 62 5 37 5 August 2005 53 32 3 4 3 5 1 3 5 62 38 June 2005 54 33 1 4 4 0 5 3 5 62 38 2002 election 36 3 40 7 5 2 6 2 4 2 4 8 8 49 1 50 9 Source Roy Morgan Research Post election announcement Pre election announcement South Australian state voting intention Newspoll Market Research Political parties Two party preferred Labor Liberal National Democrats FamilyFirst SAGreens OneNation Other Labor Liberal Jan Mar 2007 48 29 1 4 2 6 0 10 61 39 Oct Dec 2006 47 33 1 2 3 4 0 10 58 42 15 16 March 2006 46 33 1 5 1 5 3 4 0 11 57 43 Jan Feb 2006 44 37 2 2 2 3 0 10 54 46 Oct Dec 2005 46 35 2 1 2 4 0 10 56 44 Jul Sep 2005 45 38 2 1 1 4 0 10 54 46 2002 election 36 3 40 1 5 7 5 2 6 2 4 2 4 7 3 49 1 50 9 Source Newspoll The AustralianResults editHouse of Assembly edit See also Results of the South Australian state election 2006 House of Assembly See also Candidates of the South Australian state election 2006 South Australian state election 18 March 2006 87 88 House of Assembly lt lt 2002 2010 gt gt Enrolled voters 1 055 347 Votes cast 974 190 Turnout 92 31 1 28 Informal votes 35 029 Informal 3 60 0 48 Summary of votes by party Party Primary votes Swing Seats Change Labor 424 715 45 22 8 88 28 5 Liberal 319 041 33 97 6 00 15 5 Greens 60 949 6 49 4 13 0 0 Family First 55 192 5 88 3 24 0 0 Democrats 27 179 2 89 4 60 0 0 National 19 636 2 09 0 64 1 0 Dignity for Disabled 3 974 0 42 0 42 0 0 One Nation 2 591 0 28 2 13 0 0 No Rodeo 2 131 0 23 0 23 0 0 Independent 23 753 2 53 1 72 3 0 Total 939 161 47 Two party preferred Labor 533 290 56 78 7 71 Liberal 405 871 43 22 7 71 Popular vote Labor 45 22 Liberal 33 97 Greens 6 49 Family First 5 88 Democrats 2 89 Independents 2 53 National 2 09 Others 0 93 Two party preferred vote Labor 56 78 Liberal 43 22 Seats Labor 59 57 Liberal 31 91 Independents 6 38 National 2 13 The final results for the House of Assembly seats were 28 Labor 15 Liberal three independents and one National 89 First preference and two party preferred statistics for each district are available through the South Australian House of Assembly electoral districts article Labor won six of eight key seats the Liberals one of three 90 Labor s wins included the previously marginal Liberal seats of Hartley Light Morialta Mawson Bright and Newland 89 The Liberals regained Peter Lewis seat of Hammond 91 SA Nationals MP Karlene Maywald and independent MPs Bob Such Rory McEwen and Kris Hanna were all re elected 40 92 93 94 Hanna was elected at the 2002 election as a Labor candidate this counted as a loss for Labor 94 giving Labor a net gain of five seats Labor the Liberals and the Greens ran in all 47 seats the Democrats ran in all but Giles which resulted in a contested seat vote of three per cent Family First ran in all but Ramsay and Croydon with a contested seat vote of 6 1 per cent The Nationals ran in Chaffey Flinders Finniss and MacKillop averaging 24 8 per cent in those seats Dignity for Disabled No Rodeo and One Nation ran in 10 7 and 6 six seats respectively 95 Jack Snelling became speaker of the House of Assembly 96 Key Liberal seats edit The outer southern suburbs district of Mawson was first won by former Liberal Police Minister Robert Brokenshire in the 1993 state election He was defeated by former radio presenter Leon Bignell who gained a 5 7 per cent two party preferred swing for Labor 97 The other outer suburbs district that fell to Labor was Bright which had been held since 1989 by former Liberal energy minister Wayne Matthew who decided to retire at this election The seat was contested for the Liberals by Legislative Council member Angus Redford who faced a tougher fight than expected 98 He was defeated by Labor s Chloe Fox who received a 14 4 per cent swing on a two party preferred basis the largest in the state 99 The inner southern suburbs district of Unley was won in 2002 by outspoken Liberal Mark Brindal who failed to win preselection for the seat and moved to contest the marginal Labor seat of Adelaide but was shrouded in a controversy concerning a sexual relationship that Brindal had with a mentally ill man forcing him to withdraw 100 101 The Liberal candidate was businessman David Pisoni while Labor fielded Unley Mayor Michael Keenan Despite a 7 9 per cent two party preferred swing against him Pisoni hung onto the seat by 1 1 per cent 102 The inner north eastern suburbs district of Hartley had been won by Joe Scalzi in 1993 and held by a very narrow margin in each subsequent election The district has a very high proportion of Italian migrants and the ability to speak the language is considered by many commentators as being vital for a candidate to win the seat 103 This was a factor in Labor s preselection of political staffer Grace Portolesi who defeated Scalzi with a 5 9 per cent two party preferred swing 103 The neighbouring district of Morialta had been held by former Liberal Tourism Minister Joan Hall since 1993 She was defeated by Labor s Lindsay Simmons who received a 12 per cent two party preferred swing reclaiming the seat for Labor for the first time since 1975 104 In the outer north east the district of Newland had been won by Liberal Dorothy Kotz since 1989 After her decision to retire the Liberals preselected police officer and local councillor Mark Osterstock He was defeated by Labor s Tom Kenyon who recorded a 12 5 per cent two party preferred swing 105 Light which contains Gawler and the outer northern suburbs was recontested by sitting Liberal member and former Education Minister Malcolm Buckby He was defeated by Labor candidate and Gawler Mayor Tony Piccolo who received a 4 9 per cent two party preferred swing This was the first time since 1944 that Labor had won the seat 106 The rural and outback district of Stuart was first won in 1997 by Liberal Graham Gunn a 40 year member of parliament and former Speaker 107 As in 2002 he was challenged by Labor ministerial adviser Justin Jarvis Unlike the Adelaide metropolitan area and the neighbouring seat of Giles there was only a small swing of 0 7 per cent to Labor so Gunn managed to hang on with a margin of 0 6 per cent 108 Key Labor seats edit The inner eastern suburbs district of Norwood held for Labor by former Norwood mayor Vini Ciccarello was expected to be a tough contest particularly after the Liberal preselection of former Adelaide Crows footballer Nigel Smart 90 Ciccarello retained the seat picking up a 3 7 per cent swing on the two party preferred vote 109 The other Labor seat considered vulnerable was the neighbouring inner city district of Adelaide where high profile Education Minister and former Lord Mayor Jane Lomax Smith was challenged by Liberal Diana Carroll 90 Lomax Smith comprehensively defeated Carroll with a 9 2 per cent swing to Labor on the two party preferred vote 101 Key independent seats edit The southern suburbs district of Mitchell was won at the 2002 election by Labor s Kris Hanna After the election Hanna defected to the Greens and subsequently left and became an independent on 8 February 2006 Hanna faced a tough contest against by Labor s Rosemary Clancy Despite pre election expectations of a safe Labor win Hanna defeated Clancy by 0 6 per cent with the aid of Liberal preferences 94 110 Labor won a 65 2 per cent two party vote against the Liberals 2 The district of Fisher located in Adelaide s south was held by independent MP Bob Such Late in the campaign there was some speculation that Fisher may have been a closer contest than commentators initially expected 40 but Such comfortably defeated Labor s Amanda Rishworth and the Liberals Andy Minnis with an independent candidate election best 45 2 per cent of the primary vote picking up a 4 6 per cent two candidate preferred swing The election outcome saw Such facing the Labor candidate on the two party preferred vote as opposed to the Liberal candidate in 2002 40 Labor won a 59 4 per cent two party vote against the Liberals 2 The Riverland based district of Chaffey was the only seat held by Nationals SA River Murray Minister Karlene Maywald easily defeated Liberal Anna Baric Maywald received a 3 2 per cent swing on the two party preferred vote 92 The Liberals won a 71 8 per cent two party vote against Labor 2 The district of Mount Gambier which also includes much of South Australia s south east was a close contest between independent and Agriculture Minister Rory McEwen and Liberal Peter Gandolfi McEwen prevailed despite a 20 4 per cent swing against him on the two party preferred vote 93 The Liberals won a 55 6 per cent two party vote against Labor 2 The Murray Bridge based district of Hammond was won in 2002 by independent MP Peter Lewis who then cut a deal to deliver government to Labor Facing almost certain defeat he declined to recontest the district and his attempt to win a seat in the Legislative Council failed 1 111 Hammond was won comfortably by Liberal Adrian Pederick 91 With Mitchell and Fisher included Labor won the two party vote in 30 of 47 seats 2 Seats changing hands edit Seat Pre 2006 Swing Post 2006 Party Member Margin Margin Member Party Bright Liberal Wayne Matthew 5 0 14 3 9 4 Chloe Fox Labor Hammond Independent Peter Lewis 2 0 N A 12 0 Adrian Pederick Liberal Hartley Liberal Joe Scalzi 2 2 6 8 4 6 Grace Portolesi Labor Light Liberal Malcolm Buckby 2 3 4 4 2 1 Tony Piccolo Labor Mawson Liberal Robert Brokenshire 3 6 5 8 2 2 Leon Bignell Labor Morialta Liberal Joan Hall 3 3 11 2 7 9 Lindsay Simmons Labor Newland Liberal Dorothy Kotz 5 5 12 3 6 8 Tom Kenyon Labor Members listed in italics did not contest their seat at this election Hammond s second margin figure is Liberal vs Labor Post election pendulum edit For previous pendulums and maps see List of elections in South Australia The following pendulum 112 is known as the Mackerras pendulum after its inventor the psephologist Malcolm Mackerras The pendulum works by lining up all of the seats held in the House of 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 The seats are classified as follows marginal 0 5 99 per cent fairly safe 6 10 per cent safe over 10 per cent 1 Labor seats 32 Marginal Mitchell Kris Hanna IND 0 6 v ALP Light Tony Piccolo ALP 2 1 Mawson Leon Bignell ALP 2 2 Norwood Vini Ciccarello ALP 4 2 Hartley Grace Portolesi ALP 4 6 Fairly safe Mount Gambier Rory McEwen IND 6 2 v LIB Newland Tom Kenyon ALP 6 8 Morialta Lindsay Simmons ALP 7 9 Bright Chloe Fox ALP 9 4 Safe Adelaide Jane Lomax Smith ALP 10 2 Florey Frances Bedford ALP 12 1 Giles Lyn Breuer ALP 14 4 Elder Pat Conlon ALP 14 9 Wright Jennifer Rankine ALP 15 3 Ashford Steph Key ALP 16 1 Colton Paul Caica ALP 16 3 Fisher Bob Such IND 16 7 v ALP Little Para Lea Stevens ALP 16 7 Chaffey Karlene Maywald NAT 17 2 v LIB Reynell Gay Thompson ALP 17 6 West Torrens Tom Koutsantonis ALP 18 3 Torrens Robyn Geraghty ALP 19 1 Lee Michael Wright ALP 19 3 Kaurna John Hill ALP 22 0 Napier Michael O Brien ALP 24 3 Enfield John Rau ALP 24 5 Cheltenham Jay Weatherill ALP 25 4 Port Adelaide Kevin Foley ALP 25 7 Playford Jack Snelling ALP 25 8 Croydon Michael Atkinson ALP 26 0 Taylor Trish White ALP 27 4 Ramsay Mike Rann ALP 28 5 Liberal seats 15 Marginal Stuart Graham Gunn LIB 0 6 Unley David Pisoni LIB 1 1 Heysen Isobel Redmond LIB 3 0 Frome Rob Kerin LIB 3 4 Waite Martin Hamilton Smith LIB 4 0 Morphett Duncan McFetridge LIB 5 4 Fairly safe Schubert Ivan Venning LIB 6 4 Davenport Iain Evans LIB 6 4 Finniss Michael Pengilly LIB 6 5 Goyder Steven Griffiths LIB 9 1 Kavel Mark Goldsworthy LIB 9 4 Safe Flinders Liz Penfold LIB 10 1 v NAT Hammond Adrian Pederick LIB 12 0 Bragg Vickie Chapman LIB 12 8 MacKillop Mitch Williams LIB 22 2 nbsp Metro SA 1 1 mil Click here 113 for boundary names nbsp Rural SA 0 4 mil Click here 114 for boundary names nbsp 2007 federal election map containing South Australia s 11 of the 150 Australian lower house seats six Labor and five Liberal Kingston Makin and Wakefield were Liberal prior to the election From July 2008 to June 2011 South Australia had five Labor five Liberal one Green and independent Nick Xenophon in the 76 member upper house Prior to the election South Australia had six Liberal five Labor and one Democrat Legislative Council edit See also Results of the 2006 South Australian state election Legislative Council South Australian state election 18 March 2006 115 Legislative Council lt lt 2002 2010 gt gt Enrolled voters 1 055 347 Votes cast 981 658 Turnout 93 0 1 1 Informal votes 50 789 Informal 5 2 0 2 Summary of votes by party Party Primary votes Swing Seatswon Seatsheld Labor 340 632 36 6 3 7 4 8 Liberal 241 740 26 0 14 1 3 8 No Pokies 190 958 20 5 19 2 2 2 Family First 46 328 5 0 1 0 1 2 Greens 39 852 4 3 1 5 1 1 Democrats 16 412 1 8 5 5 0 1 One Nation 7 559 0 8 1 0 0 0 HEMP 6 617 0 7 0 2 0 0 National 6 237 0 7 0 2 0 0 Shooters 5 991 0 6 0 6 0 0 Dignity for Disability 5 615 0 6 0 6 0 0 Other 22 928 2 5 0 0 Total 930 869 11 22 In the South Australian Legislative Council Labor won 4 seats the Liberals won 3 seats both No Pokies member Nick Xenophon and his running mate Ann Bressington were elected and Family First and the Greens won a seat each Almost 40 per cent of voters deserted the major parties for No Pokies Nick Xenophon and the minor parties this percentage had been steadily increasing over time 116 117 Labor received a 3 7 per cent swing electing four councillors as in the previous election Carmel Zollo Bob Sneath Russell Wortley and Ian Hunter were all elected with 4 39 quotas 117 Bob Sneath was elected president of the Legislative Council On the other hand the Liberal vote collapsed with a 14 1 per cent swing against the Liberal Party Having received five councillors in 2002 at this election the Liberal Party had just three councillors elected Rob Lucas John Dawkins and Michelle Lensink were elected on 3 12 quotas 117 Before the election No Pokies member Nick Xenophon was popular with the media and in opinion polls 118 but he faced a tough campaign as a result of both major parties preferencing in favour of other independents and the minor parties 119 No Pokies received 20 5 per cent of the vote yielding 2 46 quotas and thus seats for both Xenophon and his running mate Ann Bressington 117 Having been elected at the 1997 election with 2 9 per cent of the vote and other independent candidates at the 2002 election on 1 3 per cent of the vote Xenophon being a sitting member at that election 120 the No Pokies ticket received a swing of 19 2 per cent 1 The Family First Party s first member Andrew Evans MLC was elected in 2002 Family First won 5 per cent of vote with only a small swing of 0 98 per cent allowing candidate Dennis Hood to be elected on preferences 117 The SA Greens won 4 3 per cent of the upper house vote meaning a swing of 1 5 per cent narrowly securing Mark Parnell for the last upper house seat on preferences 117 This is the first time The Greens have won a seat in South Australia Having secured second spot on the ticket at this election Sarah Hanson Young was successful in gaining the first spot on the ticket at the 2007 federal election which saw the Greens secure their first federal upper house seat in South Australia The Australian Democrats fell to just one seat in the Legislative Council held by Sandra Kanck after Kate Reynolds was defeated in her bid for re election after being appointed in 2003 The Democrats gained only 1 8 per cent after a 5 5 per cent swing against them 117 Kanck has since announced that she would not recontest her seat at the next election placing serious clouds over the future of the party in the state 121 Pauline Hanson s One Nation Party gained 0 8 per cent of the upper house vote and won none of the six lower house seats they contested Their highest vote was 4 1 per cent in the district of Hammond 91 followed by 2 7 per cent in Goyder 122 and the other four hovering around 1 per cent Dignity for Disabled ran for the first time and won 0 6 per cent of the upper house vote 117 they won none of the 10 lower house seats they contested Their best results were in Wright and Bright with 2 4 per cent in each 506 and 492 votes respectively 99 123 Labor turned independent Terry Cameron and Liberal turned independent Peter Lewis both failed in their bids for re election 117 Aftermath editAfter the election Rob Kerin vacated the position of opposition leader The Liberals selected conservative Iain Evans son of former politician Stan Evans for the role with moderate Vickie Chapman daughter of former politician Ted Chapman as deputy leader The only other contestant had been Isobel Redmond who ran because she was concerned by some speculation that the Evans deal may have been stitched up by federal Liberal counterparts Christopher Pyne and Nick Minchin 4 Preferred premier ratings in July 2006 showed Rann on 71 per cent with Evans on 15 per cent Only 27 per cent of Liberal Party supporters saw Evans as the preferred premier 124 Continuing low support for the new Liberal leadership saw Martin Hamilton Smith replace Evans in April 2007 however this move saw Liberal support decline further to a three year low according to an Advertiser poll conducted a month after the leadership change Over half of polling respondents were unable to name the leader of the Liberal Party 125 This contradicted Newspolls quarterly polling 126 indicating the Rann Labor government slipping to a two party preferred figure of 57 per cent down four per cent with a preferred premier rating of 52 per cent down 14 per cent for Rann and a first time rating of 21 per cent for Martin Hamilton Smith Poll results also show Rann s satisfaction rating was below 60 per cent for the first time since coming to office at 58 per cent with Hamilton Smith receiving a 33 per cent satisfaction rate Previously unknown quantity Ann Bressington elected on the back of Nick Xenophon s No Pokies popularity has proposed mainly conservative social policies such as raising the legal drinking age from 18 to 21 127 zero tolerance of illicit drugs mandatory twice annual drug tests of every school student over the age of 14 regardless of whether parents give their consent 128 129 and making the sale of drug taking equipment illegal 130 131 However she remains undecided on voluntary euthanasia calling it a personal struggle 132 Setting a precedent Sandra Kanck s pro euthanasia speech which contained suicide methods was censored from the internet version of Hansard in August 2006 as a result of an upper house motion with Labor Family First Nick Xenophon and Ann Bressington voting for and the Liberals and SA Greens member Mark Parnell voting against 133 Despite this the speech was published on a non Australian website 134 The state s budget was released on 21 September 2006 135 It included 1 600 public service job axings despite an election pledge of only 400 however none of the redundancies will be forced It also included increases in some fees and charges such as victims of crime levies and Technical and Further Education TAFE charges There were increases in funding for health schools police and prisons and the Department of Public Prosecutions 136 137 138 The 2007 2008 budget released on 13 June 2007 saw additional spending on Transport Energy and Infrastructure Health Families and Communities and Justice portfolios such as transport initiatives including revitalisation of the rail network commencement of the 1 7 billion Marjorie Jackson Nelson Hospital to replace the Royal Adelaide Hospital funding for mental health reform including the delivery of health services and funding for new commitments to law and order policies 139 No Pokies MP Nick Xenophon resigned from parliament in early October 2007 in a successful attempt to win a seat in the Australian Senate at the 2007 federal election which according to the South Australian result he retained 72 per cent of his 2006 vote on 14 78 per cent His replacement is his third candidate on the 2006 ticket former Valuer General John Darley and was appointed by a joint sitting on 21 November 2007 where second candidate and upper house MP Ann Bressington also took the opportunity to accuse Xenophon of lacking integrity and suitability for federal parliament 140 141 Xenophon was re elected to the Senate at the 2013 federal election with a record 25 per cent vote A record breaking 13 hour Parnell Bressington filibuster occurred in May 2008 in crossbench opposition to WorkCover cuts being passed by the major parties due to the increasing underfunded liability in the workers compensation scheme Former Liberal Premier Rob Kerin resigned in November 2008 which triggered a 2009 Frome by election Independent Geoff Brock won the seat reducing the Liberals to 14 of 47 seats Brock s parliamentary presence would later be pivotal to the outcome of the 2014 election See also editRann government Candidates of the South Australian state election 2006 Members of the South Australian House of Assembly 2006 2010 Members of the South Australian Legislative Council 2006 2010Notes edit a b c d SA 2006 election results and outcomes PDF a P 14 d P 13 State Electoral Office South Australia 2006 Retrieved 4 January 2007 Archived 21 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f State election reports ECSA Archived from the original on 8 July 2014 Retrieved 3 August 2014 a b Electoral questions and answers Election results House of Assembly 1890 2002 PDF a Q 19 b Q 45 State Electoral Office South Australia 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 19 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b Emmett Patrick Can Liberals heal rifts Archived 12 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine Stateline SA 24 March 2006 Retrieved 4 January 2007 Jaensch 1986 pp 180 182 a b Green Antony Past Elections House of Assembly ABC News Online Retrieved 15 April 2008 Jaensch 1986 pp 253 259 Jaensch 1997 pp 39 44 Jaensch 1986 pp 485 500 Rann nominated for National ALP President Government of South Australia 16 August 2006 Retrieved 4 January 2007 Archived 5 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Port Adelaide Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Parkin Summers and Woodward 2006 pp 1 15 207 209 Jaensch 1997 pp 38 50 a b Jaensch 1986 pp 382 386 Parker Lachlan New Liberal Premier for SA ABC PM Transcript 22 October 2001 Retrieved 4 January 2007 Past Elections House of Assembly ABC Elections SA 2006 Retrieved 4 January 2007 Sexton Mike SA Labor deal promises Nats Cabinet position Archived 17 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine ABC 7 30 Report transcript 15 March 2006 Retrieved 4 January 2007 SA Govt recruits National Party MP ABC PM transcript 23 July 2004 Retrieved 3 February 2007 The Greens Charter sa greens org au Retrieved 4 January 2007 Archived 6 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Implications for democracy in the Festival State PDF Australian National University April 2006 page 5 Retrieved 4 January 2007 Archived 9 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Who is Family First ABC Matt Liddy s Poll Vault 21 September 2004 Retrieved 4 January 2007 Family First Faith Second Christian Democratic Party November 2004 Retrieved 4 January 2007 Archived 11 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine Jaensch 1997 pp 36 47 Jaensch 1997 pp 43 47 South Australian House of Assembly Election 2006 Waite PollBludger com 2006 Retrieved 4 January 2007 Archived 10 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Timetable for the next Australian elections Parliament of Australia Parliamentary Library 30 August 2005 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 10 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Election Summary South Australia Election 2006 Antony Green Election Guide Australian Broadcasting Corp ABC Retrieved 7 July 2010 a b 2006 South Australian Election Legislative Council Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC 2 March 2006 Retrieved 7 July 2010 2006 South Australia State Election Group Voting Tickets Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Retrieved 7 July 2010 Unique Features of South Australian Elections ABC News Online 14 February 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 a b Election Process Election Timetable State Electoral Office South Australia 3 July 2003 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 22 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Haxton Nance PM SA election campaign begins ABC PM Transcript 20 February 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 O Brien Kerry Labor to form govt in South Australia Archived 19 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine ABC 7 30 Report 13 February 2002 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Bainger Fleur Rural voters say they won t vote for Peter Lewis again ABC SA Country Hour 15 February 2002 Retrieved 26 May 2015 Peter Lewis Former members of the Parliament of South Australia Retrieved 19 August 2022 Lewis resigns as SA speaker ABC News Online 4 April 2005 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Bob Such Former members of the Parliament of South Australia Retrieved 19 August 2022 Rory McEwen Former members of the Parliament of South Australia Retrieved 19 August 2022 Karlene Maywald Former members of the Parliament of South Australia Retrieved 19 August 2022 a b c d Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Fisher Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Handout for Labor campaigners PDF Mumble com 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 27 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine Rann stars in Labor launch ABC News Online 12 March 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Fewster Sean Labor ad unfair Conlon The Advertiser 2 March 2006 p 4 Hansard 20 09 2006 Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Parliament of South Australia 20 September 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 An example of the I m alright Jack attitude The Advertiser 1995 Parkin Andrew Political Chronicles July to December 1998 Australian Journal of Politics and History vol 45 no 2 1999 p 284 Experts predict landslide win for SA Labor ABC News Online 18 March 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine SA Liberals forced to change TV ad ABC News Online 15 March 2006 Retrieved 15 February 2007 No matter how small ABC election pollvault Retrieved 11 January 2007 Starick Paul Libs send a new message with texts The Advertiser 8 February 2006 p 18 Tonkin Richard There s No I in team and no You in Labor Webdiary com au 17 March 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Anderson Laura Liberals forced to change TV ad after blunder The Advertiser 16 March 2006 p 7 District of Unley PollBludger com Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 10 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Eastley Tony SA goes to the polls tomorrow ABC AM Transcript 17 March 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Odds on favourite ABC election pollvault Retrieved 11 January 2007 Kerin to step down if Libs lose election ABC News Online 7 June 2005 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Kerin concedes defeat in SA election ABC News Online 18 March 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 14 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Royal Simon Has Rob Kerin saved his leadership but lost the election Archived 19 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine Stateline SA 14 October 2005 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Tramline Extension Project Victoria Square to City West Government of South Australia Department for Transport Energy and Infrastructure Retrieved on 4 January 2007 dead link Calls for tram extension to be scrapped NineMSN 9 June 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Tramline Extension Victoria Square to City West Department of Transport Energy and Infrastructure Retrieved on 7 April 2007 Govt approves Adelaide tramline extension project ABC News Online 3 February 2007 Retrieved on 3 February 2007 Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Adelaide airport gets all clear ABC News Online 11 February 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Robins Phil Rann runs into bumpy patch Mumble com 6 November 2005 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 28 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine Henschke Ian Parties debate the economy Archived 22 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine ABC Stateline SA 24 February 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Economic climate has Rann in the sun The Adelaide Review 23 December 2004 Retrieved on 3 February 2007 Archived from the original on 5 March 2011 RANN SLAM Sunday Mail 18 March 2006 Archived from the original on 27 April 2008 District of Port Adelaide PollBludger com Retrieved on 3 February 2007 Archived from the original on 14 March 2007 Maywald Minister For The River Murray Archived 29 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Rann press release SaveTheMurray com 22 July 2004 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Govt ditches nuclear dump plan ABC News Online 14 July 2004 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 4 000th officer SA Police Force Government of South Australia 28 June 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived from the original on 20 August 2006 South Australia Announces Tough New Drug Laws StoptheDrugWar org 20 May 2005 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Opposition says Govt doing backflip on ecstasy testing ABC News Online 31 August 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 28 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine SA speed amnesty ends tonight ABC News Online 31 May 2003 Retrieved on 8 March 2007 Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Is the health system unhealthy Archived 19 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine ABC Stateline SA 15 March 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Rann promises hospital buy back ABC News Online 12 March 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine State election manifesto PDF Archived 13 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine Letsgetequal org February 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Bockman Michelle Wiese Libs Dems unite on gay unions The Australian 24 August 2006 p 3 Statutes Amendment Domestic Partners bill Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Parliament of SA Hansard 7 December 2006 Retrieved on 7 February 2007 South Australian State Election 2006 EffectiveVoting org Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 6 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine Rann Mike Will the Legislative Council work with us Government of South Australia 27 April 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 19 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine Claim SA WorkCover unfunded liabilities blow out to 400 million ABC News Online 3 August 2003 Retrieved on 3 February 2007 Rann must act over 1b WorkCover liability permanent dead link Liberals SA 20 November 2006 Retrieved on 3 February 2007 dead link WorkCover plan to axe payouts The Advertiser 30 January 2007 Retrieved on 3 February 2007 Beazley says IR reform influenced state elections wins ABC News Online 19 March 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Libs announce 4 000 job cuts Community and Public Sector Union 2 March 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Details of SA 2006 Election Australian Politics and Elections Database Green Antony SA 2006 Election Results ABC Retrieved 4 July 2015 a b 2006 SA Election Electorate Results A Z SA Election Results Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC Retrieved 7 July 2010 a b c Green Antony Key Seats by Party and Margin ABC elections SA Retrieved on 4 January 2007 a b c Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Hammond Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 a b Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Chaffey Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 a b Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Mount Gambier Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 a b c Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Mitchell Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 South Australia 2006 Election Results Upperhouse info Retrieved 14 January 2007 Archived 15 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Playford Electorate Profile ABC News Online 29 March 2010 Retrieved 15 April 2010 Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Mawson Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 South Australian House of Assembly Election 2006 Bright PollBludger com Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 10 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Bright Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Curtis Christopher Australian lawmaker quits over gay affair Archived 11 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine Gay com Australia 11 August 2005 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 a b Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Adelaide Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Unley Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 a b Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Hartley Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Morialta Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Newland Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Light Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Stuart count goes down to the wire ABC elections SA 22 March 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Stuart Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Norwood Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 South Australian House of Assembly Election 2006 Mitchell PollBludger com Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 10 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine South Australia House of Assembly Election 2006 Hammond PollBludger com Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 15 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Post Election Pendulum ABC News online Retrieved on 4 January 2007 1 Archived 19 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine 2 Archived 19 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine History of South Australian Elections 1857 2006 Electoral Commission SA Archived from the original on 2 March 2014 Retrieved 13 March 2014 Democratic Audit of Australia Implications for democracy in the Festival State PDF Australian National University April 2006 page 3 graph Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 9 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g h i Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Legislative Council 2006 ABC News Online Retrieved 15 April 2008 Political Picture Gallery Upperhouse info Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Legislative Council Candidates Voting Tickets State Electoral Office South Australia Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 21 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Detailed Legislative Council Result 2002 ABC News Online Retrieved 15 April 2008 Last sitting SA Democrat to quit ABC News Online 11 May 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Goyder Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Green Antony South Australian Election 2006 Wright Electorate Profile ABC News Online 20 April 2006 Retrieved 15 April 2008 In South Australia 71 Say Rann Better Premier Roy Morgan Research 8 July 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 10 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Libs worst poll in three years AdelaideNow News com au 2 May 2007 Retrieved 19 May 2007 Support for Labor Rann slips permanent dead link The Australian 10 July 2007 Retrieved 10 July 2007 Allison Lisa Raise drink age to 21 The Advertiser 31 August 2006 p 24 Klening Xanthe MP s move to drug test all teens The Advertiser 17 August 2006 p 5 Should all school students be drug tested Archived 21 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine ABC Stateline 18 August 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Ban the bong say MP s The Advertiser 6 June 2006 Allison Lisa Cocaine kits on sale in city shop window The Advertiser 11 August 2006 p 7 Hansard 31 08 2006 Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Parliament of South Australia 31 August 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Owen Michael MPs turn up heat on Kanck damage The Advertiser 2 September 2006 p 10 Speech to SA Legislative Council by Sandra Kanck MLC 30th Aug 2006 08 31 PDF Exit International US Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 21 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine State Budget 2006 2007 Government of South Australia Department of Treasury and Finance Media Releases 10 November 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 21 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Public service jobs axed in SA budget Sydney Morning Herald 21 September 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 SA to announce Budget funding boost for DPP ABC News Online 20 September 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 11 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Foley Kevin BUDGET 411m new prisons safer communities Government of South Australia 21 September 2006 Retrieved on 4 January 2007 Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine State Budget 2007 2008 Government of South Australia Department of Treasury and Finance Retrieved on 2 July 2007 Archived 24 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Henderson Nick Nick Xenophon s running mate unleashes extraordinary attack The Advertiser 2 November 2007 Retrieved 13 December 2007 MPs stunned by Xenophon blast ABC News 21 November 2007 Retrieved 13 December 2007 References editJaensch Dean ed 1986 The Flinders History of South Australia Political History Netley South Australia Wakefield Press ISBN 0 949268 52 6 Warhurst John ed 1997 Keeping the Bastards Honest The Australian Democrats First Twenty Years St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 86448 420 9 External links editParliament of South Australia ABC election guide South Australia 2006 election State and federal election results since 1890 Poll Bludger federal and state election guides Upperhouse info federal and state election guides Stateline ABC TV 24 Mar 2006 Can Liberals heal rifts History of South Australian elections 1857 2006 volume 1 ECSA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2006 South Australian state election amp oldid 1200303055, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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