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2008 Australian Capital Territory general election

Elections to the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly were held on Saturday, 18 October 2008. The incumbent Labor Party, led by Jon Stanhope, was challenged by the Liberal Party, led by Zed Seselja. Candidates were elected to fill three multi-member electorates using a single transferable vote method, known as the Hare-Clark system. The result was another hung parliament with Labor winning seven seats, the Liberals six seats and the Greens finishing with four seats, giving the Greens the balance of power in the 17-member unicameral Assembly.[1][2][3][4] On 31 October 2008, after almost two weeks of deliberations, the Greens chose to support a Labor minority government.[5][6][7] Consequently, Labor was re-elected to a third consecutive term of government in the ACT. Stanhope was elected Chief Minister at the first sitting of the seventh Assembly on 5 November 2008.[8] The election was conducted by the ACT Electoral Commission.

2008 Australian Capital Territory general election

← 2004 18 October 2008 2012 →

All 17 seats of the unicameral Legislative Assembly
9 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout90.4 ( 2.4 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Jon Stanhope Zed Seselja Meredith Hunter
Party Labor Liberal Greens
Leader since 19 March 1998 13 December 2007 October 2008
Leader's seat Ginninderra Molonglo Ginninderra
Last election 9 seats 7 seats 1 seat
Seats won 7 6 4
Seat change 2 1 3
Popular vote 79,126 66,855 33,057
Percentage 37.4% 31.6% 15.6%
Swing 9.4 3.2 6.3

Results by electorate

Chief Minister before election

Jon Stanhope
Labor

Resulting Chief Minister

Jon Stanhope
Labor

Key dates edit

[9]

  • Last day to lodge applications for party register: 30 June 2008
  • Party registration closed: 11 September 2008
  • Pre-election period commenced and nominations opened: 12 September 2008
  • Rolls closed: 19 September 2008
  • Nominations closed: 24 September 2008
  • Nominations declared and ballot paper order determined: 25 September 2008
  • Pre-poll voting commenced: 29 September 2008
  • Polling day: 18 October 2008
  • Scrutiny completed: 25 October 2008
  • Poll declared: 29 October 2008
  • Legislative Assembly formed: 5 November 2008

Overview edit

The incumbent centre-left Labor Party, led by Chief Minister Jon Stanhope, attempted to win re-election for a third term after coming to power in 2001. They were challenged by the opposition centre-right Liberal Party, led by Zed Seselja, who assumed the Liberal leadership in December 2007. A third party, the ACT Greens, held one seat in the Assembly through retiring MLA Deb Foskey.

The election saw all 17 members of the Assembly face re-election, with members being elected by the Hare-Clark system of proportional representation. The Assembly is divided into three electorates: five-member Brindabella (including Tuggeranong and parts of the Woden Valley) and Ginninderra (including Belconnen and suburbs) and seven-member Molonglo (including North Canberra, South Canberra, Gungahlin, Weston Creek, and the remainder of the Woden Valley). Election dates are set in statute to occur once every four years; the government has no ability to set the election date.

Following the 2004 election outcome, Labor held 9 seats, becoming the first majority government in the territory's history. The opposition Liberal Party held 7 seats, with the Greens holding a further one. The Liberal numbers in the Assembly dropped to six in December 2007 when former Shadow Treasurer Richard Mulcahy was expelled from the party and began sitting as an independent. The opposition thus would have needed to win a further three seats, on top of regaining Mulcahy's seat, to hold government in its own right.

The Liberal campaign suffered early problems in February 2008 when a number of prominent Liberal Party and business figures, including popular former Chief Minister Kate Carnell and high-profile businessman and former party finance director Jim Murphy, relaunched the 250 Club, previously a Liberal fundraising group, as the independent Canberra Business Club. The new organisation pledged to support minor party and independent pro-business candidates in the election, citing their disillusion with both major parties and the need for a third political force in the Assembly.[10] At the same time, their best prospect for winning Mulcahy's seat of Molonglo, the Liberal candidate for Fraser in the previous Federal election, Troy Williams, withdrew.[citation needed]

Polling edit

Conducted by Patterson Market Research, and published in The Canberra Times, polling released on 4 October suggested the Green vote had doubled to tripled since the last election, at the expense of Labor, with the Liberal vote relatively unchanged. Commentators predicted the Greens would hold the balance of power and decide who forms government. The Greens stated they were willing to court both major parties.[11][12][13]

Scanning of ballot papers edit

In the 2001 and 2004 elections, after the first manual count of paper ballots the preferences were data entered for distribution. For the 2008 election, paper ballots were scanned and character recognition software used to identify preferences. Any preferences that could not be identified by the software were entered manually.[14]

Candidates edit

[15] Sitting members at the time of the election are listed in bold. Tickets that elected at least one MLA are highlighted in the relevant colour. Successful candidates are indicated by an asterisk (*).

Retiring Members edit

Labor edit

Liberal edit

Greens edit

Brindabella edit

Five seats were up for election. The Labor Party was defending three seats. The Liberal Party was defending two seats.

Labor candidates Liberal candidates Greens candidates Motorist candidates CAP candidates
   

Joy Burch*
Mick Gentleman
John Hargreaves*
Tracey Macket
Wayne Sievers

Steve Doszpot*
David Morgan
Steve Pratt
Audrey Ray
Brendan Smyth*

Amanda Bresnan*
Sue Ellerman

Ben Doble
Burl Doble
Brian McLachlan
Geoff Rake
Bruce Ritchie

Val Jeffery
James Sizer

Ginninderra edit

Five seats were up for election. The Labor Party was defending three seats. The Liberal Party was defending two seats.

Labor candidates Liberal candidates Greens candidates Motorist candidates CAP candidates Ungrouped candidates
     

Chris Bourke
Adina Cirson
Mary Porter*
Dave Peebles
Jon Stanhope*

Alistair Coe*
Vicki Dunne*
Jacqui Myers
Andrea Tokaji
Matthew Watts

James Higgins
Meredith Hunter*

Deborah Hannigan
Chris Seddon
Andrew Simmington
Denis Walford
Wayne Whiting

Mike Crowther
Roger Nicoll
Jane Tullis

Harold Hird (Ind)
Cathy McIlhoney (Ind)
Mark Parton (Ind)
Adam Verwey (Ind)
Darren Churchill (-)
Eddie Sarkis (-)
Barry Smith (Ind)

Molonglo edit

Seven seats were up for election. The Labor Party was defending three seats. The Liberal Party was defending three seats. The Greens were defending one seat.

Labor candidates Liberal candidates Greens candidates Motorist candidates CAP candidates
   

Andrew Barr*
Eleanor Bates
Simon Corbell*
Louise Crossman
Katy Gallagher*
Mike Hettinger
David Mathews

Belinda Barnier
Jacqui Burke
Jeremy Hanson*
Giulia Jones
Gary Kent
Zed Seselja*
Clinton White

Elena Kirschbaum
Caroline Le Couteur*
Shane Rattenbury*

David Cumbers
Kim Evans
Stuart Green
Angus Laburn
Darren O'Neil
Stephen Rowland
Anthony Seddon

Alvin Hopper
Owen Saddler
Nancy-Louise Scherger
Norvan Vogt

Mulcahy candidates LDP candidates Pangallo candidates Ungrouped candidates
 

Joanne Allen
Richard Mulcahy
Ben O'Neill

David McAlary
David Pinkerton

Luciano Lombardo
Frank Pangallo
Phil Thompson

Helen Cross (Ind)
Tony Farrell (Ind)
Greg Tannahill (-)
Kerri Taranto (Ind)

Results edit

Australian Capital Territory general election, 18 October 2008[20]
Legislative Assembly
<< 20042012 >>

Enrolled voters 243,471
Votes cast 220,019 Turnout 90.4% −2.4
Informal votes 8,370 Informal 3.8% +1.1
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes % Swing Seats Change
  Labor 79,126 37.4 −9.4 7 −2
  Liberal 66,855 31.6 −3.2 6 –1
  Greens 33,057 15.6 +6.3 4 +3
  Motorist 10,553 5.0 +5.0 0 0
  Community Alliance 7,730 3.7 +3.7 0 0
  Independent 6,961 3.3 +1.5 0 0
  Pangallo Independents 4,252 2.0 +2.0 0 0
  Mulcahy Canberra Party 2,341 1.1 +1.1 0 0
  Liberal Democrats 774 0.4 −0.9 0 0
Total 211,649     17  
Results by electorate
Brindabella Ginninderra Molonglo
Party Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Labor 23,123 36.5 2 24,119 40.2 2 31,884 36.1 3
Liberal 22,364 35.3 2 16,683 27.8 2 27,808 31.5 2
Greens 8,600 13.6 1 8,350 13.9 1 16,107 18.2 2
Motorist Party 4,418 7.0 0 3,684 6.1 0 2,451 2.8 0
Community Alliance 4,829 7.6 0 1,897 3.2 0 1,004 1.1 0
Independent 5,316 8.9 0 1,645 1.9 0
Pangallo Independents 4,252 4.8 0
Mulcahy Canberra Party 2,341 2.7 0
Liberal Democrats 774 0.9 0
Electorate Seats held
Brindabella          
Ginninderra          
Molonglo              

At the close of counting on election night 18 October 2008, with 82.1 per cent of the vote counted Labor had obtained 37.6 per cent of the vote across the ACT, with the Liberals at 31.1 per cent and the Greens at 15.8 per cent. Swings were recorded against both the Labor (-9.3 per cent) and Liberal (-3.7 per cent) parties with a +6.6 per cent swing towards the Greens. Labor won 7 seats, the Liberals won 6 seats, while the Greens won 4 seats, giving them the balance of power, and negotiated with both major parties for the formation of a minority government.[4][21] After almost two weeks of deliberations, the Greens chose to form a minority government with Labor.[5] The ACT Electoral Commission determined and announced the election's final results on 25 October 2008 after distribution of preferences.[22]

In Brindabella, Labor lost one of its three seats to Greens candidate Amanda Bresnan. Government minister John Hargreaves was re-elected, but Labor backbencher Mick Gentleman was beaten by another Labor candidate, Joy Burch. For the Liberal Party, former leader Brendan Smyth was re-elected, but shadow minister Steve Pratt lost his seat to party colleague Steve Doszpot.[22]

Labor also lost a seat in Ginninderra, where Greens candidate Meredith Hunter was elected. Chief Minister Jon Stanhope and Labor MLA Mary Porter were both re-elected, and on the Liberal ticket sitting MLA Vicki Dunne was joined by Alistair Coe, who replaced retiring Bill Stefaniak.[22]

In seven-member Molonglo, the Liberals lost one seat to the Greens. Labor ministers Katy Gallagher, Andrew Barr and Simon Corbell all won re-election, as did Liberal leader Zed Seselja. Sitting MLA Jacqui Burke lost to Jeremy Hanson for the second Liberal seat. The Greens increased their representation in this seat to two, electing new MLAs Shane Rattenbury and Caroline Le Couteur, the latter at the expense of Liberal-turned-Independent MLA Richard Mulcahy.[22]

See also edit

External links edit

  • List of candidates for the 2008 ACT Legislative Assembly election
  • ACT Electoral Commission - 2008 ACT Legislative Assembly election

References edit

  1. ^ "ACT election officially declared". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 29 October 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  2. ^ "ACT 2008 - ABC elections". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 18 October 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  3. ^ Williams, George (25 October 2008). . The Canberra Times. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  4. ^ a b "Greens take extra seat in ACT election". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 25 October 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  5. ^ a b "Labor to form minority government in ACT". The Age. Fairfax Media. 31 October 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  6. ^ Stockman, David (1 November 2008). "Greens' nod sees Stanhope keep job". The Canberra Times. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 11 August 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  7. ^ "Parliamentary Agreement for the 7th Legislative Assembly for the ACT" (PDF). 31 October 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  8. ^ "Legislative Assembly for the ACT - Week 1". ACT Hansard. ACT Legislative Assembly. 5 November 2008. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
  9. ^ . ACT Legislative Assembly election - 2008. ACT Electoral Commission. 2008. Archived from the original on 30 September 2009. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
  10. ^ Alexander, Cathy (27 January 2008). . The Canberra Times. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 9 November 2011. Retrieved 8 October 2010.
  11. ^ McLennan, David (4 October 2008). . The Canberra Times. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 27 October 2009. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  12. ^ McLennan, David (4 October 2008). . The Canberra Times. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 27 October 2009. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  13. ^ McLennan, David (5 October 2008). "Stanhope Slump". The Canberra Times. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  14. ^ . ACT Electoral Commission. Archived from the original on 21 October 2008.
  15. ^ . 2008 Election. ACT Electoral Commission. 2008. Archived from the original on 30 September 2009. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
  16. ^ a b Alexander, Cathy (24 January 2008). "Labor Member to quit politics". The Canberra Times. Fairfax Media.
  17. ^ Alexander, Cathy (4 March 2008). "Labor to reveal ACT poll hopefuls". The Canberra Times. Fairfax Media.
  18. ^ "Stefaniak quits politics". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 26 August 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  19. ^ Rudra, Natasha (31 May 2008). "Foskey moving to greener pastures". The Canberra Times. Fairfax Media.
  20. ^ "2008 Election results". Elections ACT. 6 January 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2018.
  21. ^ "2008 Australian Capital Territory Election". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 18 October 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  22. ^ a b c d . 2008 Election. ACT Electoral Commission. 2008. Archived from the original on 30 September 2009. Retrieved 8 August 2010.

2008, australian, capital, territory, general, election, elections, australian, capital, territory, legislative, assembly, were, held, saturday, october, 2008, incumbent, labor, party, stanhope, challenged, liberal, party, seselja, candidates, were, elected, f. Elections to the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly were held on Saturday 18 October 2008 The incumbent Labor Party led by Jon Stanhope was challenged by the Liberal Party led by Zed Seselja Candidates were elected to fill three multi member electorates using a single transferable vote method known as the Hare Clark system The result was another hung parliament with Labor winning seven seats the Liberals six seats and the Greens finishing with four seats giving the Greens the balance of power in the 17 member unicameral Assembly 1 2 3 4 On 31 October 2008 after almost two weeks of deliberations the Greens chose to support a Labor minority government 5 6 7 Consequently Labor was re elected to a third consecutive term of government in the ACT Stanhope was elected Chief Minister at the first sitting of the seventh Assembly on 5 November 2008 8 The election was conducted by the ACT Electoral Commission 2008 Australian Capital Territory general election 2004 18 October 2008 2012 All 17 seats of the unicameral Legislative Assembly9 seats needed for a majorityOpinion pollsTurnout90 4 2 4 pp First party Second party Third party Leader Jon Stanhope Zed Seselja Meredith Hunter Party Labor Liberal Greens Leader since 19 March 1998 13 December 2007 October 2008 Leader s seat Ginninderra Molonglo Ginninderra Last election 9 seats 7 seats 1 seat Seats won 7 6 4 Seat change 2 1 3 Popular vote 79 126 66 855 33 057 Percentage 37 4 31 6 15 6 Swing 9 4 3 2 6 3Results by electorateChief Minister before election Jon Stanhope Labor Resulting Chief Minister Jon Stanhope Labor Contents 1 Key dates 2 Overview 2 1 Polling 2 2 Scanning of ballot papers 3 Candidates 3 1 Retiring Members 3 1 1 Labor 3 1 2 Liberal 3 1 3 Greens 3 2 Brindabella 3 3 Ginninderra 3 4 Molonglo 4 Results 5 See also 6 External links 7 ReferencesKey dates edit 9 Last day to lodge applications for party register 30 June 2008 Party registration closed 11 September 2008 Pre election period commenced and nominations opened 12 September 2008 Rolls closed 19 September 2008 Nominations closed 24 September 2008 Nominations declared and ballot paper order determined 25 September 2008 Pre poll voting commenced 29 September 2008 Polling day 18 October 2008 Scrutiny completed 25 October 2008 Poll declared 29 October 2008 Legislative Assembly formed 5 November 2008Overview editThe incumbent centre left Labor Party led by Chief Minister Jon Stanhope attempted to win re election for a third term after coming to power in 2001 They were challenged by the opposition centre right Liberal Party led by Zed Seselja who assumed the Liberal leadership in December 2007 A third party the ACT Greens held one seat in the Assembly through retiring MLA Deb Foskey The election saw all 17 members of the Assembly face re election with members being elected by the Hare Clark system of proportional representation The Assembly is divided into three electorates five member Brindabella including Tuggeranong and parts of the Woden Valley and Ginninderra including Belconnen and suburbs and seven member Molonglo including North Canberra South Canberra Gungahlin Weston Creek and the remainder of the Woden Valley Election dates are set in statute to occur once every four years the government has no ability to set the election date Following the 2004 election outcome Labor held 9 seats becoming the first majority government in the territory s history The opposition Liberal Party held 7 seats with the Greens holding a further one The Liberal numbers in the Assembly dropped to six in December 2007 when former Shadow Treasurer Richard Mulcahy was expelled from the party and began sitting as an independent The opposition thus would have needed to win a further three seats on top of regaining Mulcahy s seat to hold government in its own right The Liberal campaign suffered early problems in February 2008 when a number of prominent Liberal Party and business figures including popular former Chief Minister Kate Carnell and high profile businessman and former party finance director Jim Murphy relaunched the 250 Club previously a Liberal fundraising group as the independent Canberra Business Club The new organisation pledged to support minor party and independent pro business candidates in the election citing their disillusion with both major parties and the need for a third political force in the Assembly 10 At the same time their best prospect for winning Mulcahy s seat of Molonglo the Liberal candidate for Fraser in the previous Federal election Troy Williams withdrew citation needed Polling edit Conducted by Patterson Market Research and published in The Canberra Times polling released on 4 October suggested the Green vote had doubled to tripled since the last election at the expense of Labor with the Liberal vote relatively unchanged Commentators predicted the Greens would hold the balance of power and decide who forms government The Greens stated they were willing to court both major parties 11 12 13 Scanning of ballot papers edit In the 2001 and 2004 elections after the first manual count of paper ballots the preferences were data entered for distribution For the 2008 election paper ballots were scanned and character recognition software used to identify preferences Any preferences that could not be identified by the software were entered manually 14 Candidates edit 15 Sitting members at the time of the election are listed in bold Tickets that elected at least one MLA are highlighted in the relevant colour Successful candidates are indicated by an asterisk Retiring Members edit Labor edit Wayne Berry Ginninderra 16 Karin MacDonald Brindabella 16 17 Liberal edit Bill Stefaniak Ginninderra 18 Greens edit Deb Foskey Molonglo 19 Brindabella edit Five seats were up for election The Labor Party was defending three seats The Liberal Party was defending two seats Labor candidates Liberal candidates Greens candidates Motorist candidates CAP candidates Joy Burch Mick Gentleman John Hargreaves Tracey Macket Wayne Sievers Steve Doszpot David Morgan Steve Pratt Audrey Ray Brendan Smyth Amanda Bresnan Sue Ellerman Ben Doble Burl Doble Brian McLachlan Geoff Rake Bruce Ritchie Val Jeffery James Sizer Ginninderra edit Five seats were up for election The Labor Party was defending three seats The Liberal Party was defending two seats Labor candidates Liberal candidates Greens candidates Motorist candidates CAP candidates Ungrouped candidates Chris Bourke Adina Cirson Mary Porter Dave Peebles Jon Stanhope Alistair Coe Vicki Dunne Jacqui Myers Andrea Tokaji Matthew Watts James Higgins Meredith Hunter Deborah Hannigan Chris Seddon Andrew Simmington Denis Walford Wayne Whiting Mike Crowther Roger Nicoll Jane Tullis Harold Hird Ind Cathy McIlhoney Ind Mark Parton Ind Adam Verwey Ind Darren Churchill Eddie Sarkis Barry Smith Ind Molonglo edit Seven seats were up for election The Labor Party was defending three seats The Liberal Party was defending three seats The Greens were defending one seat Labor candidates Liberal candidates Greens candidates Motorist candidates CAP candidates Andrew Barr Eleanor Bates Simon Corbell Louise Crossman Katy Gallagher Mike Hettinger David Mathews Belinda Barnier Jacqui Burke Jeremy Hanson Giulia Jones Gary Kent Zed Seselja Clinton White Elena Kirschbaum Caroline Le Couteur Shane Rattenbury David Cumbers Kim Evans Stuart Green Angus Laburn Darren O Neil Stephen Rowland Anthony Seddon Alvin Hopper Owen Saddler Nancy Louise Scherger Norvan Vogt Mulcahy candidates LDP candidates Pangallo candidates Ungrouped candidates Joanne Allen Richard Mulcahy Ben O Neill David McAlary David Pinkerton Luciano Lombardo Frank Pangallo Phil Thompson Helen Cross Ind Tony Farrell Ind Greg Tannahill Kerri Taranto Ind Results editMain article Results of the Australian Capital Territory general election 2008 Australian Capital Territory general election 18 October 2008 20 Legislative Assembly lt lt 2004 2012 gt gt Enrolled voters 243 471 Votes cast 220 019 Turnout 90 4 2 4 Informal votes 8 370 Informal 3 8 1 1 Summary of votes by party Party Primary votes Swing Seats Change Labor 79 126 37 4 9 4 7 2 Liberal 66 855 31 6 3 2 6 1 Greens 33 057 15 6 6 3 4 3 Motorist 10 553 5 0 5 0 0 0 Community Alliance 7 730 3 7 3 7 0 0 Independent 6 961 3 3 1 5 0 0 Pangallo Independents 4 252 2 0 2 0 0 0 Mulcahy Canberra Party 2 341 1 1 1 1 0 0 Liberal Democrats 774 0 4 0 9 0 0 Total 211 649 17 Results by electorate Brindabella Ginninderra Molonglo Party Votes Seats Votes Seats Votes Seats Labor 23 123 36 5 2 24 119 40 2 2 31 884 36 1 3 Liberal 22 364 35 3 2 16 683 27 8 2 27 808 31 5 2 Greens 8 600 13 6 1 8 350 13 9 1 16 107 18 2 2 Motorist Party 4 418 7 0 0 3 684 6 1 0 2 451 2 8 0 Community Alliance 4 829 7 6 0 1 897 3 2 0 1 004 1 1 0 Independent 5 316 8 9 0 1 645 1 9 0 Pangallo Independents 4 252 4 8 0 Mulcahy Canberra Party 2 341 2 7 0 Liberal Democrats 774 0 9 0 Electorate Seats held Brindabella Ginninderra Molonglo At the close of counting on election night 18 October 2008 with 82 1 per cent of the vote counted Labor had obtained 37 6 per cent of the vote across the ACT with the Liberals at 31 1 per cent and the Greens at 15 8 per cent Swings were recorded against both the Labor 9 3 per cent and Liberal 3 7 per cent parties with a 6 6 per cent swing towards the Greens Labor won 7 seats the Liberals won 6 seats while the Greens won 4 seats giving them the balance of power and negotiated with both major parties for the formation of a minority government 4 21 After almost two weeks of deliberations the Greens chose to form a minority government with Labor 5 The ACT Electoral Commission determined and announced the election s final results on 25 October 2008 after distribution of preferences 22 In Brindabella Labor lost one of its three seats to Greens candidate Amanda Bresnan Government minister John Hargreaves was re elected but Labor backbencher Mick Gentleman was beaten by another Labor candidate Joy Burch For the Liberal Party former leader Brendan Smyth was re elected but shadow minister Steve Pratt lost his seat to party colleague Steve Doszpot 22 Labor also lost a seat in Ginninderra where Greens candidate Meredith Hunter was elected Chief Minister Jon Stanhope and Labor MLA Mary Porter were both re elected and on the Liberal ticket sitting MLA Vicki Dunne was joined by Alistair Coe who replaced retiring Bill Stefaniak 22 In seven member Molonglo the Liberals lost one seat to the Greens Labor ministers Katy Gallagher Andrew Barr and Simon Corbell all won re election as did Liberal leader Zed Seselja Sitting MLA Jacqui Burke lost to Jeremy Hanson for the second Liberal seat The Greens increased their representation in this seat to two electing new MLAs Shane Rattenbury and Caroline Le Couteur the latter at the expense of Liberal turned Independent MLA Richard Mulcahy 22 See also editMembers of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly 2008 2012 2012 Australian Capital Territory general electionExternal links editList of candidates for the 2008 ACT Legislative Assembly election ACT Legislative Assembly List of Members 1989 2008 ACT Electoral Commission 2008 ACT Legislative Assembly electionReferences edit ACT election officially declared ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 29 October 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2010 ACT 2008 ABC elections Australian Broadcasting Corporation 18 October 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2010 Williams George 25 October 2008 Case for a new umpire The Canberra Times Fairfax Media Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 16 July 2010 a b Greens take extra seat in ACT election ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 25 October 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2010 a b Labor to form minority government in ACT The Age Fairfax Media 31 October 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2010 Stockman David 1 November 2008 Greens nod sees Stanhope keep job The Canberra Times Fairfax Media Archived from the original on 11 August 2011 Retrieved 16 July 2010 Parliamentary Agreement for the 7th Legislative Assembly for the ACT PDF 31 October 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2010 Legislative Assembly for the ACT Week 1 ACT Hansard ACT Legislative Assembly 5 November 2008 Retrieved 8 August 2010 Election timetable ACT Legislative Assembly election 2008 ACT Electoral Commission 2008 Archived from the original on 30 September 2009 Retrieved 8 August 2010 Alexander Cathy 27 January 2008 Business gives up on ACT Liberals The Canberra Times Fairfax Media Archived from the original on 9 November 2011 Retrieved 8 October 2010 McLennan David 4 October 2008 Stanhope will need Greens to hold power The Canberra Times Fairfax Media Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 Retrieved 16 July 2010 McLennan David 4 October 2008 Poll results no comfort to Labor or Liberals The Canberra Times Fairfax Media Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 Retrieved 16 July 2010 McLennan David 5 October 2008 Stanhope Slump The Canberra Times Fairfax Media Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 16 July 2010 Scanning of ballot papers ACT Electoral Commission Archived from the original on 21 October 2008 Candidate list 2008 Election ACT Electoral Commission 2008 Archived from the original on 30 September 2009 Retrieved 8 August 2010 a b Alexander Cathy 24 January 2008 Labor Member to quit politics The Canberra Times Fairfax Media Alexander Cathy 4 March 2008 Labor to reveal ACT poll hopefuls The Canberra Times Fairfax Media Stefaniak quits politics ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 26 August 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2010 Rudra Natasha 31 May 2008 Foskey moving to greener pastures The Canberra Times Fairfax Media 2008 Election results Elections ACT 6 January 2015 Retrieved 25 August 2018 2008 Australian Capital Territory Election Australian Broadcasting Corporation 18 October 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2010 a b c d List of elected candidates 2008 Election ACT Electoral Commission 2008 Archived from the original on 30 September 2009 Retrieved 8 August 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2008 Australian Capital Territory general election amp oldid 1215277058, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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