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2006 Victorian state election

The 2006 Victorian state election, held on Saturday, 25 November 2006, was for the 56th Parliament of Victoria. Just over 3 million Victorians registered to vote elected 88 members to the Legislative Assembly and, for the first time, 40 members to the Legislative Council under a proportional representation system (Single transferable voting). The election was conducted by the independent Victorian Electoral Commission.

2006 Victorian state election

← 2002 25 November 2006 (2006-11-25) 2010 →

All 88 seats in the Victorian Legislative Assembly
45 seats were needed for a majority
All 40 seats in the Victorian Legislative Council
Information below is for the Assembly election.
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Steve Bracks Ted Baillieu Peter Ryan
Party Labor Liberal National
Leader since 22 March 1999 8 May 2006 December 1999
Leader's seat Williamstown Hawthorn Gippsland South
Last election 62 seats 17 seats 7 seats
Seats won 55 seats 23 seats 9 seats
Seat change 7 6 2
Popular vote 1,278,046 1,022,110 153,299
Percentage 43.06% 34.44% 5.17%
Swing 4.89 0.53 0.87
TPP 54.39% 45.61%
TPP swing 3.38 3.38

Results in each electorate.

The Labor Party government of Premier Steve Bracks, first elected in 1999, won a third consecutive term with 55 of the 88 lower house seats, down seven from the 62 Labor won in 2002. The Liberal Party opposition of Ted Baillieu won 23 seats, and the National Party led by Peter Ryan won nine seats. One independent member was re-elected, while one lost his seat. Labor lost Bayswater, Evelyn, Ferntree Gully, Hastings, Kilsyth, Morwell and Narracan.

In the Legislative Council, Labor won 19 of the 40 seats, the Liberals 15, the Greens three, the Nationals two and the Democratic Labour Party one. This was the first time the DLP had won a seat in the Victorian Parliament since 1955.

Steve Bracks became only the second Labor Premier of Victoria to win three elections, and the first to win a third election with a large majority. Despite speculation that he would become the longest-serving Labor Premier in Victoria, he resigned in July 2007 and was replaced by his treasurer John Brumby.

Results edit

Legislative Assembly edit

 
PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
Labor1,278,04643.06  4.8955  7
Liberal1,022,11034.44  0.5323  6
Greens297,93110.04  0.310 
National153,2995.17  0.879  2
Family First127,2664.29New0New
Independents67,8262.29  1.111  1
People Power15,2260.51New0New
Citizens Electoral Council5,1870.17  0.160 
Socialist Alliance1,1020.04  0.070 
Total2,967,993100.0088
Valid votes2,967,99395.44
Invalid/blank votes141,9144.56  1.14
Total votes3,109,907100.00
Registered voters/turnout3,353,84592.73  0.43
Two-party preferred
Labor1,613,97154.39  3.38
Liberal/National1,353,31945.61  3.38
Total2,967,290100.00

Maps edit

Legislative Council edit

 
PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
Labor1,234,08241.45  6.0419  6
Liberal1,028,42134.55  0.0415  1
Greens314,84710.58  0.293  3
National131,9464.43  0.061  3
Family First114,7393.85New0New
Democratic Labour58,7221.97  1.971  1
People Power30,4331.02New0New
Democrats24,6730.83  0.960 
Independents18,7880.63  0.040 
Country Alliance13,3290.45New0New
Christian Democrats5,8190.20  0.060 
Socialist Alliance1,1300.04  0.070 
Total2,976,929100.0039
Valid votes2,976,92995.72
Invalid/blank votes133,2434.28  0.61
Total votes3,110,172100.00
Registered voters/turnout3,353,84592.73  0.39

Legislative Council seats

Seats changing hands edit

Seat Pre-2006 Swing Post-2006
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Bayswater   Labor Peter Lockwood 2.7 5.4 2.7 Heidi Victoria Liberal  
Evelyn   Labor Heather McTaggart 0.3 3.1 2.8 Christine Fyffe Liberal  
Ferntree Gully   Labor Anne Eckstein 2.2 2.3 0.1 Nick Wakeling Liberal  
Hastings   Labor Rosy Buchanan 0.9 1.9 1.0 Neale Burgess Liberal  
Kilsyth   Labor Dympna Beard 2.1 2.4 0.3 David Hodgett Liberal  
Mildura   Independent Russell Savage 18.4 24.3 5.9 Peter Crisp National  
Morwell   Labor Brendan Jenkins 4.9* 52.4 2.4 Russell Northe National  
Narracan   Labor Ian Maxfield 6.8 10.3 3.5 Gary Blackwood Liberal  
  • * Morwell's first margin figure is Labor vs. Liberal.

Key dates edit

Terms are now fixed at four years. Key dates for the election were:

  • 31 October: Dissolution of Parliament and writs for the election lodged
  • 7 November: Close of rolls, voters had until 8 pm to enrol to vote.
  • 9 November: Close of nominations for party candidates
  • 10 November: Close of nominations for independents
  • 25 November: Election day

The polls were open from 8 am to 6 pm, and results began to posted at about 7pm. By the close of counting at about 11 pm, the result in most Legislative Assembly seats was clear. Counting in the new Legislative Council regions, which have enrolments of over 300,000 voters, was in its early stages and the results were not clear at the close of counting.

Background edit

2002 composition of the Parliament of Victoria
Political
Party
Legislative
Assembly
Legislative
Council
Labor 62 24
Liberal 17 14
National 7 4
Independent 2 2
Source: Victorian Electoral Commission

The Parliament of Victoria consists of the lower house Legislative Assembly, the upper house Legislative Council and the Queen of Australia. Eighty-eight members of the Legislative Assembly are elected to four-year terms from single-member electorates. After this election the new Legislative Council consisted of 40 members—the five members for each of the eight new regions were elected via proportional representation for four year terms.

For decades, lower house districts covering metropolitan Melbourne have always been won by either ALP or Liberal candidates. At the 2002 election, however, the Victorian Greens emerged ahead of the Liberals to challenge Labor for inner-city seats such as Melbourne, Richmond, Brunswick and Northcote. The ALP was strongest, and arguably unchallenged, in most seats north and west of the Yarra River—Melbourne's traditional cultural divide.

In fact, the Liberals had not held a metropolitan seat in the western suburbs since 1996, when they lost the seat of Essendon. At the 1996 election, the Liberals also lost Ivanhoe (their remaining seat north of the Yarra—Eltham—was lost in 2002). After the 2002 election landslide, the ALP held every Melbourne seat except for a thin band of strong Liberal seats in the eastern suburbs. To win government, the Liberals needed to win back their traditional heartland seats in eastern and south-east Melbourne.

For the Liberals and Nationals to win government with a majority of lower house seats, they needed a uniform swing of nearly 8 per cent to gain 20 seats, which would result in them almost doubling their numbers.[1]

The ALP's success in 1999 and 2002 was partly due to its success in regional Victoria. To hold onto power, the ALP sought to retain seats outside Melbourne, and to hold its eastern suburban gains in 2002.

The Liberals aimed to win back urban fringe seats in eastern Melbourne, such as Gembrook, Hastings and Evelyn, and retain their marginal seats.

The Nationals had suffered heavily in recent years from the abolition of country seats they easily won, the rise of independents in Mildura and Gippsland East and direct competition from the Liberals. They aimed to hold on to their seven rural seats and also get members elected to the new upper house.

Under the new structure of the Legislative Council, the number of members dropped from 44 to 40 after this election. This introduced considerable competition within all parties for preselection for Legislative Council seats. The switch from provinces electing one member at a time to regions electing five members also meant that the major parties were more likely to lose seats to smaller parties such as the Greens. The balance in the 2002-2006 Legislative Council was ALP 24, Liberals 14, Nationals 4 and 2 independents (both of whom were former ALP members).

State of the parties edit

With a huge majority in the lower house, the Bracks Labor government was expected to be re-elected.

The Nationals leader Peter Ryan had terminated the Coalition agreement in mid-2000 after losing Benalla, when it became apparent that the minority Bracks Government would serve out its term. This allowed the Nationals to maintain a distinct profile from the Liberals over the succeeding years, demonstrated during the 2002 Labor landslide when the Nationals won back Benalla.

Tensions emerged between the conservative parties over issues such as the Liberal policy of halving tolls on the EastLink freeway. Peter Ryan stated that his party did not back the policy, because it would mean public money was spent on motorists in Melbourne's eastern suburbs, at the expense of services for country Victorians.[2]

The Nationals also took offence at then Liberal leader Robert Doyle's repeated statement that the Liberals only needed 20 seats to win government, a figure which implied the support of the Nationals.[3]

During March 2006, Phil Honeywood, the Deputy Opposition Leader, then Victor Perton both announced they would not contest the next election. This contributed to ongoing speculation about Robert Doyle's leadership, during which Ted Baillieu emerged as a possible challenger. Tensions between the Liberal factions were temporarily resolved with the appointment of Louise Asher as deputy opposition leader, with Doyle retaining the leadership unchallenged.[4]

Robert Doyle's media director Rob Clancy's resignation became public on 26 April 2006, two weeks after his chief of staff Ron Wilson left for a job in the private sector. The Liberal Party state president Helen Kroger is another Doyle supporter who moved on. This string of resignations raised questions about the strength of Doyle's team in the lead up to the election. In response, Doyle denied that people were leaving because they did not think the party could win the election and that the resignations did not reflect well on the Liberals.[5]

Strong rumours of an imminent "forced resignation" and Doyle "losing the support of the party" were aired on the front page of Melbourne's Herald Sun newspaper on 4 May 2006. Doyle did indeed resign as both Opposition Leader and MP for Malvern that day, although he stated that the "decision was his own"[6] and that "his best was not enough to lead the party to victory in a state election just six months away".[7]

On 5 May 2006, it became clear that Ted Baillieu would become Opposition and Liberal Party Leader after former Victorian Premier Jeff Kennett and Shadow Minister for Transport Terry Mulder both withdrew from the leadership race. Baillieu was subsequently elected unopposed on 8 May 2006.

With declining voter support over the last two Victorian state elections the Nationals almost lost Third Party status in the 2002 State Election. They entered the 2006 election with 11 seats (7 in the Legislative Assembly and 4 in the Legislative Council), the minimum required to for official party status.[8] Several of their Assembly seats were marginal, particularly Shepparton (4.27 percent) and Benalla (1.97 percent).

Several commentators predicted that the Nationals would face destruction at this election. The changes to the Legislative Council created large country regions which would negate the personal appeal of several candidates. Upper house member Bill Baxter became the candidate for the lower house electorate of Benambra in an attempt to remain in Parliament.

In the absence of a Liberal/National coalition, preference deals between Labor and the Liberals looked set to crush Nationals representation in the Assembly as well.[9] Leader Peter Ryan gave what one commentator called "the speech of the campaign thus far" on 16 November, when he lambasted the major parties for their (perceived) action against the Nationals. The party went on to win an additional two seats.[10]

The Greens' Greg Barber, former City of Yarra mayor, won the fourth seat in the upper house region of Northern Metropolitan, where the Greens were considered most likely to win their first seat in the Victorian Parliament. Sue Pennicuik, previously co-convener of the state party, also won the fourth upper house seat Southern Metropolitan region. Colleen Hartland won an upper house seat as well, the fifth seat in the Western Metropolitan Region. Bill Pemberton was preselected as the lead upper house candidate in the Eastern Metropolitan Region but was not elected.

In the lower house, Dr Richard Di Natale needed a 2.4 percent swing in the seat of Melbourne to unseat Labor's cabinet minister Bronwyn Pike, but wasn't successful in taking the seat from her, although he came quite close. Gurm Sekhon also wasn't successful in winning a seat, he needed a 3.1 percent swing in the seat of Richmond to unseat Labor's Richard Wynne.

The two current independent lower house MPs, Russell Savage (Mildura) and Craig Ingram (Gippsland East) had comfortable margins and were therefore considered highly likely to be re-elected. However, Russell Savage lost his seat to the Nationals, with the planned Nowingi toxic waste dump in the electorate cited as one of the main factors contributing to his defeat.[11]

The fate of the two independent upper house MPs was less clear. Maverick Labor-turned-independent MLC Dianne Hadden attempted to shift to the lower house and run in Ballarat East against the incumbent Labor MP Geoff Howard, but no polling was carried out as to the potential result. Liberal-turned-independent Andrew Olexander attempted to retain his seat in the Legislative Council, having attempted to build a profile for himself after being expelled from the Liberal Party over disputes stemming from a drink driving conviction.

Polling edit

Polling conducted by Newspoll and published in The Australian is performed via random telephone number selection in city and country areas. Sampling sizes usually consist of over 1000 electors, with the declared margin of error at ±3 percent.

Legislative Assembly (lower house) opinion polling
Primary vote 2PP vote
ALP Lib Nat Grn Oth ALP Lib
8 – 9 Nov 2006 44% 36% 4% 8% 8% 55% 45%
Sep – Oct 2006 43% 35% 4% 7% 11% 54% 46%
Jul – Aug 2006 46% 36% 4% 6% 8% 55% 45%
May – Jun 2006 45% 32% 4% 5% 14% 57% 43%
Mar – Apr 2006 44% 34% 4% 7% 11% 56% 44%
Jan – Feb 2006 44% 36% 4% 5% 11% 56% 44%
Nov – Dec 2005 41% 36% 4% 7% 12% 54% 46%
Sep – Oct 2005 43% 38% 3% 6% 11% 55% 45%
Jul – Aug 2005 42% 38% 3% 6% 11% 54% 46%
May – Jun 2005 44% 35% 3% 9% 9% 56% 44%
2002 election 48.0% 33.9% 4.3% 9.7% 4.1% 57.8% 42.2%
Source:
Better Premier ratings^
Labor
Bracks
Liberal
Baillieu
8 – 9 Nov 2006 56% 28%
Sep – Oct 2006 51% 25%
Jul – Aug 2006 50% 25%
May – Jun 2006 49% 24%
Mar – Apr 2006 60% 15%*
Jan – Feb 2006 58% 17%*
Nov – Dec 2005 55% 19%*
Sep – Oct 2005 55% 21%*
Jul – Aug 2005 51% 22%*
May – Jun 2005 57% 19%*
Source:
* Results are for former Liberal leader Robert Doyle.
^ Remainder were "uncommitted" to either leader.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Paul Strangio, Baillieu has to swim against electoral tide, The Age, 6 November 2006
  2. ^ Liberals, Nationals to consider coalition[permanent dead link], The Age, 10 April 2006
  3. ^ Rivalry set to spoil coalition victory plans, "The Age" – 8 April 2005
  4. ^ A rival-turned-ally rescues Doyle's leadership, The Age, 31 March 2006
  5. ^ Opposition Leader Doyle loses another player, The Age, 26 April 2006
  6. ^ Doyle ready to quit, Herald Sun, 4 May 2006
  7. ^ Doyle: my best not enough, The Age, 4 May 2006
  8. ^ Victorian Election 2002 14 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine, Parliament of Australia Parliamentary Library, Current Issues Brief No 13, 13 February 2003
  9. ^ "Preference shifts to sideline Nationals", The Age, 16 November 2006
  10. ^ "The preferences fallout: Peter Ryan plays 'Survivor of Spring Street'", The Age, 16 November 2006
  11. ^ Jacqueline Freegard, Bracks' attack was fatal ~ Savage, Herald Sun, 27 November 2006

External links edit

  • Victorian Electoral Commission
  • Victoria Decides, Herald Sun
  • State Election '06 5 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine, The Age. Includes a manifesto for Victoria.
  • Antony Green ABC Election Guide
  • Poll Bludger Election Guide

2006, victorian, state, election, held, saturday, november, 2006, 56th, parliament, victoria, just, over, million, victorians, registered, vote, elected, members, legislative, assembly, first, time, members, legislative, council, under, proportional, represent. The 2006 Victorian state election held on Saturday 25 November 2006 was for the 56th Parliament of Victoria Just over 3 million Victorians registered to vote elected 88 members to the Legislative Assembly and for the first time 40 members to the Legislative Council under a proportional representation system Single transferable voting The election was conducted by the independent Victorian Electoral Commission 2006 Victorian state election 2002 25 November 2006 2006 11 25 2010 All 88 seats in the Victorian Legislative Assembly45 seats were needed for a majority All 40 seats in the Victorian Legislative Council Information below is for the Assembly election First party Second party Third party Leader Steve Bracks Ted Baillieu Peter Ryan Party Labor Liberal National Leader since 22 March 1999 8 May 2006 December 1999 Leader s seat Williamstown Hawthorn Gippsland South Last election 62 seats 17 seats 7 seats Seats won 55 seats 23 seats 9 seats Seat change 7 6 2 Popular vote 1 278 046 1 022 110 153 299 Percentage 43 06 34 44 5 17 Swing 4 89 0 53 0 87 TPP 54 39 45 61 TPP swing 3 38 3 38Results in each electorate Premier before election Steve Bracks Labor Elected Premier Steve Bracks Labor The Labor Party government of Premier Steve Bracks first elected in 1999 won a third consecutive term with 55 of the 88 lower house seats down seven from the 62 Labor won in 2002 The Liberal Party opposition of Ted Baillieu won 23 seats and the National Party led by Peter Ryan won nine seats One independent member was re elected while one lost his seat Labor lost Bayswater Evelyn Ferntree Gully Hastings Kilsyth Morwell and Narracan In the Legislative Council Labor won 19 of the 40 seats the Liberals 15 the Greens three the Nationals two and the Democratic Labour Party one This was the first time the DLP had won a seat in the Victorian Parliament since 1955 Steve Bracks became only the second Labor Premier of Victoria to win three elections and the first to win a third election with a large majority Despite speculation that he would become the longest serving Labor Premier in Victoria he resigned in July 2007 and was replaced by his treasurer John Brumby Contents 1 Results 1 1 Legislative Assembly 1 1 1 Maps 1 2 Legislative Council 2 Seats changing hands 3 Key dates 4 Background 4 1 State of the parties 5 Polling 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksResults editSee also Results of the 2006 Victorian state election Legislative Assembly and Post election pendulum for the 2006 Victorian state election Legislative Assembly edit nbsp PartyVotes Seats Labor1 278 04643 06 nbsp 4 8955 nbsp 7Liberal1 022 11034 44 nbsp 0 5323 nbsp 6Greens297 93110 04 nbsp 0 310 nbsp National153 2995 17 nbsp 0 879 nbsp 2Family First127 2664 29New0NewIndependents67 8262 29 nbsp 1 111 nbsp 1People Power15 2260 51New0NewCitizens Electoral Council5 1870 17 nbsp 0 160 nbsp Socialist Alliance1 1020 04 nbsp 0 070 nbsp Total2 967 993100 00 88 Valid votes2 967 99395 44Invalid blank votes141 9144 56 nbsp 1 14Total votes3 109 907100 00 Registered voters turnout3 353 84592 73 nbsp 0 43Two party preferredLabor1 613 97154 39 nbsp 3 38Liberal National1 353 31945 61 nbsp 3 38Total2 967 290100 00 Maps edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Legislative Council edit See also Results of the 2006 Victorian state election Legislative Council nbsp PartyVotes Seats Labor1 234 08241 45 nbsp 6 0419 nbsp 6Liberal1 028 42134 55 nbsp 0 0415 nbsp 1Greens314 84710 58 nbsp 0 293 nbsp 3National131 9464 43 nbsp 0 061 nbsp 3Family First114 7393 85New0NewDemocratic Labour58 7221 97 nbsp 1 971 nbsp 1People Power30 4331 02New0NewDemocrats24 6730 83 nbsp 0 960 nbsp Independents18 7880 63 nbsp 0 040 nbsp Country Alliance13 3290 45New0NewChristian Democrats5 8190 20 nbsp 0 060 nbsp Socialist Alliance1 1300 04 nbsp 0 070 nbsp Total2 976 929100 00 39 Valid votes2 976 92995 72Invalid blank votes133 2434 28 nbsp 0 61Total votes3 110 172100 00 Registered voters turnout3 353 84592 73 nbsp 0 39 Legislative Council seats Legislative Council Region Seats held Eastern Metropolitan Region Eastern Victoria Region Northern Metropolitan Region Northern Victoria Region South Eastern Metropolitan Region Southern Metropolitan Region Western Metropolitan Region Western Victoria Region Labor Liberal National Green Democratic LaborSeats changing hands editSeat Pre 2006 Swing Post 2006 Party Member Margin Margin Member Party Bayswater Labor Peter Lockwood 2 7 5 4 2 7 Heidi Victoria Liberal Evelyn Labor Heather McTaggart 0 3 3 1 2 8 Christine Fyffe Liberal Ferntree Gully Labor Anne Eckstein 2 2 2 3 0 1 Nick Wakeling Liberal Hastings Labor Rosy Buchanan 0 9 1 9 1 0 Neale Burgess Liberal Kilsyth Labor Dympna Beard 2 1 2 4 0 3 David Hodgett Liberal Mildura Independent Russell Savage 18 4 24 3 5 9 Peter Crisp National Morwell Labor Brendan Jenkins 4 9 52 4 2 4 Russell Northe National Narracan Labor Ian Maxfield 6 8 10 3 3 5 Gary Blackwood Liberal Morwell s first margin figure is Labor vs Liberal Key dates editTerms are now fixed at four years Key dates for the election were 31 October Dissolution of Parliament and writs for the election lodged 7 November Close of rolls voters had until 8 pm to enrol to vote 9 November Close of nominations for party candidates 10 November Close of nominations for independents 25 November Election day The polls were open from 8 am to 6 pm and results began to posted at about 7pm By the close of counting at about 11 pm the result in most Legislative Assembly seats was clear Counting in the new Legislative Council regions which have enrolments of over 300 000 voters was in its early stages and the results were not clear at the close of counting Background edit2002 composition of the Parliament of Victoria PoliticalParty LegislativeAssembly LegislativeCouncil Labor 62 24 Liberal 17 14 National 7 4 Independent 2 2 Source Victorian Electoral Commission The Parliament of Victoria consists of the lower house Legislative Assembly the upper house Legislative Council and the Queen of Australia Eighty eight members of the Legislative Assembly are elected to four year terms from single member electorates After this election the new Legislative Council consisted of 40 members the five members for each of the eight new regions were elected via proportional representation for four year terms For decades lower house districts covering metropolitan Melbourne have always been won by either ALP or Liberal candidates At the 2002 election however the Victorian Greens emerged ahead of the Liberals to challenge Labor for inner city seats such as Melbourne Richmond Brunswick and Northcote The ALP was strongest and arguably unchallenged in most seats north and west of the Yarra River Melbourne s traditional cultural divide In fact the Liberals had not held a metropolitan seat in the western suburbs since 1996 when they lost the seat of Essendon At the 1996 election the Liberals also lost Ivanhoe their remaining seat north of the Yarra Eltham was lost in 2002 After the 2002 election landslide the ALP held every Melbourne seat except for a thin band of strong Liberal seats in the eastern suburbs To win government the Liberals needed to win back their traditional heartland seats in eastern and south east Melbourne For the Liberals and Nationals to win government with a majority of lower house seats they needed a uniform swing of nearly 8 per cent to gain 20 seats which would result in them almost doubling their numbers 1 The ALP s success in 1999 and 2002 was partly due to its success in regional Victoria To hold onto power the ALP sought to retain seats outside Melbourne and to hold its eastern suburban gains in 2002 The Liberals aimed to win back urban fringe seats in eastern Melbourne such as Gembrook Hastings and Evelyn and retain their marginal seats The Nationals had suffered heavily in recent years from the abolition of country seats they easily won the rise of independents in Mildura and Gippsland East and direct competition from the Liberals They aimed to hold on to their seven rural seats and also get members elected to the new upper house Under the new structure of the Legislative Council the number of members dropped from 44 to 40 after this election This introduced considerable competition within all parties for preselection for Legislative Council seats The switch from provinces electing one member at a time to regions electing five members also meant that the major parties were more likely to lose seats to smaller parties such as the Greens The balance in the 2002 2006 Legislative Council was ALP 24 Liberals 14 Nationals 4 and 2 independents both of whom were former ALP members State of the parties edit With a huge majority in the lower house the Bracks Labor government was expected to be re elected The Nationals leader Peter Ryan had terminated the Coalition agreement in mid 2000 after losing Benalla when it became apparent that the minority Bracks Government would serve out its term This allowed the Nationals to maintain a distinct profile from the Liberals over the succeeding years demonstrated during the 2002 Labor landslide when the Nationals won back Benalla Tensions emerged between the conservative parties over issues such as the Liberal policy of halving tolls on the EastLink freeway Peter Ryan stated that his party did not back the policy because it would mean public money was spent on motorists in Melbourne s eastern suburbs at the expense of services for country Victorians 2 The Nationals also took offence at then Liberal leader Robert Doyle s repeated statement that the Liberals only needed 20 seats to win government a figure which implied the support of the Nationals 3 During March 2006 Phil Honeywood the Deputy Opposition Leader then Victor Perton both announced they would not contest the next election This contributed to ongoing speculation about Robert Doyle s leadership during which Ted Baillieu emerged as a possible challenger Tensions between the Liberal factions were temporarily resolved with the appointment of Louise Asher as deputy opposition leader with Doyle retaining the leadership unchallenged 4 Robert Doyle s media director Rob Clancy s resignation became public on 26 April 2006 two weeks after his chief of staff Ron Wilson left for a job in the private sector The Liberal Party state president Helen Kroger is another Doyle supporter who moved on This string of resignations raised questions about the strength of Doyle s team in the lead up to the election In response Doyle denied that people were leaving because they did not think the party could win the election and that the resignations did not reflect well on the Liberals 5 Strong rumours of an imminent forced resignation and Doyle losing the support of the party were aired on the front page of Melbourne s Herald Sun newspaper on 4 May 2006 Doyle did indeed resign as both Opposition Leader and MP for Malvern that day although he stated that the decision was his own 6 and that his best was not enough to lead the party to victory in a state election just six months away 7 On 5 May 2006 it became clear that Ted Baillieu would become Opposition and Liberal Party Leader after former Victorian Premier Jeff Kennett and Shadow Minister for Transport Terry Mulder both withdrew from the leadership race Baillieu was subsequently elected unopposed on 8 May 2006 With declining voter support over the last two Victorian state elections the Nationals almost lost Third Party status in the 2002 State Election They entered the 2006 election with 11 seats 7 in the Legislative Assembly and 4 in the Legislative Council the minimum required to for official party status 8 Several of their Assembly seats were marginal particularly Shepparton 4 27 percent and Benalla 1 97 percent Several commentators predicted that the Nationals would face destruction at this election The changes to the Legislative Council created large country regions which would negate the personal appeal of several candidates Upper house member Bill Baxter became the candidate for the lower house electorate of Benambra in an attempt to remain in Parliament In the absence of a Liberal National coalition preference deals between Labor and the Liberals looked set to crush Nationals representation in the Assembly as well 9 Leader Peter Ryan gave what one commentator called the speech of the campaign thus far on 16 November when he lambasted the major parties for their perceived action against the Nationals The party went on to win an additional two seats 10 The Greens Greg Barber former City of Yarra mayor won the fourth seat in the upper house region of Northern Metropolitan where the Greens were considered most likely to win their first seat in the Victorian Parliament Sue Pennicuik previously co convener of the state party also won the fourth upper house seat Southern Metropolitan region Colleen Hartland won an upper house seat as well the fifth seat in the Western Metropolitan Region Bill Pemberton was preselected as the lead upper house candidate in the Eastern Metropolitan Region but was not elected In the lower house Dr Richard Di Natale needed a 2 4 percent swing in the seat of Melbourne to unseat Labor s cabinet minister Bronwyn Pike but wasn t successful in taking the seat from her although he came quite close Gurm Sekhon also wasn t successful in winning a seat he needed a 3 1 percent swing in the seat of Richmond to unseat Labor s Richard Wynne The two current independent lower house MPs Russell Savage Mildura and Craig Ingram Gippsland East had comfortable margins and were therefore considered highly likely to be re elected However Russell Savage lost his seat to the Nationals with the planned Nowingi toxic waste dump in the electorate cited as one of the main factors contributing to his defeat 11 The fate of the two independent upper house MPs was less clear Maverick Labor turned independent MLC Dianne Hadden attempted to shift to the lower house and run in Ballarat East against the incumbent Labor MP Geoff Howard but no polling was carried out as to the potential result Liberal turned independent Andrew Olexander attempted to retain his seat in the Legislative Council having attempted to build a profile for himself after being expelled from the Liberal Party over disputes stemming from a drink driving conviction Polling editPolling conducted by Newspoll and published in The Australian is performed via random telephone number selection in city and country areas Sampling sizes usually consist of over 1000 electors with the declared margin of error at 3 percent Legislative Assembly lower house opinion polling Primary vote 2PP vote ALP Lib Nat Grn Oth ALP Lib 8 9 Nov 2006 44 36 4 8 8 55 45 Sep Oct 2006 43 35 4 7 11 54 46 Jul Aug 2006 46 36 4 6 8 55 45 May Jun 2006 45 32 4 5 14 57 43 Mar Apr 2006 44 34 4 7 11 56 44 Jan Feb 2006 44 36 4 5 11 56 44 Nov Dec 2005 41 36 4 7 12 54 46 Sep Oct 2005 43 38 3 6 11 55 45 Jul Aug 2005 42 38 3 6 11 54 46 May Jun 2005 44 35 3 9 9 56 44 2002 election 48 0 33 9 4 3 9 7 4 1 57 8 42 2 Source Newspoll Better Premier ratings LaborBracks LiberalBaillieu 8 9 Nov 2006 56 28 Sep Oct 2006 51 25 Jul Aug 2006 50 25 May Jun 2006 49 24 Mar Apr 2006 60 15 Jan Feb 2006 58 17 Nov Dec 2005 55 19 Sep Oct 2005 55 21 Jul Aug 2005 51 22 May Jun 2005 57 19 Source Newspoll Results are for former Liberal leader Robert Doyle Remainder were uncommitted to either leader See also editCandidates of the 2006 Victorian state electionReferences edit Paul Strangio Baillieu has to swim against electoral tide The Age 6 November 2006 Liberals Nationals to consider coalition permanent dead link The Age 10 April 2006 Rivalry set to spoil coalition victory plans The Age 8 April 2005 A rival turned ally rescues Doyle s leadership The Age 31 March 2006 Opposition Leader Doyle loses another player The Age 26 April 2006 Doyle ready to quit Herald Sun 4 May 2006 Doyle my best not enough The Age 4 May 2006 Victorian Election 2002 Archived 14 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine Parliament of Australia Parliamentary Library Current Issues Brief No 13 13 February 2003 Preference shifts to sideline Nationals The Age 16 November 2006 The preferences fallout Peter Ryan plays Survivor of Spring Street The Age 16 November 2006 Jacqueline Freegard Bracks attack was fatal Savage Herald Sun 27 November 2006External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Victorian state election 2006 Victorian Electoral Commission Victoria Decides Herald Sun State Election 06 Archived 5 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine The Age Includes a manifesto for Victoria Antony Green ABC Election Guide Poll Bludger Election Guide Mary Bolling Herald Sun election blog Herald Sun election blog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2006 Victorian state election amp oldid 1221872479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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