Division of Dunkley
Dunkley Australian House of Representatives Division | |
---|---|
Created | 1984 |
MP | Peta Murphy |
Party | Labor |
Namesake | Louisa Margaret Dunkley |
Electors | 110,685 (2019) |
Area | 152 km2 (58.7 sq mi) |
Demographic | Outer Metropolitan |
The Division of Dunkley is an Australian electoral division in the state of Victoria. The division is located south-east of Melbourne in the Mornington Peninsula. It covers an area of approximately 152 square kilometres (59 sq mi) from Seaford in the north to Mount Eliza in the south and Langwarrin South in the southeast.
History[]
The division was created in 1984 and is named for Louisa Margaret Dunkley, a trade unionist and campaigner for equal pay for women.
Despite having encompassed the Labor-leaning suburbs of Carrum Downs (part), Frankston, Frankston North, Skye (part), and Seaford, the Liberal-leaning suburbs and towns of Langwarrin, Langwarrin South, Mount Eliza, Mornington and Baxter (part) helped Dunkley remain a Liberal-held seat from 1996 until 2019. However, as a result of the Australian Electoral Commission's 2018 boundary redistribution, which excluded Liberal-leaning Mornington and Baxter (part) from the electorate and included the whole of Labor-leaning Carrum Downs and Skye, Dunkley became a notionally marginal Labor seat. It was subsequently gained by the Labor Party at the 2019 Australian federal election.[1]
Members[]
Image | Member | Party | Term | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bob Chynoweth (1941–) |
Labor | 1 December 1984 – 24 March 1990 |
Previously held the Division of Flinders. Lost seat | ||
Frank Ford (1936–) |
Liberal | 24 March 1990 – 13 March 1993 |
Lost seat | ||
Bob Chynoweth (1941–) |
Labor | 13 March 1993 – 2 March 1996 |
Lost seat | ||
Bruce Billson (1966–) |
Liberal | 2 March 1996 – 9 May 2016 |
Served as minister under Howard and Abbott. Retired | ||
Chris Crewther (1983–) |
Liberal | 2 July 2016 – 18 May 2019 |
Lost seat | ||
Peta Murphy (1973–) |
Labor | 18 May 2019 – present |
Incumbent |
Election results[]
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Chris Crewther | 38,616 | 39.88 | −1.22 | |
Labor | Peta Murphy | 37,301 | 38.52 | +2.00 | |
Greens | Emily Green | 8,125 | 8.39 | −1.09 | |
Justice | Lachlan O'Connell | 5,027 | 5.19 | +0.19 | |
Animal Justice | Elizabeth Johnston | 2,961 | 3.06 | +0.18 | |
United Australia | Ron Jean | 2,513 | 2.60 | +2.60 | |
Conservative National | Christopher James | 1,337 | 1.38 | +1.38 | |
Rise Up Australia | Yvonne Gentle | 948 | 0.98 | +0.34 | |
Total formal votes | 96,828 | 94.86 | +0.90 | ||
Informal votes | 5,250 | 5.14 | −0.90 | ||
Turnout | 102,078 | 92.26 | +1.10 | ||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Labor | Peta Murphy | 51,066 | 52.74 | +1.71 | |
Liberal | Chris Crewther | 45,762 | 47.26 | −1.71 | |
Labor notional hold | Swing | +1.71 |
References[]
- ^ "Profile of the electoral division of Dunkley (Vic)". Current federal electoral divisions. Australian Electoral Commission. 23 September 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ^ Dunkley, VIC, Tally Room 2019, Australian Electoral Commission.
External links[]
- Electoral divisions of Australia
- Constituencies established in 1984
- 1984 establishments in Australia