Electoral district of Ivanhoe

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Ivanhoe
VictoriaLegislative Assembly
VIC Ivanhoe District 2014.png
Location of Ivanhoe (dark green) in Greater Melbourne
StateVictoria
Created1945
MPAnthony Carbines
PartyLabor Party
Electors46,777 (2018)
Area32 km2 (12.4 sq mi)
DemographicMetropolitan

The electoral district of Ivanhoe is an electoral district of the Victorian Legislative Assembly. It is located in the north-eastern suburbs of Melbourne and includes the suburbs of Heidelberg, Ivanhoe, Rosanna and Macleod.

Formed in 1945 the seat had usually been fairly safe for the Liberal Party having only been won by Labor at its 1952 and 1982 landslides before the 1990s. However a redistribution prior to the 1992 election made the seat notionally Labor. Liberal candidate Vin Heffernan was able to win at that election, only to be one of just three sitting Liberals defeated at the 1996 election. Labor's Craig Langdon held the seat comfortably until he resigned from the parliament on 25 August 2010, citing family and personal reasons, as well as "disloyalty and betrayal" from several of his colleagues. Langdon had failed to gain pre-selection for the 2010 state election, and there was speculation that his early resignation would trigger a by-election in Ivanhoe.[1] In fact, on 13 September a by-election writ was issued, but the next day House Speaker Jenny Lindell announced that she would discharge the writ citing significant expense to hold a by-election three weeks before the full state election.[2]

Members for Ivanhoe[]

Member Party Term
  Robert Gardner Independent 1945–1947
  Rupert Curnow Liberal 1947–1950
  Frank Block Liberal 1951–1952
  Michael Lucy Labor 1952–1955
  Labor (Anti-Communist)
  Vernon Christie Liberal 1955–1973
  Bruce Skeggs Liberal 1973–1982
  Tony Sheehan Labor 1982–1985
  Vin Heffernan Liberal 1985–1996
  Craig Langdon Labor 1996–2010
  Anthony Carbines Labor 2010–present

Election results[]

2018 Victorian state election: Ivanhoe[3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Anthony Carbines 18,800 46.45 +10.49
Liberal Monica Clark 13,084 32.33 −7.70
Greens Andrew Conley 5,962 14.73 −0.91
Independent Craig Langdon 1,969 4.86 +0.02
Democratic Labour Philip Jenkins 660 1.63 +1.63
Total formal votes 40,475 95.22 −0.19
Informal votes 2,030 4.78 +0.19
Turnout 42,505 90.87 −1.98
Two-party-preferred result
Labor Anthony Carbines 25,244 62.37 +8.96
Liberal Monica Clark 15,231 37.63 −8.96
Labor hold Swing +8.96

References[]

External links[]

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