I would also like to thank the 7,457 people in Kooyong who voted Green.
I offer my congratulations to Petro Georgiou for his win again for the seat of Kooyong. I think Petro's strong stand on upholding the rule of law, human rights and fair treatment of asylum seekers and on the environment have stood him in good stead. In doing so I think Petro has demonstrated the only possible successful direction for the Liberal party.
Petro ran an honest and fair campaign in Kooyong, unlike many other electorates where the Liberals used negative fear tactics and distorted the truth. Petro was rewarded with virtually no swing against him, compared to an average national swing against the Coalition of -4.5%.
I would also like to congratulate Kevin Rudd and the Labor party for winning the election and running a good campaign. I look forward to some real action on climate change in the very near future, starting with the next round of United Nations international negotiations in Bali in December.
Here are the results as of midday Sunday 25 November.
Kooyong:
- HARVEY, Ken (Labor) 19,248 votes 30.94% +1.93 swing
- GEORGIOU, Petro (Liberal) 33,987 votes 54.63% -0.03 swing
- CAMPBELL, Peter (Greens) 7,188 votes 11.55% -0.99 swing
National results in the House of Representatives:
- Labor(two party preferred): +6.15% swing (a record win)
- Liberals primary votes: 35.96% -4.51 swing
- Greens primary votes: 7.64% +0.45 swing
- Nationals primary votes: 5.38% -0.51 swing
Nationally, over 15 Labor seats were won on Greens preferences, including Deakin and Corangamite in Victoria, so there is a clear mandate for real action on climate change and more funding for public transport, public health and public education.
Senate results in Victoria
We are still hopeful that Richard Di Natale will be elected as the first Greens Senator for Victoria. However, even though Richard received a record 10.1% of the primary vote in Victoria, this is still short of a quota (14.3%). However analysis of preference flows indicates it will be difficult for Richard to be elected, although he is still in with a chance, even though 1 out of 10 people in Victoria voted for him in the senate. It most likely take 2 weeks before the final result is known.
Overall senate results and the balance of power
The Greens achieved two more records in the Senate:
- Senator Bob Brown received 17.7% of the senate vote in Tasmania, a swing of 4.45% and has therefore exceeded a quota on primary votes and is re-elected. Congratulations Bob!
- Kerrie Tucker received 22% of the senate vote in the ACT, a swing of 5.5%. However, a quota of 33.3% is required in the territories (which only have two senators). Kerrie is still in with a chance of securing a senate seat.
- Scott Ludlum is likely to be elected to the senate in WA
- Sarah Hanson-Young is likely to be elected to the senate in South Australia.
- Unfortunately, Senator Kerry Nettle has lost her bid to get relected to the senate in NSW.
Let us hope that both Richard Di Natale and Kerrie Tucker are elected to ensure the Greens have the balance of power in the senate.
What about climate change?
Alistair McCaskill (Greens candidate for the neighbouring electorate of Chisholm) has provided the following excellent summation of the challenges for getting climate change and other green issues onto the political agenda.
This was clearly Labor's election, and the result is largely a reflection of the electorate's focus on the major parties combined with a mood for change. It's easy to think of additional things we could have done (locally), but it's clear they would have had little, if any effect on the final result. In the seat of Melbourne, with a budget many times larger than ours, a much larger support base, and Adam Bandt as a very capable candidate, the swing to the Greens was only 3.6%. This is a good indication of just how hard it is to change minds.
Even with the efforts of groups such as The Big Switch, GetUp, The Climate Institute, Australian Conservation Foundation, Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, and numerous local climate action groups, I don't think climate change was the influential issue that many people suggested (and I hoped) it would be.
Links
- The Day After (Poll Bludger)
- First preferences by party (AEC)
- Marginals collapse like sandcastles , Tim Colebatch, The Age
- Paul Keating relieved John Howard era is over , Paul Keating, Herald Sun
- Petro bucks the trend James Dowling, Progress Leader