2013 Australian federal election

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2013 Australian federal election

← 2010 7 September 2013 2016 →

All 150 seats in the House of Representatives
76 seats were needed for a majority
40 (of the 76) seats in the Senate
Opinion polls
Registered14,723,385 Increase 4.52%
Turnout13,726,070 (93.23%)
(Increase0.01 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Prime Minister Tony Abbott.jpg
The Hon. Kevin Rudd.jpg
Christine_Milne_profile.jpg
Leader Tony Abbott Kevin Rudd Christine Milne
Party Liberal/National coalition Labor Greens
Leader since 1 December 2009 (2009-12-01) 26 June 2013 (2013-06-26) 13 March 2012 (2012-03-13)
Leader's seat Warringah (NSW) Griffith (Qld.) Senator for Tasmania
Last election 72 seats, 43.32% 72 seats, 37.99% 1 seat, 11.76%
Seats won 90 55 1
Seat change Increase 18 Decrease 17 Steady
First preference vote 5,882,818 4,311,365 1,116,918
Percentage 45.55% 33.38% 8.65%
Swing Increase 1.93 Decrease 4.61 Decrease 3.11
TPP 53.49% 46.51%
TPP swing Increase 3.61 Decrease 3.61

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Clive Palmer Aug15 crop.jpg
Bob Katter.jpg
IND
Leader Clive Palmer Bob Katter N/A
Party Palmer United Katter's Australian Independents
Leader since 1 April 2013 (2013-04-01) 3 June 2011 (2011-06-03) N/A
Leader's seat Fairfax (Qld.)
(won seat)
Kennedy (Qld.) N/A
Last election new party new party 4 seats
Seats won 1 1 2 seats
Seat change Increase 1 Increase 1 Decrease 2
First preference vote 709,035 134,226 177,217
Percentage 5.49% 1.04% 1.37%
Swing Increase 5.49 Increase 1.04 Decrease -0.84

Results by division for the House of Representatives, shaded by winning party's margin of victory.

Prime Minister before election

Kevin Rudd
Labor

Subsequent Prime Minister

Tony Abbott
Liberal/National coalition

The 2013 Australian federal election to elect the members of the 44th Parliament of Australia took place on Saturday 7 September 2013. The centre-right Liberal/National Coalition opposition led by Opposition leader Tony Abbott of the Liberal Party of Australia and Coalition partner the National Party of Australia, led by Warren Truss, defeated the incumbent centre-left Labor Party government of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd in a landslide. It was also the third time in history that a party won 90 or more seats at an Australian election. Labor had been in government for six years since being elected in the 2007 election. This election marked the end of the Rudd-Gillard-Rudd Labor government and the start of the 9 year long Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison Liberal-National Coalition government. Abbott was sworn in by the Governor-General, Quentin Bryce, as Australia's new prime minister on 18 September 2013, along with the Abbott Ministry. The 44th Parliament of Australia opened on 12 November 2013, with the members of the House of Representatives and territory senators sworn in.[1] The state senators were sworn in by the next Governor-General Peter Cosgrove on 7 July 2014, with their six-year terms commencing on 1 July.[2]

The proclamation dissolving the House of Representatives and formally beginning the election period had been issued by Governor-General Bryce on 5 August 2013. The writs of election were subsequently issued by Bryce for the election of members of the House of Representatives and territory senators, and by the state governors for the senators for each state.[3]

Voting in Australia's federal elections has been compulsory since 1925. For the House of Representatives, a preferential ballot system has been in use since 1919, in single-member seats. For the Senate—the proportionally representative upper house—a single transferable vote system has been in use since 1949, with optional group voting tickets since 1984. Elections are conducted by the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC).

A special half-Senate election was conducted on 5 April 2014 in Western Australia as a result of 1,375 lost ballot papers.[4]

Key dates

[edit]
  • Governor-General accepted Kevin Rudd's advice to dissolve Parliament and hold a general election – 4 August 2013
  • Prorogation of 43rd Parliament – 5:29 pm Monday 5 August 2013[5][3]
  • Dissolution of House of Representatives – 5:30 pm Monday 5 August 2013
  • Issue of writs – Monday 5 August 2013[6]
  • Close of rolls – 8 pm Monday 12 August 2013
  • Close of candidate nominations – 12 noon Thursday 15 August 2013
  • Declaration of candidate nominations – 12 noon Friday 16 August 2013
  • Election day or Polling day – Saturday 7 September 2013
  • Swearing-in of 44th Parliament – Wednesday 18 September 2013
  • Last day for the return of writs – Monday 13 November 2013
  • Deadline for first meeting of the 44th Parliament – Wednesday 13 December 2013

On 30 January 2013, the then Prime Minister Julia Gillard had announced the election would be held on 14 September. However, following a leadership ballot in June 2013, she was replaced as leader and prime minister by Rudd, who then abandoned the originally planned date. A referendum on amending the constitution to allow the federal government to directly fund local councils, which was initially planned to be held on the same day as the federal election, could not go ahead on the date announced by Rudd.[7] This is because Section 128 of the Constitution of Australia requires that a referendum be submitted to electors between two and six months after its passage through Parliament. As early voting started on 20 August it could not be submitted then.

43rd Parliament

[edit]

House of Representatives

[edit]
House of Representatives seat numbers prior to the 2013 election

Government (71)
  Labor (71)

Opposition
Coalition (72)

  Liberal (44)
  LNP (20)
  Nationals (6)
  Nat. WA (1)
  CLP (1)

Crossbench (7)
  Ind. (5)
  Greens (1)
  KAP (1)

At the 2010 federal election, Labor and the Liberal/National Coalition each won 72 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives, four short of the requirement for majority government, resulting in the first hung parliament since the 1940 federal election. On the crossbench, one member of the Australian Greens, one member of the National Party of Western Australia and four independent members held the balance of power. After gaining the support of the Greens and three independents on confidence and supply votes, Labor was able to form a minority government with 76 seats, the smallest possible margin in the 150-seat House.[8]

Changes in House numbers

[edit]

On 24 November 2011, Harry Jenkins resigned as Speaker of the House of Representatives and returned to the Labor backbench. Later, that day, Deputy Speaker Peter Slipper was elected Speaker and quit the Liberal National Party to become an independent. This changed nominal confidence and supply numbers on the floor of the house from 75–74 to 76–73.[9][10] In January 2012, Andrew Wilkie withdrew his guarantee of confidence to the incumbent government, changing numbers to 75–73 in the event of his abstention, or 75–74 in the event of his support for a vote of no confidence in the government. In April 2012, Labor's Craig Thomson moved to the crossbenches as an independent MP, and in May, WA National Tony Crook moved from the crossbenches to the Nationals, but did not join the Coalition. Changes brought the government to 71 seats, the Coalition 72 seats and seven crossbenchers. On 9 October 2012, after an unsuccessful vote of no confidence in the speakership, Slipper resigned as Speaker and was replaced by Labor Deputy Speaker Anna Burke. Slipper remained an independent MP.

Pendulum

[edit]

Senate

[edit]
Senate seat numbers prior to the 2013 election

Government (31)
  Labor (31)

Opposition
Coalition (34)

  Liberal (24)
  LNP (6)
  Nationals (3)
  CLP (1)

Crossbench (11)
  Greens (9)
  DLP (1)
  Ind. (1)

Before the election, the 76-seat Senate was made up of senators from the Coalition (34), Australian Labor Party (31), Australian Greens (9), Democratic Labour Party (1) and one independent senator, Nick Xenophon. The Greens held the sole balance of power. Previously the Greens had held a shared balance of power with the Family First Party and Xenophon.

Of the 76 Senate seats, 40 are contested. This corresponds to half of each state's allocation as well as both senators from the two major territories. Newly elected state senators commenced their terms on 1 July 2014 and the senators of the territories began their terms immediately after their elections.[11]

State/Territory Seats ALP Coalition Greens Other
NSW 6 3 3
VIC 6 3 3
QLD 6 3 3
WA 6 2 3 1
SA 6 2 2 1 1 (Ind., Xenophon)
TAS 6 3 2 1
ACT 2 1 1
NT 2 1 1
To be contested 40 18 18 3 1
Elected in 2010 36 13 16 6 1 (DLP)
Total 76 31 34 9 2

Election period

[edit]

On 30 January 2013, at a speech at the National Press Club, Prime Minister Julia Gillard announced the election would be held on Saturday 14 September 2013, although the Governor-General was not formally advised and no writ of election was issued.[12] Kevin Rudd succeeded Julia Gillard as prime minister on 27 June 2013.

The Broadcasting Services Act 1992 was checked by various commercial broadcasting media outlets and media councils as a result of Gillard's announcement.[13] The Act says, in part,

"Election period" means:
(a) in relation to any other election to a Parliament – the period that starts on:
– (i) the day on which the proposed polling day for the election is publicly announced; or
- (ii) the day on which the writs for the election are issued;
whichever happens first, and ends at the close of the poll on the polling day for the election;

— Broadcasting Services Act 1992, Schedule 2, Section 1

and

PART 2
b. (i) If, during an election period, a broadcaster broadcasts election matter, the broadcaster must give reasonable opportunities for the broadcasting of election matter to all political parties contesting the election, being parties which were represented in either House of the Parliament for which the election is to be held at the time of its last meeting before the election period.

— Broadcasting Services Act 1992, Schedule 2, Section 3(2)

This is interpreted as "equal time, over time" rather than equal time in the same broadcast, and that this requirement began with the announcement on 30 January 2013.[13]

Retiring MPs and senators

[edit]

The terms of members of the House of Representatives who did not renominate ended at the dissolution of the parliament (5 August 2013).

The terms of senators who did not renominate ended on 30 June 2014, unless they represented the Australian Capital Territory or the Northern Territory, in which case their term ended on the day before polling day (6 September 2013). That date also applies to territory senators who contest the election but are defeated.

Members and senators who chose not to renominate are as follows:

Independent

[edit]

Labor

[edit]

Liberal

[edit]

National

[edit]

WA Nationals

[edit]

Electoral events timeline

[edit]
  • 30 January – Prime Minister Julia Gillard announces planned election date of 14 September 2013.[12]
  • 2 February – Attorney-General Nicola Roxon announces she will be retiring at the election. Higher Education Minister Senator Chris Evans, whose term was not due to finish until 2017, announces he will be resigning in the near future.[45]
  • 19 February – Greens leader Christine Milne announces that the alliance agreement with the ALP is over, but her party will not vote against confidence or supply.[46]
  • 26 February – Gillard announces she will "campaign" in western Sydney for the following week, from Sunday night until Friday.[47]
  • 19 March – Richard Torbay is forced to resign from the Nationals, forfeiting his candidature for the Division of New England.[48] Barnaby Joyce puts his name forward as a possible replacement candidate, hoping to move from the Senate to the House of Representatives.[49]
  • 21 March – Former Labor leader, Minister Simon Crean asks Gillard for a party leadership vote, and publicly declares his support for Kevin Rudd. In parliament, the Opposition attempts to suspend standing orders for a no confidence vote and although gaining 73 votes to the government's 71 votes, fails to gain the absolute majority of 76 votes required. Crean is sacked from the ministry. At the leadership ballot no alternative candidate nominates, and Gillard is re-elected as ALP leader unopposed.[50] Rudd supporters Joel Fitzgibbon, Ed Husic, Janelle Saffin and Richard Marles quit their positions in the executive government.[51]
  • 22 March – Rudd issues a statement that he will never again return to the ALP leadership.[52] Kim Carr, Martin Ferguson and Chris Bowen quit their ministries.[53][54][55]
  • 23 March – Key independent MP Andrew Wilkie warns that ongoing instability within the ALP means the government will have difficulty surviving a vote of confidence when parliament resumes in May.[56]
  • 2 May – The opposition indicates it will support the Government's National Disability Insurance Scheme policy, including an increase in the Medicare levy from 1.5% to 2%.[57][58]
  • 26 June – Independents Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor both announce they won't recontest their seats at the election. Kevin Rudd defeats Julia Gillard in another Labor leadership spill by a 57–45 margin. After the spill, Gillard along with ministers Craig Emerson and Peter Garrett announce their retirement at the coming election.
  • 27 June – Rudd is sworn in as prime minister by Governor-General Quentin Bryce, with Anthony Albanese and Chris Bowen sworn in as deputy prime minister and Treasurer respectively. Defence Minister Stephen Smith MP announces his retirement at the coming election.
  • 29 June – Greg Combet MP announces his retirement at the coming election.
  • 1 July – The Second Rudd Ministry is sworn in. Simon Crean MP announces his retirement at the coming election.[59]
  • 1 July – Wikileaks party receives formal registration as a political party.[60]
  • 22 July – The ALP caucus approves changes to the way the federal parliamentary leader is chosen. The new rules make it more difficult to change leaders and require a ballot of the party membership on contested leadership spills.[61][62]
  • 4 August – Kevin Rudd announces the election date as 7 September 2013.[63]
  • 5 August – Quentin Bryce, the Governor-General, issues the election writ.
  • 11 August – The first of three televised leaders debates between Rudd and Abbott is held in Canberra.[64][65]
  • 21 August – The second televised leaders debate between Rudd and Abbott is held in Brisbane.[66][67]
  • 25 August – The Coalition's formal campaign launch is held in Brisbane.[68]
  • 27 August – Treasurer Chris Bowen and shadow treasurer Joe Hockey debate at the National Press Club. Later that evening, the third and final televised leaders debate between Rudd and Abbott is held at the Rooty Hill RSL in Sydney.[69]
  • 28 August – The Coalition releases a document outlining $31.6 billion of proposed budget savings.[70]
  • 29 August – The Rudd government releases several costings estimates which it claims show a $10 billion shortfall in the Coalition's claimed savings released the previous day.[71] In a strongly-worded statement, the secretaries of the Department of Treasury and Department of Finance criticise the use of these confidential costings prepared for the government, re-iterating that the assumptions used differ from the costings prepared for the Coalition.[72]
  • 1 September – Labor's formal campaign launch is held in Brisbane.[73]
  • 5 September – The Coalition releases its remaining policy costings, claiming a further $9 billion worth of savings, including a $4.5 billion reduction in Australia's foreign aid budget.[74] Later in the day, the Coalition releases a policy document announcing the implementation of an opt-out Internet filter. That evening, Shadow Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull states that the document was "poorly worded" and released by mistake, and that the Coalition had no such policy.[75]
  • 7 September (election day) – The Liberal-National coalition defeats the Australian Labor Party with the Coalition expected to win about 90 seats in the House of Representatives. Kevin Rudd conceded defeat and announced that he would not renominate for the ALP's leadership.
  • 18 September – The Abbott Ministry is sworn in by Governor-General Quentin Bryce.
  • 17 October – A recount of all "above-the-line" Senate votes made in Western Australia is initiated after an appeal by the WA Greens and the Australian Sports Party is upheld.[76]
  • 31 October – The AEC announces that it is unable to find 1,375 ballot papers during the WA Senate recount.[77]
  • 31 October – The AEC declares Clive Palmer the winner of the seat of Fairfax, after two recounts, by a margin of 53 votes. Palmer claims the result vindicates his decision to challenge more than half the ballot papers cast.[78]
  • 4 November – The AEC declares the result of the WA Senate recount, awarding the last two seats to the Greens and Australian Sports Party, instead of the ALP and Palmer United Party.[79]
  • 15 November – The AEC disputes its own declaration of the WA Senate result, by lodging a petition with the Court of Disputed Returns, asking that the WA Senate result be declared null and void.[80]
  • January 2014 – Justice Kenneth Hayne, in the Court of Disputed Returns, hears submissions from the AEC and political parties.[81] On 30 January 2014, Hayne reserved his decision.[82]
  • 20 February 2014 – The Court of Disputed Returns voids the results of the WA Senate election.[83]
  • 21 February 2014 – Electoral Commissioner Ed Killesteyn announces his resignation, to take effect on 4 July 2014.[84]

Campaign

[edit]

The incumbent Labor-led government argued for a need for a "safe pair of hands" to manage an economic shift from mining-oriented growth to something else; while the opposition said that it would prevent a recession that could be caused by a budget deficit. The Sydney Morning Herald suggested both arguments hedged on the mining boom going bust.[85] Rudd officially began the campaign season on 1 September in his hometown of Brisbane. At the rally, he promised tax breaks for small businesses and more work for local contractors on infrastructure projects. He said: "In this election, we are now engaged in the fight of our lives. It is a fight about the values that underpin Australia's future, a fight about our vision for Australia's future. It's a fight about how we go about building Australia's future, a future for the many, not just for the few." He also dismissed the opinion polls that showed him trailing to Abbott in gaining a parliamentary plurality.[86]

Opinion polls

[edit]
Two-party-preferred.
Primary vote.
Aggregate of voting intention polls between the 2013 election and the previous election. A moving average is shown in a solid line.

Newspaper endorsements

[edit]

The press overwhelmingly favoured the Coalition over Labor, with all of News Corp's publications endorsing Tony Abbott's opposition over Kevin Rudd's government, as well as Fairfax's publications such as The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Canberra Times, backing the Coalition over Labor. Fairfax's newspapers, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Canberra Times both considered the need for political stability a primary reason for supporting the Coalition, as well as criticising Labor's continuing infighting and scandals.[87][88] The Age backed Labor, praising Labor's stewardship of the economy during the global financial crisis and noting that, of the two parties, they were the one with a vision for Australia. The Sunday Age, however, supported the Coalition, rejecting their daily counterpart's editorial that Labor had vision and that the election amounted to choosing a lesser evil, noting that during the election campaign a "genuine contest of ideas [had] not materialised", that "the campaign [had] contained no vision or policy clarion call commanding our attention and demanding our vote" and subsequently that "in the absence of policies and detailed economic information, voter decisiveness will depend on one issue: trust."[89] During this period, various News Corp's papers published numerous front-page articles supporting The Coalition and denigrating Labor. During the campaign, The Daily Telegraph ran front pages depicting Labor as Nazis,[90] displaying a picture of Rudd above a headline telling readers to "Kick this mob out,[91] and, on election day, ran the headline "After 33 days campaigning, 18 babies kissed, 104,275 km flown and six years of an incompetent Labor government, now it's... your turn."[92] The Sunday Telegraph, meanwhile, printed a front-page editorial with the headline "Australia needs Tony".[93] Additionally, The Courier-Mail used a front page to depict Labor as clowns,[94] and ran a headline of "Does This Guy Ever Shut Up" alongside a photo of Rudd during a debate.[95] Similarly, in the weeks preceding the election, the Herald Sun ran the headline "Trust Me" alongside a photo Abbott[96] and on the day of the election ran a front page consisting of the headline "It's Tony's Time" alongside another photo of Abbott.[97]

National daily newspapers

[edit]
Newspaper Publisher 2013 endorsement Link 2010 endorsement Link
The Advertiser News Corp Australia Coalition Labor
The Age Fairfax Media Labor Labor [1]
The Australian News Corp Australia Coalition Coalition [2]
The Australian Financial Review Fairfax Media Coalition Coalition [3]
The Canberra Times Fairfax Media Coalition Labor [4]
The Courier-Mail News Corp Australia Coalition Coalition [5]
The Daily Telegraph News Corp Australia Coalition Coalition [6]
The Guardian Australia Guardian Media Group Labor N/A [7]
The Herald Sun News Corp Australia Coalition Coalition [8]
The Mercury News Corp Australia Coalition Labor
Northern Territory News News Corp Australia Coalition Labor
The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media Coalition Labor [9]
The West Australian Seven West Media Coalition Coalition

National Sunday newspapers

[edit]
Newspaper Publisher 2013 endorsement 2010 endorsement Link
The Sunday Age Fairfax Media Coalition Labor [10]
The Weekend Australian News Corp Australia Coalition Coalition [11]
The Sunday Mail News Corp Australia Coalition Coalition [12]
The Sunday Telegraph News Corp Australia Coalition Labor [13]
The Sunday Herald Sun News Corp Australia Coalition Labor [14]

International and foreign press

[edit]
Newspaper Endorsement Link
Fiji Sun Coalition [15]
The Economist Labor [16]

Results

[edit]

House of Representatives

[edit]
Government (90)
Coalition
  Liberal (58)
  LNP (22)
  National (9)
  CLP (1)
Opposition (55)
  Labor (55)
Crossbench (5)
  Green (1)
  Palmer (1)
  Katter (1)
  Independent (2)[note 1]


The disproportionality of the lower house in the 2013 election was 9.66 according to the Gallagher index, mainly between the Coalition and Green parties.
House of Representatives (IRV)
Turnout 93.23% (CV) — Informal 5.91%
[99]
Party Votes % Swing Seats Change
  Labor 4,311,365 33.38 −4.61 55 Decrease 17
  Coalition 5,882,818 45.55 +2.23 90 Increase 18
  Liberal 4,134,865 32.02 +1.56 58 Increase 14
  Liberal National 1,152,217 8.92 −0.20 22 Increase 1
  National 554,268 4.29 +0.56 9 Increase 2
  Country Liberal (NT) 41,468 0.32 +0.01 1 Steady
  Greens 1,116,918 8.65 −3.11 1 Steady
  Palmer United 709,035 5.49 +5.49 1 Increase 1
  Family First 181,820 1.41 −0.84
  Katter's Australian 134,226 1.04 +0.73 1 Increase 1
  Independents 177,217 1.37 −1.15 2 Decrease 2
Others 401,528 3.11
Total 12,914,927     150
Two-party-preferred vote
  Liberal/National Coalition 6,908,710 53.49 +3.61 90 Increase 18
  Labor 6,006,217 46.51 −3.61 55 Decrease 17
Invalid/blank votes 811,143 5.91 +0.36
Registered voters/turnout 14,723,385 93.23
Source: Federal Election 2013
Popular vote
Labor
33.38%
Liberal
32.02%
LNP (QLD)
8.92%
Greens
8.65%
Palmer United
5.49%
National
4.29%
Family First
1.41%
Katter's Australian
1.04%
CLP
0.32%
Independent
1.37%
Other
3.11%
Two-party-preferred vote
Coalition
53.49%
Labor
46.51%
Parliament seats
Coalition
60.00%
Labor
36.67%
Greens
0.67%
Palmer United
0.67%
Katter's Australian
0.67%
Independent
1.33%

Senate

[edit]
Government (33)
Coalition
  Liberal (23)
  LNP (6)
  National (3)
  CLP (1)
Opposition (25)
  Labor (25)
Crossbench (18)
  Green (10)
  Palmer (2)
  Motoring (1)
  Liberal Democrat (1)
  Family First (1)
  DLP (1)
  Independent (2)

This table includes votes and percentage from the 2013 election and the seat allocation is based on the void election in Western Australia. The 2014 Australian Senate special election in Western Australia includes the revised national totals after that election.

Senate (STV GV) — Turnout 93.88% (CV) — Informal 2.96%[100][101]
Party Votes % Swing Seats won Total seats Change
  Liberal/National joint ticket [a] 3,938,204 29.36 –0.04 8 16 Decrease 1
  Liberal[b] 1,006,710 7.51 +1.08 8 16 Steady
  National[c] 69,523 0.52 –0.19 0 0 Steady
  Country Liberal (NT) 42,781 0.32 –0.01 1 1 Steady
Coalition total 5,057,218 37.70 –0.92 17 33 Decrease 1
  Labor 4,038,591 30.11 –5.02 12 25 Decrease 6
  Greens 1,159,588 8.65 –4.46 4 10 Increase 1
  Palmer United 658,976 4.91 +4.91 2 2 Increase 2
  Liberal Democratic Party 523,831 3.91 +2.10 1 1 Increase 1
  Xenophon Group 258,376 1.93 +1.93 1 1 Steady
  Family First 149,306 1.11 –0.99 1 1 Increase 1
  Motoring Enthusiasts 67,560 0.50 +0.50 1 1 Increase 1
Others 1,499,570 11.18
Total 13,413,016     40 76
Invalid/blank votes 409,149 2.96 –0.79
Registered voters/turnout 14,086,869 93.71
Source: Commonwealth Election 2013

The Senate has 76 seats. Forty seats were up for election; six in each of the six states, two for the ACT and two for the Northern Territory. The terms of the four senators from the territories commenced on election day. The terms of the six longest-serving state senators ended on 30 June 2014; the terms of the new state senators commenced on 1 July 2014, and were originally supposed to end on 30 June 2020—however, the entire Senate was dissolved at the double-dissolution 2016 election.[102][103]

The Senate saw the Coalition government on 33 seats with the Labor opposition on 25 seats, the Greens on 10 seats and a crossbench of eight—Palmer United on three seats, with other minor parties and independents on five seats (the LDP's David Leyonhjelm, Family First's Bob Day, Motoring's Ricky Muir and incumbents Nick Xenophon and the DLP's John Madigan). Muir announced he would vote in line with Palmer United.[104] The initial election saw Wayne Dropulich of the Australian Sports Party win a seat in Western Australia, but the subsequent voiding of the result and ensuing special election saw the Palmer United Party gain a third seat. The Coalition government required the support of at least six non-coalition senators to pass legislation.

A record number of candidates stood at the election.[105] Group voting tickets came under scrutiny because multiple candidates were provisionally elected with the vast majority of their 14.3 per cent quotas coming from the preferences of other parties across the political spectrum. "Preference whisperer" Glenn Druery organised tight cross-preferencing between over 30 minor parties as part of his Minor Party Alliance.[106][107][108] Sports' Wayne Dropulich won a Senate seat on a record-low primary vote of 0.2 per cent in Western Australia, his party placing 21st out of 28 groups on primary votes.[109][110][111] Motoring's Ricky Muir won a senate seat on a record-low primary vote of 0.5 per cent in Victoria.[112][113] Family First's Bob Day won a seat on a primary vote of 3.8 per cent in South Australia.[113][114] All three were involved with the Minor Party Alliance.[115] Previous examples of winning with low vote shares include Family First's Steve Fielding in 2004 on 1.9 per cent in Victoria,[116] the Nuclear Disarmament Party's Robert Wood in 1987 on 1.5 per cent in New South Wales, and the DLP's John Madigan won his seat in 2010 on a primary vote of 2.3 per cent in Victoria.[117] Xenophon and larger parties including the incoming government announced they would look at changes to the GVT system.[118][119][120]

Western Australia special Senate election

[edit]
Revised national Senate totals following WA special election (STV GV)
Turnout 93.45% (CV) – Informal 2.93%[99]
Party Votes % Swing Seats won Continuing senators Total seats Change
  Liberal/National joint ticket [a] 3,938,204 29.43 –0.03 8 8 16 Decrease 1
  Liberal[b] 928,291 6.94 –1.65 8 8 16 Steady
  National[c] 41,920 0.31 –0.19 0 0 0 Steady
  Country Liberal (NT) 42,781 0.32 –0.01 1 1 1 Steady
Coalition total 4,951,196 37.00 –1.29 17 16 33 Decrease 1
  Australian Labor Party 3,965,284 29.63 –5.50 12 13 25 Decrease 6
  Australian Greens 1,234,592 9.23 –3.88 4 6 10 Increase 1
  Palmer United Party 751,121 5.61 +5.61 3 3 Increase 3
  Liberal Democratic Party 502,180 3.75 +1.94 1 1 Increase 1
  Xenophon Group 258,376 1.93 +1.93 1 1 Steady
  Family First Party 149,994 1.12 –0.98 1 1 Increase 1
  Democratic Labour Party 115,276 0.86 –0.20 0 1 1 Steady
  Australian Motoring Enthusiast Party 66,807 0.50 +0.50 1 1 Increase 1
  Other 1,385,719 10.36 +0.49
Total 13,380,545 40 36 76
Invalid/blank votes 403,380 2.93 –0.82
Registered voters/turnout 14,750,392 93.45
Source: Commonwealth Election 2013

Most Senate votes cast in Western Australia were subject to a formal recount.[121] During the recount it was determined that 1,375 WA Senate ballot papers could not be located.[122][123] After the final recount the result was duly declared which changed the last two predicted WA Senate spots from Palmer and Labor back to Sports and Green. Mick Keelty, a former AFP Commissioner, was requested by the AEC to investigate the issue of the misplaced ballot papers.[124][125] On 15 November, the AEC petitioned the High Court, acting as the Court of Disputed Returns, to seek an order from the court that the WA Senate election of all six senators (3 Liberal, 1 Labor, 1 Green, 1 Sport) be declared void.[126][127][128] On 18 February 2014, it was announced that the Court of Disputed Returns had found that the result of the Western Australia Senate election should be voided, meaning a fresh election for all six senate vacancies would be required.[129]

The AEC notes that the Court has advised in its written decision issued today that it finds that the only relief appropriate is for the 2013 Western Australian Senate election result to be declared void.......In accordance with the Australian Constitution and the requirements of the Western Australian Election of Senators Act 1903, an election of six senators for Western Australia would occur once a writ has been issued by His Excellency Mr Malcolm McCusker AC CVO QC, the Governor of Western Australia.

— Australian Electoral Commission, 18 February 2014

On 28 February 2014 it was announced that the half-Senate election in Western Australia would take place on 5 April, which returned 3 Liberal, 1 Labor, 1 Green, 1 Palmer.

Seats changing hands

[edit]

Members listed in italics did not re-contest their House of Representatives seats at this election.

Seat 2010 Swing 2013 [130]
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Banks, NSW   Labor Daryl Melham 1.45 −3.28 1.83 David Coleman Liberal  
Barton, NSW Labor Robert McClelland 6.86 −7.17 0.31 Nickolas Varvaris Liberal
Bass, TAS Labor Geoff Lyons 6.74 −10.78 4.04 Andrew Nikolic Liberal
Braddon, TAS Labor Sid Sidebottom 7.48 −10.04 2.56 Brett Whiteley Liberal
Capricornia, QLD Labor Kirsten Livermore 3.68 −4.45 0.77 Michelle Landry Liberal National
Corangamite, VIC Labor Darren Cheeseman 0.28 −4.22 3.94 Sarah Henderson Liberal
Deakin, VIC Labor Mike Symon 0.60 −3.78 3.18 Michael Sukkar Liberal
Dobell, NSW Independent Craig Thomson 5.07 N/A 0.68 Karen McNamara Liberal
Eden-Monaro, NSW Labor Mike Kelly 4.24 −4.85 0.61 Peter Hendy Liberal
Fairfax, QLD Liberal National Alex Somlyay 6.95 N/A 0.03 Clive Palmer Palmer United
Fisher, QLD Independent Peter Slipper 4.13 N/A 9.75 Mal Brough Liberal National
Hindmarsh, SA Labor Steve Georganas 6.08 −7.97 1.89 Matt Williams Liberal
Indi, VIC Liberal Sophie Mirabella 9.94 N/A 0.25 Cathy McGowan Independent
La Trobe, VIC Labor Laura Smyth 1.66 −5.67 4.01 Jason Wood Liberal
Lindsay, NSW Labor David Bradbury 1.12 −4.11 2.99 Fiona Scott Liberal
Lyne, NSW Independent Rob Oakeshott 12.73 N/A 14.77 David Gillespie National
Lyons, TAS Labor Dick Adams 12.29 −13.51 1.22 Eric Hutchinson Liberal
New England, NSW Independent Tony Windsor 21.52 N/A 14.46 Barnaby Joyce National
O'Connor, WA National WA Tony Crook 3.56 −4.51 0.95 Rick Wilson Liberal
Page, NSW Labor Janelle Saffin 4.19 −6.71 2.52 Kevin Hogan National
Petrie, QLD Labor Yvette D'Ath 2.51 −3.04 0.53 Luke Howarth Liberal National
Reid, NSW Labor John Murphy 2.68 −3.53 0.85 Craig Laundy Liberal
Robertson, NSW Labor Deborah O'Neill 1.00 −4.00 3.00 Lucy Wicks Liberal

Result commentary

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The Labor Party recorded its lowest two-party preferred vote since 1996 and lowest primary vote since 1931. Kevin Rudd announced his resignation as party leader and confirmed he would not run again in the subsequent leadership election.[131]

With Nova Peris's victory in the Senate election in the Northern Territory, she became the first Aboriginal woman to be elected to parliament.[132] Julian Assange failed to be elected to the Senate after running in Victoria, with his WikiLeaks Party garnering 0.62% of the popular vote.[133] Former Queensland Premier Peter Beattie, standing in the Liberal-held seat of Forde, also failed to enter parliament.[134]

In an unprecedented outcome in Australian electoral history, the Senate result in Western Australia was declared void after the loss of over 1,300 ballot papers, necessitating a fresh election for the Senate in that state.[83][135]

Rudd suffered a large swing against him in his seat of Griffith, which was large enough for the LNP candidate, Bill Glasson, to have a higher first-preference vote than Rudd, although Rudd eventually won the seat on preferences.

Aftermath

[edit]

The Coalition had campaigned on a tough stance on asylum seekers who came to Australia by boat (as had the Labor Party in the final weeks leading up to the election). Immediately after the election, Abbott reiterated his party's promise and announced that his new government would begin Operation Sovereign Borders—which would turn back any vessels carrying asylum seekers—as soon as possible. He also confirmed he would abolish the carbon price that was introduced by the Gillard government,[136] as well as lower foreign aid by A$4.5 billion.[137]

Reactions

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International reactions

[edit]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b The Liberal and National parties ran a joint ticket in New South Wales and Victoria. It includes the Liberal National Party in Queensland.
  2. ^ a b The Liberals-only ticket ran in Western Australia, South Australia, Tasmania and the Australian Capital Territory.
  3. ^ a b The Nationals-only ticket ran in Western Australia and South Australia.
  1. ^ The two independents elected were: Cathy McGowan Andrew Wilkie (first elected in 2010)[98]

References

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Further reading

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