Psephos - Adam Carr's Election Archive

Adam Carr's Election Archive

Australian federal election, 2019
Division of Maribyrnong, Victoria

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Western Melbourne: Ascot Vale, Avondale Heights, Essendon, Maidstone, Niddrie
State seats: All of Essendon, parts of Footscray and Niddrie
Local government areas: All of Moonee Valley, parts of Brimbank, Melbourne and Moreland
Enrolment at close of rolls: 112,879
1999 republic referendum: Yes 56.8
2018 same-sex marriage survey: Yes 59.9

Sitting member: Hon Bill Shorten (Labor): Elected 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016

2007 Labor majority over Liberal: 15.3%
2010 Labor majority over Liberal: 16.9%
2013 Labor majority over Liberal: 11.4%
2016 Labor majority over Liberal: 12.3%
2019 notional Labor majority over Liberal: 9.4%

Status: Fairly safe Labor

  • 2016 results
  • Statistics and history

  • Candidates in ballot-paper order:

    1. Sarwar Hasan
    United Australia Party
    2. James Williams
    Australian Greens
    3. Hon Bill Shorten
    Australian Labor Party
    4. Christine Stow
    Liberal Party



    Candidate websites:

    Hon Bill Shorten
    Christine Stow
    James Williams

    Division of Maribyrnong

    Maribyrnong was created in 1906, and at various times has covered most of the western and north-western suburbs of Melbourne. In 1949 it was cut back to the area around Essendon, but later it expanded to the west to take in newer suburbs such as Sunshine and St Albans. The 2018 redistribution created the new St Albans-based seat of Fraser, pushing Maribyrnong to the south-east, taking territory from Wills and Melbourne.

    Maribyrnong is a solidly working-class seat, with 17% of its workforce engaged in manufacturing and a high proportion of people born in non English speaking countries. It is also the second-most Catholic electorate in Australia (35.0%), a fact of considerable importance in its history.

    Maribyrnong has been held by the Labor Party for most of its history, the only significant exception being the period from 1955 to 1969, when the Democratic Labor Party, with its base among working-class Catholics, directed its preferences to the Liberals, enabling them to win the seat. Members for Maribyrnong include Labor ministers Arthur Drakeford, Dr Moss Cass and Alan Griffiths. Bob Sercombe won the seat in 1996, but lost his preselection in a coup organised by the Labor Unity faction in 2006. His successor was Bill Shorten, the national secretary of the Australian Workers Union, who has held it safely since.

    Bill Shorten, Labor MP for Maribyrnong since 2007, was born in Melbourne, the son of a waterside worker and union official, and has arts and law degrees from Monash and an MBA from Melbourne Business School. He worked for Gareth Evans, Bill Landeryou and other Labor figures and as a lawyer for Maurice Blackburn, a leading Labor law firm. In 1994 he went to work for the AWU and rose rapidly, becoming Victorian State Secretary in 1998 and National Secretary in 2001. He was regarded as the model of the new trade union official - well-educated, professional and articulate. He gained a national reputation at the time of the 2006 Beaconsfield mine disaster in Tasmania.

    In 2007 Shorten entered Parliament, and was appointed Parliamentary Secretary for Disabilities and Children's Services by Kevin Rudd. It was no secret that Rudd disliked him and saw him as a threat, and was determined not to promote him. As a result, Shorten was one of the organisers of the June 2010 coup that replaced Rudd with Julia Gillard. After the 2010 election he became in rapid succession Minister for Financial Services and Superannuation, Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations and Minister for Education. He held his place in Rudd's brief second ministry in 2013. After the election he defeated the Left's candidate, Anthony Albanese, to win the Labor leadership.

    Shorten benefited greatly from the inept performance of Tony Abbott as PM, and led in the polls from early 2014 until Malcolm Turnbull's coup against Abbott in September 2015. His poll standing then collapsed, and many observers wrote off his chances of winning the 2016 election or surviving as Leader long after it. But a dogged campaign saw Labor gain 14 seats and reduce the Turnbull government to a one-seat majority. This boosted Shorten's standing and enabled him to survive for the next three years in opposition. Labor continued to lead in the polls, but Shorten's personal standing lagged far behind Turnbull's. Despite this he led Labor to success in the July 2018 "super Saturday" by-elections, which brought about Turnbull's downfall.

    After the 2018 redistrubution Shorten had the option of moving to the new ultra-safe seat of Fraser, but opted to remain in Maribyrnong, despite its reduced Labor majority. This is still a safe Labor seat and Shorten is unlikely to be troubled.

    The Liberal candidate is Christine Stowe, a consultant. The Greens candidate is James Williams, an engineer.

    Demographics:

    Median weekly household income: $1,405 (Australia $1,438)
    People over 65: 15.7% (Australia 15.8%)
    Australian born: 53.7% (Australia 66.7%)
    Ancestry: Vietnamese 10.1%, Italian 9.7%
    Non-English-speaking households: 48.6% (Australia 22.2%)
    Catholics 35.0% (Australia 22.6%)
    Buddhism: 8.3%
    No religion 21.8% (Australia 29.6%)
    University graduates: 24.0% (Australia 22.0%)
    Professional and managerial employment: 35.1% (Australia 35.2%)
    Employed in manufacturing and construction: 22.5% (Australia 22.9%)
    Paying a mortgage: 28.8% (Australia 34.5%)
    Renting: 31.4% (Australia 30.9%)
    Traditional families: 34.6% (Australia 32.8%)

    Members:

    Hon Samuel Mauger (Prot, Lib) 1906-10
    Hon James Fenton (ALP, UAP) 1910-34
    Hon Arthur Drakeford (ALP) 1934-55
    Philip Stokes (Lib) 1955-69
    Hon Dr Moss Cass (ALP) 1969-83
    Hon Alan Griffiths (ALP) 1983-96
    Robert Sercombe (ALP) 1996-2007
    Hon Bill Shorten (ALP) 2007-

    Boundaries following 2018 redistribution:




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