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Electoral district of Port Adelaide

Coordinates:34°48′13″S138°33′15″E / 34.80361°S 138.55417°E /-34.80361; 138.55417
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State electoral district of South Australia
This article is about the South Australian state electorate. For the federal electorate, seeDivision of Port Adelaide.

Australian electorate
Port Adelaide
South AustraliaHouse of Assembly
Map of Adelaide, South Australia with electoral district of Port Adelaide highlighted
Electoral district of Port Adelaide (green) in the Greater Adelaide area
StateSouth Australia
Dates current1857–1970, 2002–present
MPSusan Close
PartyAustralian Labor Party (SA)
NamesakePort Adelaide
Electors27,895 (2018)
Area118.75 km2 (45.8 sq mi)
DemographicMetropolitan
Coordinates34°48′13″S138°33′15″E / 34.80361°S 138.55417°E /-34.80361; 138.55417
Electorates around Port Adelaide:
Gulf St VincentTaylorTaylor
Gulf St VincentPort Adelaide
Gulf St VincentSeveral[1]Torrens
Footnotes
Electoral District map[2]

Port Adelaide is a single-memberelectoral district for theSouth Australian House of Assembly. Named afterPort Adelaide, which it surrounds, it is a 118.8 km2 suburban and industrial electorate onAdelaide'sLefevre Peninsula, and stretches east toward Adelaide's northern suburbs. It contains a mix of seaside residential areas, wasteland and industrial regions. In addition to its namesake suburb ofPort Adelaide, the district includes the suburbs ofBirkenhead,Bolivar,Cavan,Dry Creek,Ethelton,Exeter,Garden Island,Gepps Cross,Gillman,Glanville,Globe Derby Park,Largs Bay,Largs North,New Port,North Haven,Osborne,Ottoway,Outer Harbor,Peterhead,Semaphore,Semaphore South,St Kilda,Taperoo,Torrens Island,Wingfield, as well as part ofRosewater.

Port Adelaide has had three incarnations as a South Australian electoral district.

Port Adelaide was the name of an electoral district of the unicameralSouth Australian Legislative Council from 1851 until its abolition in 1857.[3]

From 1857 until 1902 it was a two-seatmulti-member district. From 1902 until 1915 it was a large three-seat multi-member district covering Adelaide's north-west and western suburbs; together with the four-memberAdelaide and five-memberTorrens, the three districts with a total of 12-members covered the whole of the metropolitan area in the 42 member house.[4] The district returned to two members in 1915, and became a single member district from the1938 election onward. It was held without interruption byLabor until the district's abolition prior to the1970 election, and for most of that time was one of Labor's safest seats. The bulk of its territory was split between the neighbouring seats ofSemaphore andPrice. The last member for this seat's original incarnation,John Ryan, transferred to Price.

The seat was recreated in 2002, essentially as a reconfigured version ofHart (which was itself created in 1993 as a replacement for Semaphore). Like its previous incarnation, it is a comfortably safe Labor seat. The member for Hart, deputy premier and state treasurerKevin Foley, followed most of his constituents into the recreated seat and held it easily. At the2006 election, Foley increased his margin from 21.7 percent to 25.7 percent, and gained a majority in all booths. Foley retired in 2011, triggering a by-election held inFebruary 2012.Susan Close retained the seat for Labor.

Members

[edit]
Two members (1857–1902)
MemberPartyTermMemberPartyTerm
 John Hart, Sr.1857–1859 John Hughes1857–1858
 Edward Collinson1858–1860
 William Owen1860–1862 Patrick Coglin1860–1865
 John Hart, Sr.1862–1866
 David Bower1865–1870
 Jacob Smith1866–1868
 Henry Hill1868–1870
 William Quin1870–1871 Henry Kent Hughes1870–1875
 John Duncan1871–1875
 William Quin1875–1880
 David Bower1875–1887
 John Hart, Jr.1880–1881
 William Mattinson1881–1890 
 George Hopkins1887–1893
 Ben Rounsevell1890–1893
 William ArchibaldLabor1893–1902 Ivor MacGillivrayLabor1893–1902
Three members (1902–1915)
MemberPartyTermMemberPartyTermMemberPartyTerm
 William ArchibaldLabor1902–1910 Ivor MacGillivrayLabor1902–1915 Thomas Brooker1902–1905
  Henry ChessonLabor1905–1915
 Thompson GreenLabor1910–1915
Two members (1915–1938)
MemberPartyTermMemberPartyTerm
 John PriceLabor1915–1925 Ivor MacGillivrayLabor1915–1917
  National1917–1918
  John Stanley VerranLabor1918–1924
  Frank CondonLabor1924–1927
 John Stanley VerranLabor1925–1927
 John JonasLabor1927–1933 Thomas ThompsonProtestant Labor1927–1930
  Albert ThompsonLabor1930–1938
 James StephensLabor1933–1938
Single-member (1938–1970)
MemberPartyTerm
 James StephensLabor1938–1959
 John RyanLabor1959–1970
Single-member (2002–present)
MemberPartyTerm
 Kevin FoleyLabor2002–2011
 Susan CloseLabor2012–present

Election results

[edit]
Main article:Electoral results for the district of Port Adelaide
This section is an excerpt fromResults of the 2022 South Australian state election (House of Assembly) § Port Adelaide.[edit]
2022 South Australian state election: Port Adelaide
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LaborSusan Close14,07458.3+10.4
LiberalChad McLaren5,44822.6+4.0
GreensJim Moss2,47110.2+4.4
Family FirstLucia Snelling1,2045.0+5.0
Animal JusticeAdrian Romeo9453.9+0.0
Total formal votes24,14296.6
Informal votes8503.4
Turnout24,99288.1
Two-party-preferred result
LaborSusan Close17,33571.8+5.0
LiberalChad McLaren6,80728.2−5.0
LaborholdSwing+5.0

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^West to east:Lee,Cheltenham,Croydon, andEnfield
  2. ^Electoral District of Port Adelaide (Map).Electoral Commission of South Australia. 2018. Retrieved1 April 2018.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^"Statistical Record of the Legislature 1836 to 2009"(PDF). Parliament of South Australia. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 11 March 2019. Retrieved15 November 2013.
  4. ^"Parliamentary Electorates". The Adelaide Chronicle. 5 April 1902. p. 33 – via Trove.

References

[edit]
Labor (28)
Liberal (13)
Independent (5)
Speaker (1)
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