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Electoral district of Light

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Australian electorate
Light
South AustraliaHouse of Assembly
Interactive map of electoral district boundaries
StateSouth Australia
Dates current1857–1902, 1938–present
MPTony Piccolo
PartyAustralian Labor Party (SA)
NamesakeColonel William Light
Electors25,990 (2018)
Area62.36 km2 (24.1 sq mi)
DemographicRural
Electorates around Light:
FromeFromeSchubert
FromeLightSchubert
TaylorTaylorElizabeth
Footnotes
Electoral District map[1]

Light is a single-memberelectoral district for theSouth Australian House of Assembly. Light is named afterColonel William Light (1786 – 1839), who was the firstSurveyor-General of South Australia.[2] The electorate was created in 1857, abolished at the1902 election and recreated at the1938 election.[3] It is based on the semi-rural township ofGawler, and stretches southwards into the outermost northern suburbs ofAdelaide.

Covering a total area of 62.36 km2, Light consists of the suburbs ofBuchfelde,Evanston Gardens,Evanston Park,Evanston South, Gawler,Gawler East,Gawler South,Gawler West,Hewett,Hillier,Kudla,Munno Para,Munno Para Downs,Munno Para West,Reid, andWillaston. Although growing urbanisation in recent years has resulted in Adelaide's growth spilling into Gawler, Light is classed as a rural electorate.

The electorate was held by theLiberal Party and its predecessor, theLiberal and Country League, for all but one term from its re-creation in 1938 until2006. For most of that time, it was a fairly safe to safe LCL/Liberal seat.

A redistribution prior to the2002 election pushed Light further into the outer Adelaide suburbs, paring back the margin from a fairly safe 6.3 percent to an extremely marginal 1.1 percent. At the 2002 election, Liberal incumbentMalcolm Buckby picked up a small swing in his favour and retained the electorate even as the Liberals lost government. In 2006Tony Piccolo became the secondLabor member to win the electorate, and the first Labor member for the electorate in 62 years. At the2010 election he increased his margin against the statewide trend and decades of voting patterns in the seat, and became the first Labor member to be re-elected to Light. His victory was one of two that allowed Labor to hold onto a narrow majority despite losing the two-party vote.

A redistribution prior to the2014 election reduced Labor's margin significantly from 5.3 percent to 2.8 percent, but Labor again retained the electorate with an unchanged margin. After a redistribution slightly increased the Labor margin to 5.4 percent, Piccolo retained the seat in2018 with a healthy swing of almost six percent, enough to make Light a fairly safe Labor seat (and just on the edge of being safe). This came even as Labor lost government, marking only the second time that the conservatives won government without holding Light.

The electorate's first member in its current incarnation as a single-member seat was Premier and LCL founderRichard Layton Butler, who held the electorate for a few months in 1938 before making an unsuccessful attempt to transfer to federal politics. Other particularly notable members includeBruce Eastick, leader of the LCL/Liberals from 1972 to 1975 andSpeaker of the South Australian House of Assembly during theTonkin government.

Members

[edit]
Two members (1857–1875)
MemberPartyTermMemberPartyTerm
 J. T. Bagot1857–1865 Carrington Smedley1857–1857
 W. H. Maturin1858–1858
 David Shannon1858–1860
 Francis Dutton1860–1862
 John Rowe1862–1862
 Francis Dutton1862–1865
 P. B. Coglin1865–1868 John Rounsevell1865–1868
 John Hart Sr.1868–1870 William Lewis1868–1870
 Edward Hamilton1870–1871 James Pearce1870–1875
 James White1871–1871
 Mountifort Conner1871–1873
 R. I. Stow1873–1875
Three members (1875–1884)
MemberPartyTermMemberPartyTermMemberPartyTerm
 James White1875–1881 David Nock1875–1878 Jenkin Coles1875–1878
 James Shannon1878–1881 F. S. Carroll1878–1878
 David Moody1878–1881
 Jenkin Coles1881–1884 H. V. Moyle1881–1884 Robert Dixson1881–1884
Two members (1884–1902)
MemberPartyTermMemberPartyTerm
 Jenkin Coles1884–1891 David Moody1884–1887
 Paddy Glynn1887–1890
 J. W. White1890–1891
 Defence League1891–1896 Defence League1891–1896
 1896–1902 David Moody1896–1899
 F. W. Paech1899–1902
Single-member (1938–present)
MemberPartyTerm
 Richard Layton ButlerLiberal and Country1938–1938
 Herbert MichaelLiberal and Country1939–1941
 Sydney McHughLabor1941–1944
 Herbert MichaelLiberal and Country1944–1956
 George HambourLiberal and Country1956–1960
 Leslie NicholsonLiberal and Country1960–1962
 John FreebairnLiberal and Country1962–1970
 Bruce EastickLiberal and Country1970–1974
 Liberal1974–1993
 Malcolm BuckbyLiberal1993–2006
 Tony PiccoloLabor2006–present

Election results

[edit]
Main article:Electoral results for the district of Light
This section is an excerpt fromResults of the 2022 South Australian state election (House of Assembly) § Light.[edit]
2022 South Australian state election: Light
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LaborTony Piccolo13,14457.5+6.4
LiberalAndrew Williamson5,46823.9−10.5
One NationDavid Duncan1,5426.8+6.8
GreensBrett Ferris1,5066.6−0.3
Family FirstBenjamin Hackett1,1845.2+5.2
Total formal votes22,84497.0
Informal votes7043.0
Turnout23,54888.1
Two-party-preferred result
LaborTony Piccolo15,87369.5+11.1
LiberalAndrew Williamson6,97130.5−11.1
LaborholdSwing+11.1
Distribution of preferences: Light
PartyCandidateVotesRound 1Round 2Round 3
Dist.TotalDist.TotalDist.Total
Quota (50% + 1)11,423
 LaborTony Piccolo13,144+47213,616+1,16914,785+1,08815,873
 LiberalAndrew Williamson5,468+1835,651+2815,932+1,0396,971
 One NationDavid Duncan1,542+3101,852+2752,127Excluded
 GreensBrett Ferris1,506+2191,725Excluded
 Family FirstBenjamin Hackett1,184Excluded

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Electoral District of Light (Map).Electoral Commission of South Australia. 2018. Retrieved1 April 2018.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^"Light - Electoral Commission SA". Electoral Commission of South Australia. Archived fromthe original on 15 March 2022. Retrieved14 July 2022.
  3. ^"Statistical Record of the Legislature 1836 to 2009"(PDF). Parliament of South Australia. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 11 March 2019. Retrieved22 December 2013.

References

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