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Redistribution (Australia)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Redistribution of electoral boundaries in Australia

For other uses, seeRedistribution (disambiguation).

InAustralia, aredistribution is the process of redrawing theboundaries ofelectoral divisions for theHouse of Representatives arising from changes in population and changes in the number of representatives. There is no redistribution for theSenate as each State constitutes a division, though with multiple members. TheAustralian Electoral Commission (AEC), an independentstatutory authority, oversees the apportionment and redistribution process for federal divisions, taking into account a number of factors.[1] Politicians, political parties and the public may make submissions to the AEC on proposed new boundaries, but any interference with their deliberations is considered a serious offence.

Section 24 of the Constitution of Australia specifies that the number of members of the House of Representatives in each state is to be calculated from their population, although each state is entitled to a minimum of five members regardless of population. This minimum condition currently only applies to Tasmania, the smallest state. Representation of territories has been specified by subsequent laws. After the number of members for eachstate and territory is determined, in a process called apportionment or determination, the state and territory is divided into that number ofelectoral divisions.

A redistribution (sometimes called redrawing or "revision")[2] of the geographic boundaries of divisions in a state or territory takes place when an apportionment determination results in a change in the number of seats to which a state or territory is entitled, at least once every seven years, or sooner when the AEC determines that population shifts within a state or territory have caused some seats to have too many or too few voters. TheCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918 requires that all electoral divisions within a state or territory have approximately an equal numbers ofenrolled voters. TheCommonwealth Electoral Act (No. 2) 1973 reduced the allowed variation of electors in each division to 10% of the state or territory's average, down from 20%.[3] New boundaries apply only to general elections held after the redistribution process has been completed, and by-elections are held on the previous electoral boundaries.

Each state and territory has its own commission which follows similar but not identical processes and principles for determining electoral boundaries and conducting elections within their jurisdiction, and those of local governments.

Redistribution triggers

[edit]

Section 59 of theCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918 outlines the timing on when redistribution should commence.

A redistribution of divisions in a State, the ACT or Northern Territory is required or triggered in three circumstances:[4][5]

  • if there has been a change in the number of parliamentary representatives to which the State or Territory is entitled, due to a change in population or an increase in the overall number of members, subject to the minimum number of divisions in original States. Under Sections 46 and 48 of the Act, these are determined by the Electoral Commissioner within 13 months after every first meeting of the House of Representatives ("determination").
  • if the number of electors in more than one third of the divisions in the State or one of the divisions in the Territory deviates from the respective State/Territory's average divisional enrolment by more than 10% for a period of more than two months ("malapportionment")
  • if seven years has elapsed since the previous redistribution

However, despite the above requirements or triggers, a redistribution is not to commence in a State, the ACT or Northern Territory in two circumstances:[5]

  • if a redistribution of divisions is already undergoing in the State or Territory, otherwise the new redistribution would terminate the undergoing redistribution
  • if it is within the twelve month period prior to the expiration of the House of Representatives.

For the latter circumstance, if the elapse of seven years since the previous redistribution falls within the twelve month period, the redistribution will instead be automatically deferred and commence within 30 days after the first meeting of the next House of Representatives. This is to prevent a generalelection from occurring while a redistribution is in progress.

Section 59 also states three additional circumstances:

  • if a redistribution is triggered in a State or Territory anytime within 13 months after the first meeting of House of Representatives met (any of the triggers, including within 30 days after the first House of Representatives meeting as above)
  • the determination of the seat entitlement has not been made yet (which has to be 12–13 months after the first sitting)
  • the three-person Electoral Commission makes a judgement that there may be a change in seat entitlement for the State or Territory

If all of the three requirements are met, then the Electoral Commission can decide to defer the redistribution for the State and Territory until after the seat entitlement has been determined.[5]

Example of redistribution deferrals

[edit]

From the above legislative requirements, this means that a redistribution can be deferred up to two times. An example of this was the redistribution in the ACT between 2012–2014. ACT had a redistribution on 9 December 2005, which meant that the following scheduled redistribution was to start around December 2012. The first House of Representatives sitting of the43rd Parliament was on 27 September 2010, meaning the House of Representatives was due to expire on 27 September 2013. December 2012 fell within the twelve month period prior to the expiration (27 September 2012 to 27 September 2013), which meant that the scheduled redistribution was automatically deferred to within 30 days after the first House of Representatives sitting in the44th Parliament.[6]

The 44th Parliament eventually began on 12 November 2013. Within the following 30 days, the Electoral Commission made a judgement that there was possibility of a change in seat entitlement for ACT. The Commission then chose to defer the redistribution again until the determination could be made in another twelve months time (November–December 2014).[6] The redistribution for ACT finally commenced in December 2014, two years after its scheduled commencement.[7][8]

Malapportionment

[edit]

Under Section 58 of theCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918, after the end of every month, the Electoral Commissioner is to ascertain (on the same day):[9]

  • the number of electors enrolled in each division (in respect of each State/Territory)
  • the average divisional enrolment of each State/Territory (i.e. total enrolment of the State/Territory divided by the number of the divisions in the State/Territory)
  • the percentage deviation between the above two for each division

These numbers are required to be published in the Gazette monthly. Ascertainments are based on existing divisions and includes any finalised redistributed boundaries and created divisions at the time of ascertainment. An example of this is the gazette published in November 2024 for the number of electors as of 31 October 2024.[10] The redistributions and boundaries for New South Wales, Victoria and Western Australia had just recently been finalised within the month prior. The October 2024 ascertainment included the new seat ofBullwinkel and excluded the abolished seats ofHiggins andNorth Sydney, even though these would not come into effect until the2025 election.

Under Section 59 of theCommonwealth Electoral Act, if the number of electors in more than one third of the divisions in a State or one of the divisions in a Territory deviates from the respective State/Territory's average divisional enrolment by more than 10% for a period of more than two months, this is consideredmalapportionment and is one of the three possible triggers for redistribution for that State or Territory.[5]

Total number of members

[edit]

Section 24 of the Constitution specifies that the total number of members of theHouse of Representatives shall be "as nearly as practicable" twice as many as the number ofsenators.High Court rulings have later interpreted this section of the Constitution to apply to state members and senators. However, the principle of the House of Representatives roughly double of the Senate can still be applied when including territory members and senators.

As there are 72 state senators, there should be roughly 144 state members of the House of Representatives. When including the 4 territory senators, there should be roughly 152 members of the House of Representatives. The total number of members of the House of Representatives, and consequently electorates, varies from time to time. Every time there is a change in the number of members, a redistribution is required to be undertaken, except in Tasmania which has always had the constitutional minimum number of five members. At thefirst federal election, there were 75members of the House of Representatives (for 65 divisions). In 1949, the number was increased from 74 to 121 (excluding the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory),[11] and in 1984 it was increased from 125 to 148.[12] Following the 2017 apportionment, the total number of members increased from 150 to 151, which was reversed following the 2023 apportionment.

Entitlement of states and territories

[edit]

The AEC determines the number of members to which each state and territory is entitled, which is based on the population of each state and territory. The day when it is exactly one year and one day after the first sitting day for a new House of Representatives is known as the "reference day". On this day (or the next earliest weekday if the reference day is a weekend or public holiday in the ACT), the Electoral Commissioner ascertains the most recent population estimate for each state and territory from theAustralian Bureau of Statistics, in a process termed "ascertainment".[13] Based on these figures, the AEC then makes its apportionment determination ("determination"), which is to be done "as soon as possible" after the ascertainment .The absolute latest a determination could be made is one month after the ascertainment.[14]

Section 24 of the Constitution requires that electorates be apportioned among the states in proportion to their respective populations; provided that each Original State has at least 5 members. Section 29 of the Constitution forbids electorate boundaries from crossing state lines. The current apportionment method is now found in section 48 of theCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918.[15]

Under the current method, the AEC firstly calculates a quota, as follows:

Quota=Total population of the six statesNumber of senators for the states x 2{\displaystyle {\mbox{Quota}}={\frac {\mbox{Total population of the six states}}{\mbox{Number of senators for the states x 2}}}}

State entitlements

[edit]

After the quota is calculated, the number of members to be chosen in each State is the number of people of the State divided by the quota, and if on such division there is a remainder greater than one-half of the quota, one more member shall be chosen in the State.[16]

Quotient of each state=Population of each state Quota{\displaystyle {\mbox{Quotient of each state}}={\frac {\mbox{Population of each state }}{\mbox{Quota}}}}

In simpler terms, the entitlement of each state is the quotient rounded to the nearest whole number. However, each Original State is entitled to a minimum of five members under the Australian Constitution, thus givingTasmania two more seats than its population would normally justify.[17]

Territory entitlements

[edit]

Until 2020, the quotient and entitlement of each territory was obtained using a similar rounding method to the one used for the states. In 2003, astatistical error margin — equal to twice the standard error of the population estimate, as provided by theAustralian Bureau of Statistics — was added to the quotient for each territory. The quotient and the error margin were added and rounded to the nearest whole number to determine the entitlement for each territory.

These provisions enabled the Northern Territory to retain its second seat at the2004 federal election, and the Australian Capital Territory to gain a third seat at the2019 federal election.[18]

TheElectoral Amendment (Territory Representation) Act 2020, passed on 9 December 2020,[19][20] amended theCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918 to additionally apply theharmonic mean method in calculating each territory's entitlement; the method is also known as Dean’s Method.[21] The inclusion of the statistical error margin was also abolished.

The calculation of the territory's quotient is first determined in the same way used for state entitlement:

Quotient of each territory=Population of each territory Quota{\displaystyle {\mbox{Quotient of each territory}}={\frac {\mbox{Population of each territory }}{\mbox{Quota}}}}

In accordance with Section 48 of theCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918, the calculation of the entitlement of each territory varies on the quotient calculated:

  • If the quotient is less than or equal to 0.5, then the territory is not entitled to have any members in the House of Representatives, except in the case of the Northern Territory and Australian Capital Territory (both are entitled to a minimum of one member each).[18]
  • If the quotient is greater than 0.5, but less than or equal to 1, the territory is entitled to one member in the House of Representatives.
  • If the quotient is more than 3, then the entitlement of the territory is the quotient rounded to the nearest whole number (the same method as state entitlement).
  • If the quotient is more than 1, but less than or equal to 3, the entitlement is calculated via the harmonic mean method below. If the quotient is larger than its corresponding harmonic mean, then the entitlement is the quotient rounded up to the nearest whole number; otherwise, the entitlement is the quotient rounded down to the nearest whole number.[22][23]
Minimum number of members=Quotient rounded down to the nearest whole number{\displaystyle {\mbox{Minimum number of members}}={\mbox{Quotient rounded down to the nearest whole number}}}
Harmonic mean=2 x Minimum number of members x (Minimum number of members + 1)Minimum number of members + (Minimum number of members + 1){\displaystyle {\mbox{Harmonic mean}}={\frac {\mbox{2 x Minimum number of members x (Minimum number of members + 1)}}{\mbox{Minimum number of members + (Minimum number of members + 1)}}}}
QuotientMinimum number
of members
Harmonic meanSeat Entitlement
1 to 1.333211.33331
1.3333 to 22
2 to 2.3922.40002
2.40 to 33

Under these new rules adopted in December 2020, the Northern Territory, with a quota of 1.4332, will retain two seats at the2022 Australian federal election.[19][24] It would have lost one of these seats under the AEC determination made in July 2020.[25]

The entitlement calculation applies to every territory of Australia except Jervis Bay Territory, which is taken to be part of the Australian Capital Territory. If the territory of Norfolk Island is not entitled to a seat, its population is added to the Australian Capital Territory for an adjusted calculation of the latter's quotient. Similarly, if either or both the territories of Christmas Island and Coco (Keeling) Islands is not entitled to a seat, the island's (or both islands') population is added to the Northern Territory for an adjusted calculation of the latter's quotient.[16] As of 2024[update], Norfolk Island is part of the Australian Capital Territory'sDivision of Bean, while Christmas Island and Coco (Keeling) Islands are part of the Northern Territory'sDivision of Lingiari.

Apportionments

[edit]

2023 apportionment

[edit]

The latest apportionment determination was made in July 2023. Following its timeline, the AEC on 27 July 2023 announced an apportionment determination based on the population figures for December 2022. The determination resulted in a reduction of one seat in New South Wales to 46, a reduction of one seat in Victoria to 38 and an increase of one seat in Western Australia to 16. The total number of seats in the House of Representatives will decrease from 151 to 150 at the2025 Australian federal election.[26]

State or territoryPopulation
December 2022
('000)[27]
SeatsChange
New South Wales8,238.846Decrease 1
Victoria6,704.238Decrease 1
Queensland5,378.230Steady
Western Australia2,825.116Increase 1
South Australia1,834.210Steady
Tasmania571.55Steady
State total25,552.4145Decrease 1
Australian Capital Territory461.13Steady
Northern Territory250.12Steady
Other4.8-
Total26,268.5150Decrease 1

2020 apportionment

[edit]

On 18 June 2020, the Bureau of Statistics had provided the AEC with population figures for December 2019. In the 2020 apportionment, Western Australia lost a seat to 15 seats and Victoria gained a seat to 39. Under the determination, the Northern Territory would have lost one of its two seats.[25] However, an amendment in December 2020 changed the method for determining the apportionment for the territories, which had the effect of reversing the loss of the seat for the Northern Territory.[19] The number of seats by States in the House of Representatives arising from the 2020 determination, with the change in law relating to the territories, were as follows:

State or territoryPopulation
June 2020
('000)[28]
SeatsChange
New South Wales8,164.147Steady
Victoria6,694.939Increase 1
Queensland5,174.430Steady
Western Australia2,661.915Decrease 1
South Australia1,769.310Steady
Tasmania540.65Steady
State total25,005.2146Steady
Australian Capital Territory431.13Steady
Northern Territory246.02Steady
Other4.7-
Total25,687.0151Steady

The population quota is 173,647 (25,005,200 divided by 144). The resulting redistributions must take place by July 2021[29] for them to be in place in time for the2022 federal election, due by May 2022.

2017 apportionment

[edit]

The first sitting of the House of Representatives following theJuly 2016 election took place on 31 August 2016,[17] and the three-year term was scheduled to expire on 29 August 2019. Following its timeline, the AEC on 31 August 2017 announced an apportionment determination following the completion of processing of the 2016 census. The determination resulted in a reduction of one seat in South Australia to 10, an increase of one seat in Victoria to 38 and an additional seat in the ACT to 3. The total number of seats in the House of Representatives increased from 150 to 151 at the2019 federal election.[17][30] The number of seats by States in the House of Representatives arising from the 2017 determination were as follows:

State or territorySeatsChange
New South Wales47Steady
Victoria38Increase 1
Queensland30Steady
Western Australia16Steady
South Australia10Decrease 1
Tasmania5Steady
Australian Capital Territory3Increase 1
Northern Territory2Steady
Total151Increase 1

A draft redistribution in Victoria was released on 6 April 2018, and the final distribution was released on 12 July.[31][32] There were also three scheduled redistributions of electoral boundaries, as seven years had elapsed since the last time these boundaries were reviewed.

2014 apportionment

[edit]

On 13 November 2014, the AEC made an apportionment determination that resulted in Western Australia's entitlement increasing from 15 to 16 seats, and New South Wales's decreasing from 48 to 47 seats.[16] The number of seats by States in the House of Representatives arising from the 2014 determination were as follows:[33]

State or territorySeatsChange
New South Wales47Decrease 1
Victoria37Steady
Queensland30Steady
Western Australia16Increase 1
South Australia11Steady
Tasmania5Steady
Australian Capital Territory2Steady
Northern Territory2Steady
Total150Steady

A redistribution of electoral boundaries in New South Wales and Western Australia was undertaken before the2016 election.[33] The redistribution in New South Wales was announced on 16 October 2015, with the Labor-heldDivision of Hunter proposed to be abolished.[34] TheDivision of Charlton was renamed Hunter to preserve the Hunter name used since federation.[4] This effectively meant that the Division of Charlton was abolished and the Division of Hunter was retained.[35] A redistribution also occurred in the Australian Capital Territory, as seven years had elapsed since the last time the ACT's boundaries were reviewed.[36]

Historical entitlements

[edit]

The historical apportionment entitlement of seats for the various states and territories is:[37]

State or territory198419861988199119941997199920032005200920112014201720202023
New South Wales51.38251.33951.04350.41750.31450.07550.01449.91849.31748.21847.85447.38647.32047.11446.430
Victoria38.72738.65238.17637.89537.27936.73436.75736.65236.54436.66236.75536.77737.89238.54937.782
Queensland23.76723.88124.40325.14926.17627.13827.39827.96128.76729.61629.93229.74729.63629.73330.309
Western Australia13.10813.20013.70614.13614.06114.25414.51714.50514.60814.97115.24716.20915.58215.29615.921
South Australia12.86712.78212.63512.45112.22611.96511.64611.41511.22911.08610.86010.63010.41910.19610.337
Tasmania4.1504.1464.0383.9513.9443.8293.6683.5493.5343.4483.3513.2523.1503.1123.221
Australian Capital Territory2222.4662.5042.4952.4252.4212.3752.3862.3892.4392.5442.5522.611
Northern Territory1111.3771.4281.4541.5241.4981.5051.5361.5261.5571.5021.4331.423
Total148148148147148148150149150150150150151151150

The entitlements of the external territories are less than 0.05 and are not shown in the table. Therefore, these territories are not entitled to any seats. The apportionment entitlements shown for Australian Capital Territory and Northern Territory have accounted for the populations of Norfolk Island, Christmas Island and Coco (Keeling) Islands.

Historical apportionments

[edit]

The historical apportionment of seats for the various states and territories is:[38][39]

State or territory'01'03'06'13'22'34'37'49'55'68'69'74'77'80'84'89'92'94'97'99'00'03'06'09'11'16'18'21'24
New South Wales26272847464543515049484746
Victoria23222120333433393837383938
Queensland910181924252627282930
Western Australia5891011131415161516
South Australia761011121113121110
Tasmania5
Australian Capital TerritoryN/A12323
Northern TerritoryN/A12
Total7574121122124125127124125148147148150151150

Recent redistributions

[edit]

Australian Capital Territory

[edit]

The most recent redistribution of federal electoral divisions in the Australian Capital Territory commenced on 4 September 2017, due to changes in the territory's representation entitlement. The AEC released a proposed redistribution on 6 April 2018, and the final determination on 13 July 2018.[40] The redistribution resulted in the creation of a third ACT electoral division namedBean (notionally fairly safe Labor), after historianCharles Bean.[41][42]

The next scheduled redistribution began on 12 August 2025, roughly seven years after the previous redistribution.[43]

New South Wales

[edit]

New South Wales underwent a redistribution on 25 February 2016, before theMay 2016 federal election.[44]

Due to another change in the state's representation entitlement, New South Wales underwent a redistribution in 2024 which would abolish a seat and reducing the entitlement to 46. If there had been no change in entitlement, the state would still have undergone a scheduled redistribution anyway (seven years since the previous redistribution). In the draft redistribution announced on 14 June 2024, the seat ofNorth Sydney was proposed to be abolished.[45] The redistribution was formalised and gazetted on 10 October 2024.[46]

Northern Territory

[edit]

On 7 December 2016, the Electoral Commission for the Northern Territory announced the results of its deliberations into the boundaries ofLingiari andSolomon, the two federal electoral divisions in the Northern Territory. New boundaries gazetted from 7 February 2017 saw the remainder of theLitchfield Municipality and parts ofPalmerston (the suburbs ofFarrar,Johnston,Mitchell,Zuccoli and part ofYarrawonga) transferred from Solomon to Lingiari.[47]

The following scheduled redistribution began on 22 February 2024.[48] The number of seats for the Northern Territory (two seats) remained unchanged. The redistribution was formalised and gazetted on 4 March 2025.[49] The outer suburbs of Palmerston that had been transferred from Solomon to Lingiari in 2017 were transferred back to Solomon. This also meant that the entirety ofCity of Palmerston was within Solomon.

Queensland

[edit]

A scheduled redistribution began in Queensland on 6 January 2017, and was finalised on 27 March 2018. Changes were made to the boundaries of 18 of Queensland's 30 electoral divisions, and no division names were changed.[50]

The next scheduled redistribution was supposed to begin within 30 days from 27 March 2025, seven years after the previous redistribution. However, under Section 59(3) of theCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918, as the date fell within the last 12 months of the47th Parliament (due to expire 25 July 2025), the redistribution was deferred to after the2025 election. It would have commenced within 30 days after the start of the 48th Parliament (22 July 2025) in accordance withCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918. In August 2025, Electoral Commission deemed that the seat entitlement for Queensland might change. In accordance with Section 59(5) of the act, the redistribution was further deferred to July-August 2026 when the final seat entitlement could be confirmed.[43][51]

South Australia

[edit]

The redistribution in South Australia commenced on 4 September 2017. The proposed redistribution report was released on 13 April 2018, and the final determination on 20 July 2018. The AEC abolished the division ofPort Adelaide.[52] The hybrid urban-rural seat ofWakefield became the entirely urban seat ofSpence, afterCatherine Helen Spence.[53][54] The more rural portions of Wakefield transferred to Grey and Barker.[55]

Port Adelaide was abolished due to population changes since the state's last redistribution in 2011. Although South Australia's population was still increasing, faster increases in other states saw a reduction in South Australia's representation from 11 to 10 seats. This was the third time South Australia lost a seat since the 1984 enlargement of the parliament, withHawker abolished in 1993 andBonython in 2004.[56][57][58]

The next scheduled redistribution began on 12 August 2025, roughly seven years after the previous redistribution.[43]

Tasmania

[edit]

A scheduled redistribution began in Tasmania on 1 September 2016.[59] The determinations were announced on 27 September 2017, involved boundary changes, and theDivision of Denison was renamed theDivision of Clark.[60] Final determination was on 14 November 2017.

The next scheduled redistribution was supposed to begin within 30 days from 14 November 2024, seven years after the previous redistribution. However, under Section 59 of theCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918, as the date fell within the last 12 months of the47th Parliament (due to expire 25 July 2025), the redistribution was deferred to after the2025 election. It would commence within 30 days after the start of the 48th Parliament (22 July 2025), in accordance withCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918.[61] The redistribution eventually began on 12 August 2025.[43]

Western Australia

[edit]

A redistribution of federal election divisions in Western Australia was undertaken in 2020, due to changes in the state's representation entitlement. The determinations were made on 2 August 2021, and abolished theDivision of Stirling.

Due to changes in the state's representation entitlement, Western Australia gained a seat in the 2024 redistribution. In the draft redistribution announced on 31 May 2024, the new seat was proposed to be named Bullwinkel.[62] The redistribution was formalised and gazetted on 24 September 2024.[63]

Victoria

[edit]

A redistribution of federal electoral divisions in Victoria commenced on 4 September 2017, due to changes in the state's representation entitlement. The determinations were made on 13 July 2018, and created a 38th electoral division namedFraser (notionally a safe Labor).[64]

Several divisions were also renamed: Batman toCooper (afterWilliam Cooper), McMillan toMonash (afterSir John Monash), Melbourne Ports toMacnamara (afterDame Jean Macnamara) and Murray to Nicholls (afterSir Douglas andLady Nicholls). A proposal to rename Corangamite to Cox (after swimming instructor May Cox) did not proceed.[65] The Coalition notionally lost the seat ofDunkley andCorangamite to Labor in the redistribution.[66]

Another redistribution in Victoria was finalised and gazetted on 26 July 2021, creating a 39th electoral division namedDivision of Hawke (notionally a safe Labor). None of the existing 38 divisions were notionally lost in the redistribution.[67]

Due to another change in the state's representation entitlement, Victoria underwent a third consecutive redistribution in 2024 which would abolish a seat and returning the entitlement to 38 seats. In the draft redistribution announced on 31 May 2024, the seat ofHiggins was proposed to be abolished.[68] The redistribution was formalised and gazetted on 17 October 2024.[69]

Redistribution process

[edit]

A redistribution is undertaken on a State-by-State basis. After the redistribution process commences, a Redistribution Committee — consisting of theElectoral Commissioner, the Australian Electoral Officer for the State concerned (in the ACT, the senior DivisionalReturning officer), the StateSurveyor General and the StateAuditor General — is formed. The Electoral Commissioner invitespublic suggestions on the redistribution which must be lodged within 30 days. A further period of 14 days is allowed for comments on the suggestions lodged. The Redistribution Committee then divides the State or Territory into divisions and publishes its proposed redistribution. A period of 28 days is allowed after publication of the proposed redistribution for written objections. A further period of 14 days is provided for comments on the objections lodged. These objections are considered by an augmented Electoral Commission — consisting of the four members of the Redistribution Committee and the two part-time members of the Electoral Commission.

At the time of the redistribution the number of electors in the divisions may vary up to 10% from the 'quota' or average divisional figure but at a point 3.5 years after the expected completion of the redistribution, the figures should not vary from the average projected quota by more or less than 3.5%. Thus the most rapidly growing divisions are generally started with enrolments below the quota while those that are losing population are started above the quota.

Neither the Government nor the Parliament can reject or amend the final determination of the augmented Electoral Commission.

Management

[edit]
See also:Australian electoral system § Gerrymandering and malapportionment

Boundaries for theAustralian House of Representatives and for the six state and two territorial legislatures are drawn up by independent authorities, at the federal level by theAustralian Electoral Commission (AEC) and in the states and territories by their equivalent bodies. Politicians have no influence over the process, although they, along with any other citizen or organisation, can make submissions to the independent authorities suggesting changes.

There is significantly less political interference in the redistribution process than iscommon in the United States. In 1978, federal Cabinet ministerReg Withers was forced to resign for suggesting to another minister that the name of a federal electorate be changed to suit a political ally.[70]

There have been examples ofmalapportionment of federal and state electoral districts in the past, often resulting in rural constituencies containing far fewer voters than urban ones and maintaining in power those parties that have rural support despite polling fewer popular votes. Past malapportionments inQueensland,Western Australia and the 'Playmander' inSouth Australia were notorious examples of the differences between urban and rural constituency sizes than their population would merit. The Playmander distorted electoral boundaries and policies that kept theLiberal and Country League in power for 32 years from 1936 to 1968.[71] In extreme cases, rural areas had four times the voting value of metropolitan areas. Supporters of such arrangements claimed Australia's urban population dominates the countryside and that these practices gave fair representation to country people.[citation needed]

Naming of divisions

[edit]

The redistribution, creation and abolition of divisions is the responsibility of the AEC. When new divisions are created, the AEC will select a name. Most divisions are named in honour of prominent historical people, such as former politicians (oftenPrime Ministers), explorers, artists and engineers, and rarely for geographic places.

Some of the criteria the AEC uses when naming new divisions are:[72]

  • divisions are namedafter deceased Australians who have rendered outstanding service to their country, with consideration given to former Prime Ministers
  • theoriginal names of Divisions proclaimed atFederation in1901 are to be retained where possible
  • geographical place names are to be avoided
  • Aboriginal names can be used as appropriate
  • names that duplicate names of state electoral districts are not to be used.

Divisions with Indigenous names andthe remaining 34 of the 65 original divisions (i.e those that were contested at the1901 federal election, note that 32 of the 65 have since been abolished) should not be renamed or abolished.[72]

Geographical locations

[edit]

There are several divisions named after geographical locations, including bodies of water, islands, settlements. For example, the seat ofWerriwa inWestern Sydney is named afterLake George (which is not located in the seat of Werriwa), which is known asWeereewa in theNgunnawal language.

Individuals

[edit]

Several deceased individuals have been honoured with divisions named after them, including severalIndigenous Australians.

Every deceased former Prime Minister had a division named after them.[73] TheDivision of Cook inSydney was originally only named after CaptainJames Cook, and not former Prime MinisterSir Joseph Cook. However, in 2024, the namesake was altered to be joint between both men, to give recognition to Joseph Cook and have a division named after him.[74]

There are seven former Prime Ministers who are still alive (Paul Keating,John Howard,Kevin Rudd,Julia Gillard,Tony Abbott,Malcolm Turnbull andScott Morrison), who therefore do not have divisions named after them as they are still alive. However, divisions named after Prime Ministers are not necessarily divisions that have been renamed, generally a new division is created instead, sometimes even in a different city or region (e.gMalcolm Fraser served as the member forWannon in westernVictoria, but theDivision of Fraser in westernMelbourne).[73] While it is unlikely for any former Prime Minister to have their exact division they served whilst in office renamed in honour of them (as opposed to creating a new division), for some divisions it is impossible due to the practice of keeping the names of the original divisions and those of divisions with Indigenous names. For example, theBennelong (the seat John Howard held as Prime Minister) andWarringah (the seat Tony Abbott held as Prime Minister) will not be renamed "Howard" and "Abbott", respectively due to these names being Indigenous, whileWentworth (the seat Malcolm Turnbull held as Prime Minister) will not be renamed "Turnbull" due to Wentworth being one of the 34 remaining original divisions created.[73]

State electoral districts

[edit]

The AEC guidelines explicitly prohibit the use of names that are also used for state electoral districts. However, due to the fact that the names of the original divisions should remain the same, there are still some divisions that share the names of state electoral districts because they are among the original divisions, as well as some that were created after 1901 but before this guideline was implemented. Thus, the following divisions share the same name as a state electoral district (Tasmanian electorates share the same names on both levels of politics and are thus not included as pairs of examples):

Federal divisionState districtOriginal division?
NameStateNameState
AdelaideSAAdelaideSANo
BassTASBassVICNo
CookNSWCookQLDNo
CooperVICCooperQLDNo
FlindersVICFlindersSAYes
FremantleWAFremantleWAYes
MelbourneVICMelbourneVICYes
NewcastleNSWNewcastleNSWYes
ParramattaNSWParramattaNSWYes
PerthWAPerthWAYes
RichmondNSWRichmondVICYes
SydneyNSWSydneyNSWNo

Notional seat status

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After a redistribution is carried out in a state or territory, the AEC calculates "notional" margins for the redistributed divisions by modelling the outcome of the previous election as if the new boundaries had been in place. These notional margins are used as the baseline for theelectoral swings calculated and published in the AEC's virtual tally room at the following election.[75] In some cases, the change in electoral boundaries can see the party which notionally holds the seat differ from the party which won it at the election.[76]

References

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  1. ^AEC - Redistribution overview
  2. ^"Advertising".The Mercury. Hobart, Tasmania. 27 March 1886. p. 4. Retrieved2 July 2013 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^Commonwealth Electoral Act (No. 2) 1973, s.4
  4. ^abMuller, Damon (25 August 2022)."The process of federal redistributions: a quick guide". Parliament of Australia. Retrieved1 December 2024.
  5. ^abcdCommonwealth Electoral Act 1918, s.59
  6. ^ab"Deferral of federal electoral redistribution for the ACT". Australian Electoral Commission. 6 December 2013. Retrieved2 December 2014.
  7. ^"Determination of membership entitlement to the House of Representatives". Australian Electoral Commission. 13 November 2014. Retrieved2 December 2014.
  8. ^"Commencement of the redistribution of federal electoral boundaries in the ACT". Australian Electoral Commission. 1 December 2014. Retrieved2 December 2014.
  9. ^Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918, s.58
  10. ^"Number of Electors Enrolled in Each Division as at 31 October 2024".Federal Register of Legislation. 15 November 2024. Retrieved8 December 2024.
  11. ^"AEC redirection page".
  12. ^Representation Act 1983
  13. ^Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918, Section 46: Ascertainment of numbers of people of Commonwealth, States and Territories
  14. ^Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918, s.48
  15. ^Australian Electoral Commission.Research Report 4 – Australian Federal Redistributions 1901–2003. Accessed 5 May 2008.
  16. ^abcCalculating representation entitlements of states and territories
  17. ^abcDetermination of membership entitlement to the House of Representatives
  18. ^abGreen, Antony (July 2020)."Fair Representation for the Territories - A Submission to the Joint Standing Committee of Electoral Matters".Parliament of Australia. Retrieved11 December 2020.
  19. ^abc"NT to keep two federal House of Representative seats at next election after legislation passes Parliament".ABC News. 9 December 2020.
  20. ^"'A shame job': Bill to safeguard two federal members for the NT a step closer to reality".www.abc.net.au. 3 December 2020. Retrieved9 December 2020.
  21. ^Green, Antony (9 June 2020)."2020 Apportionment of Seats: Part 2 – Allocating to the Territories".Antony Green's Election Blog. Retrieved11 December 2020.
  22. ^"Electoral Amendment (Territory Representation) Bill 2020".Parliament of Australia. Retrieved11 December 2020.
  23. ^"Two Northern Territory seats to again be contested at the next federal election". Australian Electoral Commission. 10 December 2020. Retrieved19 January 2021.
  24. ^Muller, Damon (2 December 2020)."Electoral Amendment (Territory Representation) Bill 2020". Parliament of Australia. Retrieved11 December 2020.
  25. ^abReshuffle leaves NT with one seat in federal parliament's lower house
  26. ^"House of Representatives to return to 150 members". Australian Electoral Commission. 27 July 2023. Retrieved18 October 2023.
  27. ^Notification of Determination – Section 49 Certificate – Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 – 2023
  28. ^States and territories Annual population change
  29. ^"Victorians have chance to shape new federal electorates".
  30. ^"Determination of membership entitlement to the House of Representatives".aec.gov.au. 31 August 2017.
  31. ^Victorian federal redistribution
  32. ^"Labor could be sitting pretty after planned electoral boundary changes".The Age. 6 April 2018.Archived from the original on 10 August 2022.
  33. ^abRedistributions
  34. ^The Age, 16 October 2015:Labor's Joel Fitzgibbon loses his seat in redistribution by Australian Electoral Commission
  35. ^"Federal Election 2016 - Electorate: Hunter".ABC News. 27 July 2016. Retrieved6 January 2021.
  36. ^"Determination of membership entitlement to the House of Representatives". Australian Electoral Commission. 13 November 2014. Retrieved14 November 2014.
  37. ^"State/territory entitlement to electoral divisions".Australian Electoral Commission.
  38. ^"Australian Federal Redistributions 1901 -2003"(PDF).
  39. ^"Previous redistributions".Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved12 July 2020.
  40. ^"Step 6 – announcement of names and boundaries of federal electoral divisions in the Australian Capital Territory". Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved6 July 2018.
  41. ^"Proposed federal electoral divisions for ACT released".Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved6 April 2018.
  42. ^"2017-18 Federal Redistribution - Australian Capital Territory".ABC Elections. 20 June 2018.
  43. ^abcd"Redistributions begin in South Australia, Tasmania and the ACT". Australian Electoral Commission. 12 August 2025. Retrieved18 August 2025.
  44. ^"Previous redistributions".Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved20 January 2021.
  45. ^"Proposed federal electoral divisions for New South Wales released". Australian Electoral Commission. 14 June 2024. Retrieved14 June 2024.
  46. ^"Federal electoral divisions in New South Wales formalised". Australian Electoral Commission. 10 October 2024. Retrieved1 December 2024.
  47. ^"Media release: Augmented Electoral Commission decides names and boundaries of federal electoral divisions in the Northern Territory". Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved7 December 2016.
  48. ^"Commencement of the redistribution of federal electoral divisions in the Northern Territory". Australian Electoral Commission. 22 February 2024. Retrieved3 June 2024.
  49. ^"Federal electoral divisions in the Northern Territory formalised". Australian Electoral Commission. 4 March 2025. Retrieved6 March 2025.
  50. ^"Queensland redistribution indicative timetable". Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved31 August 2017.
  51. ^"Queensland redistribution Deferral of redistribution".Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved18 August 2025.
  52. ^"Electoral Commission scraps seat of Port Adelaide held by Labor MP Mark Butler".ABC News. 25 June 2018.
  53. ^"Proposed federal electoral divisions for South Australia released". Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved13 April 2018.
  54. ^"2017-18 Federal Redistribution - South Australia".ABC Elections. 26 June 2018.
  55. ^"Federal electoral divisions in South Australia formalised".Australian Electoral Commission. 20 July 2018. Retrieved28 July 2018.
  56. ^"Electoral redistributions during the 45th Parliament: APH Statistics and Mapping". Aph.gov.au. 25 August 2016. Retrieved19 March 2018.
  57. ^"South Australia to potentially lose federal seat under future redistribution". Abc.net.au. 25 August 2016. Retrieved19 March 2018.
  58. ^"South Australia set to be reduced to 10 federal electorates". The Advertiser. 25 August 2016. Retrieved19 March 2018.
  59. ^"Tasmanian redistribution indicative timetable". Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved31 August 2017.
  60. ^"Names and boundaries of federal electoral divisions in Tasmania decided". Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved27 September 2017.
  61. ^"Tasmanian redistribution Deferral of redistribution".Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved26 November 2024.
  62. ^"Proposed federal electoral divisions for Western Australia released". Australian Electoral Commission. 31 May 2024. Retrieved3 June 2024.
  63. ^"Federal electoral divisions in Western Australia formalised". Australian Electoral Commission. 24 September 2024. Retrieved1 December 2024.
  64. ^"2017-18 Federal Redistributions - Victoria".ABC Elections. 20 June 2018.
  65. ^"Names and boundaries of federal electoral divisions in Victoria decided".Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved20 June 2018.
  66. ^Green, Antony."2017–18 Federal Redistributions".ABC Elections. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved25 August 2018.
  67. ^Green, Antony (26 July 2021)."2021 Federal Redistribution – Boundaries Finalised for Victoria". Antony Green's Election. Retrieved26 July 2021.
  68. ^"Proposed federal electoral divisions for Victoria released". Australian Electoral Commission. 31 May 2024. Retrieved3 June 2024.
  69. ^"Federal electoral divisions in Victoria formalised". Australian Electoral Commission. 17 October 2024. Retrieved1 December 2024.
  70. ^National Archives of Australia: Background to the 1978 Cabinet records. Retrieved 19 November 2014
  71. ^Labor and Liberal Parties, SA, Dean Jaensch, "A 2:1 ratio of enrolments in favour of the rural areas was in force from 1936."
  72. ^abAustralian Electoral Commission.Guideline for Naming Divisions. Updated 20 July 2011. Accessed 1 February 2012.
  73. ^abc"Future shock: The electorates of Abbott, and Howard, and Rudd, and Turnbull". 25 December 2021.
  74. ^"Redistribution of New South Wales into electoral divisions"(PDF). Australian Electoral Commission. October 2024. Retrieved1 December 2024.
  75. ^"National seat status". Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved13 May 2019.
  76. ^Green, Antony."2017–18 Federal Redistributions".ABC Elections. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved13 May 2019.

External links

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