BENTLEIGH (Margin: 6.20%)
ALP | LIB | Swing | 2006 votes | |||
Ordinary | 12,650 | 50.11% | 12,595 | 49.89% | 7.12% | 27,106 |
Postal | 1,491 | 45.28% | 1,802 | 54.72% | 4.45% | 2,785 |
Early | 1,857 | 47.04% | 2,091 | 52.96% | 3.25% | 2,223 |
Marked | ||||||
Provisional | 109 | 60.22% | 72 | 39.78% | 20.73% | 21 |
Absent | 1,062 | 50.26% | 1,051 | 49.74% | 7.68% | 1,643 |
TOTAL | 17,169 | 49.36% | 17,611 | 50.64% | 6.84% | 33,778 |
ELTHAM (Margin: 6.41%)
ALP | LIB | Swing | 2006 votes | |||
Ordinary | 12,382 | 50.83% | 11,980 | 49.17% | 5.94% | 27,530 |
Postal | 1,262 | 46.59% | 1,447 | 53.41% | 2.87% | 2,497 |
Early | 3,209 | 50.45% | 3,152 | 49.55% | 6.01% | 3,266 |
Marked | ||||||
Provisional | 96 | 51.89% | 89 | 48.11% | 14.78% | 6 |
Absent | 1,234 | 56.68% | 943 | 43.32% | 4.05% | 1,775 |
TOTAL | 18,183 | 50.80% | 17,611 | 49.20% | 5.61% | 35,074 |
BALLARAT EAST (Margin: 6.81%)
ALP | LIB | Swing | 2006 votes | |||
Ordinary | 13,288 | 51.49% | 12,521 | 48.51% | 5.35% | 26,866 |
Postal | 1,331 | 48.84% | 1,394 | 51.16% | 3.23% | 2,026 |
Early | 2,315 | 48.55% | 2,453 | 51.45% | 5.28% | 2,268 |
Marked | ||||||
Provisional | 158 | 54.30% | 133 | 45.70% | 2.51% | 0 |
Absent | 1,576 | 57.94% | 1,144 | 42.06% | 5.88% | 2,236 |
TOTAL | 18,668 | 51.41% | 17,645 | 48.59% | 5.40% | 33,396 |
MACEDON (Margin: 8.17%)
ALP | LIB | Swing | 2006 votes | |||
Ordinary | 15,671 | 51.21% | 14,930 | 48.79% | 7.48% | 28,429 |
Postal | 1,505 | 48.44% | 1,602 | 51.56% | 6.47% | 2,455 |
Early | 3,351 | 50.04% | 3,346 | 49.96% | 2.43% | 6,245 |
Marked | ||||||
Provisional | 139 | 62.61% | 83 | 37.39% | -12.61% | 16 |
Absent | 1,315 | 57.73% | 963 | 42.27% | 3.27% | 1,910 |
TOTAL | 21,981 | 51.23% | 20,924 | 48.77% | 6.94% | 39,055 |
LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL
ALP | LIB | NAT | GRN | OTH | IN DOUBT | |
Eastern Metro | 2 | 3 | ||||
Northern Metro | 2 (-1) | 2 (+1) | 1 | |||
South-Eastern Metro | 3 | 2 | ||||
Southern Metro | 1 (-1) | 3 (+1) | 1 | |||
Western Metro | 2 (-1) | 2 (+1) | 1 | |||
Eastern Victoria | 2 | 2 | 1 | |||
Northern Victoria | 2 | 2 | 1 | |||
Western Victoria | 2 | 2 | 1 (+1) | 0 (-1) | ||
TOTAL | 16 | 18 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
Tuesday, December 14
The button was pushed today on the count for the Legislative Council, securing the Coalition its 21 seats out of 40 and wrapping up the election count as a whole. Key to the Coalition triumph was Liberal candidate Craig Ondarchie’s victory in Northern Metropolitan from the second position on his party’s ticket, producing a result of two Labor, two Liberal and one Greens. His win came at the expense of Stephen Mayne, who in the event finished fairly solidly behind the second Greens candidate (2.6 per cent to 1.6 per cent) at a point where he had hoped to stay in contention by absorbing her preferences, and the Sex Party, who with 7.4 per cent failed to stay ahead of third Labor candidate Nathan Murphy on 9.1 per cent at the second last count. At that point the second Ondarchie was far enough ahead of Murphy that there was no prospect of preferences closing the gap, with the former sneaking over a quota on preferences from Mayne. In Western Metropolitan, below-the-line votes made the difference by heavily favouring the Greens – largely because below-the-lines for right-wing minor parties who had put Labor ahead of the Greens on their preference ticket tended to exhaust. The rate of exhaustion was such that Colleen Hartland won election with slightly under a quota, finishing on 16.6 per cent to Labor candidate Bob Smith on 16.2 per cent.
Saturday, December 11
As you may have noticed I’ve been less than vigilant in following the count, but those with an interest will be aware that Stephen Mayne continued to fade in late counting in terms that will almost certainly deliver the final Northern Metropolitan seat to the Liberals, securing the Coalition their upper house majority. The only remaining point of curiosity is whether Colleen Hartland of the Greens can secure re-election in Western Metropolitan, thereby achieving a status quo result for a party that had hoped for so much better. Antony Green reports all will be revealed when the button is finally pushed on Tuesday. Hopefully there will be no repeat of the 2006 error in which the Democratic Labor Party was wrongly credited with a second seat.
Monday, December 6
Stopped paying attention there for a while after the VEC started re-checking and took their existing results offline. Antony Green offers a thorough update, noting that recounting in Northern Metropolitan is proceeding slowly due to intensive scrutineering of the result that could deliver the Coalition an upper house majority. In Western Metropolitan, the tide seems to be favouring the Greens’ Colleen Hartland, who might yet retain her seat at the expense of Labor’s number three. UPDATE: Kevin Bonham in comments still rates her the underdog.
Wednesday, December 1
Stephen Mayne has discussed his prospects at length in his email newsletter, noting he has two hurdles to clear: first to stay ahead of the Greens at what appears as count 8 in the ABC’s projection, where he is currently on 1.54 per cent to the Greens’ 1.22 per cent, and then for the below-the-line count to not upset his applecart by putting him behind Liberal and Labor at the second last count. Mayne rates himself only a 50-50 chance of clearing the first hurdle as he expects the Greens to surge as absent votes are added. I’m not sure what was added today, but the addition has seen the Greens lose ground – possibly too much for Mayne, as Kevin Bonham argues in comments, because it will mean fewer of their preferences for him if he can stay ahead. Bonham reckons Mayne will need to significantly outperform Labor in preferences from the 3170 below-the-line votes which are recorded as going to him on the ABC projection, which treats all votes as above-the-lines. Bonham, who has learned a thing or two about preference behaviour from analysis of Hare-Clark elections in his home jurisdiction of Tasmania, reckons this unlikely, and that the most probable result would indeed be a twenty-first seat for the Coalition.
In the lower house, addition of absent and other votes have seen Labor pull further ahead in Eltham and Ballarat East, to 546 and 510 votes respectively, which puts these seats and the final result beyond doubt: the Liberals have won 35 seats and the Nationals 10, with Labor on 43. I will continue updating my tables as new figures come in, but I won’t be offering any further commentary on the lower house unless something unusually interesting happens.
Tuesday, November 30
Long past time I had something to say about the upper house, with the Coalition on the precipice of majorities in both houses. The Liberals have gained a seat from Labor in Southern Metropolitan and the Nationals have gained the DLP’s seat in Western Victoria. They also look likely to win seats from the Greens in Western Metropolitan and to hold off a challenge from the Country Alliance in Northern Victoria, where their second seat had been under threat. That puts the Coalition on 18 seats out of 40 with a likely extra two to achieve a blocking majority, and the chance of getting over the line for an absolute majority of 21. The decisive factor in Northern Metropolitan will be the second last count, at which the Labor number three, Liberal number two and Stephen Mayne appear to be at almost level pegging. Mayne will win the seat if he finishes ahead of either or both, and the current ABC projection has him finishing ahead of Labor after soaking up the Greens’ surplus and an eclectic range of preferences from the Sex Party, DLP and Family First. Should he finish behind the seat will almost certainly go to the Liberals, although Labor remain at least a mathematical possibility.
In continuing lower counting, Labor’s lead has more than doubled in Ballarat East, from 166 to 343, with the addition of 657 more postals and the first 766 absents. It was the latter which made the difference, breaking 60-40 their way – not unpredictably given that most would be sourced from town voters who cast their ballots in Ballarat West. Eltham too has become slightly firmer for Labor with 795 more pre-polls gaining them a handy 53 votes, but losses on rechecking have pared back the overall improvement in their lead, which goes from 245 to 267. Bentleigh and Macedon have drifted out of the doubtful column. Rechecking and a highly unfavourable batch of 819 absent votes has further increased the Liberal lead in Bentleigh from 460 to 559. In Macedon, the addition of 419 postal votes has cut Labor’s lead from 498 to 419, but it’s probably too little too late.
Monday, November 29
9pm. Another 605 postals in Bentleigh have broken 321-284 the Liberals’ way, increasing their lead from 423 to 460. In Eltham the addition of 5730 pre-polls and 600 more postals has increased Labor’s lead from 225 to 245. I’m not sure on what basis Labor sources quoted in the ABC yesterday were expecting to lose this seat – I would rate them better than even. Another 416 postal votes have been added in Ballarat East and have broken perfectly evenly, with Labor continuing to lead by 166.
4.30pm. Labor has had a disappointing result from 2268 pre-polls in Ballarat East which have cut their lead from 388 to 166. The addition of 5111 pre-polls from Macedon has also cut their lead from 719 to 498. However, absent votes remain to be added, and in both cases they favoured Labor heavily in 2006.
Sunday, November 28
11pm. Bob Katter’s Hat in comments relates that according to an ABC report, “Labor sources expect to lose Eltham but are ‘hopeful’ on Macedon”.
6.41pm. If there are the same number of absent votes as last time, and if anything there are likely to be fewer, they would need to defy every trend going by swinging to Labor by 5 per cent to overturn the Liberals’ lead.
6.34pm. The VEC site has now updated, and it has the Liberal lead at 15,667 to 15,244. The Herald-Sun’s assertion that only “some postal votes” remain to be counted is at best imprecise, as no absent votes have been added – and there were 1643 of these in 2010. So what we have today is the addition of 3130 pre-poll votes which, as stated in the previous entry, have broken 1670 to 1460 in favour of the Liberals and increased their lead from 213 to 423. The table at the top of the post has now been amended to reflect this. As you can see, the notion that there would be more of these than last time and that they would be relatively favourable to Labor was quite correct, but not nearly to the extent they required. So it’s fair to say that the ABC computer, which has copped some flak over this, was right all along.
6.12pm. Boerwar in comments reports postals have favoured 1670 to 1460 to the Liberals – I’m not sure if this includes or is in addition to those counted last night, which favoured the Liberals 1072 to 1050. An update on the VEC tally room site would be nice.
6.09pm. The Herald-Sun reports that there are now merely “some postal votes” remaining to be counted, so obviously absent votes as well as pre-polls have been counted (although I fail to see how absent votes could have been assembled so quickly from every corner of the state). In any case, a very clear impression emerges that barring counting errors, the Liberal lead of about 400 is insurmountable, ending any doubts about the overall result.
5.45pm. Rod Hagen in comments hears from Twitter that pre-poll counting in Bentleigh is trending against Labor, increasing the Liberal lead from 213 to 430.
5pm. By popular demand, the VEC have announced they will be counting the pre-poll votes from Bentleigh today. In what promises to be the television event of the year, this will apparently be broadcast live on Sky News.
Saturday night
This thread will be used to follow late counting in the Victorian election, which – for those who have just joined us – promises to be a focus of fierce interest due to the possibility of a 44-44 tied parliament if everything falls Labor’s way. For now you’ll have to look elsewhere for a summary of the situation. However, below is a table which will hopefully shed some light on a few important aspects of the situation. Four must-win seats are identified in the table, of which Labor currently leads in three while trailing by 213 votes (0.38 per cent) in Bentleigh. The first row of the table shows two-party results from ordinary votes, thus excluding the postals that were added last night. To give an idea of how the remainder of the count might go, the next five rows show Labor’s two-party results on the various types of vote in 2006. The story goes that a large number of pre-polls might offer salvation here for Labor in Bentleigh, but that would seem very unlikely indeed going on the precedent of last time. However, Labor is doing slightly less poorly on postal votes than last time — their primary vote is only 1.5 per cent lower — so there might be at least something in the idea that votes cast earlier would not have copped the effects of the late swing to the Coalition. The left column shows the percentage of the statewide vote accounted for by each vote type in 2010. The bottom half of the table shows the ordinary vote turnout in each electorate, which as you may have heard was substantially lower than last time.
ALP 2PP | |||||
% | Bentleigh | Eltham | Macedon | Ball. East | |
2010 Ordinary | ? | 50.0% | 50.8% | 51.2% | 50.9% |
2006 Ordinary | 78.0% | 57.2% | 56.8% | 58.7% | 56.8% |
2006 Pre-Poll | 9.0% | 50.3% | 56.5% | 56.2% | 53.8% |
2006 Postal | 6.5% | 49.7% | 49.5% | 54.9% | 52.1% |
2006 Absent | 6.5% | 57.9% | 60.7% | 61.0% | 63.8% |
2006 Declaration | 0.1% | 81.0% | 44.4% | 50.0% | – |
Ordinary votes as percentage of enrolment | |||||
2006 | 75.5% | 74.3% | 69.1% | 73.9% | |
2010 | 68.0% | 64.3% | 67.4% | 66.5% |
Finally, can we please keep this thread specifically for discussion of the count. If you would like to discuss the Victorian election in more general terms, the election night thread is still open below.
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