2011 New South Wales state election

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The 2011 New South Wales state election held on Saturday, 26 March 2011. The 16-year-incumbent Labor Party government led by Premier Kristina Keneally was defeated in a landslide by the LiberalNational Coalition opposition led by Barry O'Farrell.

Labor suffered a two-party swing of 16.4 points, the largest against a sitting government at any level in Australia since World War II. From 50 seats at dissolution, Labor was knocked down to 20 seats—the worst defeat of a sitting government in New South Wales history, and one of the worst of a state government in Australia since federation. The Coalition picked up a 32-seat swing to win a strong majority, with 69 seats–the largest majority government, in terms of percentage of seats controlled, in NSW history. It is only the third time since 1941 that a NSW Labor government has been defeated. It was also notable in that many of Labor's safest seats, such as Newcastle and Parramatta, were won by the Liberal Party on large swings. This election also saw the previous record for largest percentage of seats controlled by the Coalition, which won 74.2 percent of seats (69 out of 93 seats). The previous record for percentage of the legislature controlled was set by Neville Wran's Labor Party in the 1981 election, in which Labor won 69 out of 99 seats (69.7 percent).

New South Wales has compulsory voting, with an optional preferential ballot in single-member seats for the lower house and single transferable vote with optional preferential above-the-line voting in the proportionally represented upper house. The election was conducted by the New South Wales Electoral Commission (NSWEC).

Future premier Dominic Perrottet and future opposition leader Mark Speakman entered parliament at this election.

Background

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File:NSW Election Map pre-2011.png
New South Wales electorates by party before the election
File:NSW Election Map 2011.png
New South Wales electorates by party after the election

The centre-left Labor Party, led by Premier Kristina Keneally, and the centre-right Liberal Party, led by Leader of the Opposition Barry O'Farrell, were the two main parties in New South Wales. In the 2007 state election, of 93 seats total, Labor won 52 seats, the Liberals won 22 seats and the Nationals, led by Andrew Stoner, who are in coalition with the Liberals, won 13 seats. Six seats were retained by independents. Smaller parties which hold no seats in the lower house but achieved significant votes in 2007 include The Greens and the Christian Democratic Party.

On 18 October 2008, four state electorates (Lakemba, Ryde, Cabramatta, Port Macquarie) went to by-elections as a result of the resignation of the Premier, two of his ministers, and an independent who left after winning a federal by-election. The results in Ryde, Cabramatta, and Lakemba showed the largest by-election swing against Labor in its history.[1] The results showed a significant swing towards the Liberal Party with a swing of 22.7 percentage points in former health minister Reba Meagher's seat of Cabramatta, but it was retained by ALP candidate Nick Lalich,[1] and a swing of 13 points against Labor in former premier Morris Iemma's seat of Lakemba, also retained by an ALP candidate, Robert Furolo.[1] Ryde, once a safe Labor seat, with a swing of 23.1 points delivered former deputy premier John Watkins' seat to Victor Dominello. Peter Besseling, the independent candidate, won Port Macquarie, left vacant after the resignation of Nationals-turned-independent member Rob Oakeshott, over the Nationals by a two-party margin of 54.5–45.5%, despite a swing of 23.7 points to the Nationals. On 19 June 2010 a by-election in the electoral district of Penrith[2] was triggered as a result of the resignation of Labor Party MP Karyn Paluzzano, with Liberal candidate Stuart Ayres winning the seat with a two-party-preferred swing of more than 25 points, the biggest swing against an incumbent government in New South Wales history, until the 2013 Miranda by-election which eclipsed it with a 26-point two-party swing against the Liberal/National government.[3]

Key dates

  • Expiry of 54th Parliament: 12am on Friday, 4 March 2011
  • Issue of Writs: 5 March 2011
  • Close of Nominations: 10 March 2011
  • Polling Day: Saturday 26 March 2011
  • Return of the Writs: 30 April 2011[4]
  • Meeting of 55th Parliament: By Monday, 16 May 2011

Campaign

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The Labor Party launched their campaign on 5 February 2011[5] in Liverpool within the electoral district of Macquarie Fields.[6] Premier Keneally launched the Labor Party's campaign slogan "Protecting jobs – Supporting families". In attendance for the launch were former Prime Minister Bob Hawke and former Premiers Wran and Carr.

The Liberal and Nationals Coalition launched their campaign on 20 February 2011 at the Joan Sutherland Performing Arts Centre in Penrith within the electoral district of Penrith with the slogan: "Real Change for NSW". In attendance for the launch were both Liberal and Nationals Leaders O'Farrell and Stoner as well as federal Liberal Party leader Tony Abbott, former Liberal Premiers and Leaders Greiner, Fahey, and Chikarovski.[7]

The Coalition had been leading in opinion polling for almost three years, and were unbackable favourites throughout the campaign to win the election. The final Newspoll had support for Labor at an all-time low with 23 percent of the primary vote and 35.9 percent of the two-party vote. Bookmakers were paying $1.01 for a Coalition win with Labor getting as much as $36 and one agency even paid out the winnings and declared the winner a week earlier.[8] At one point, Labor was widely predicted to win as few as 13 seats, seven less than the actual result.[9] According to several pollsters, Labor was in danger of losing several seats where it had not been seriously threatened in decades, as well as several that it had held for a century or more. Indeed, there were concerns that Labor would not win enough seats to form a credible shadow cabinet.

Resulting parliament

The Liberal/National Coalition won the largest proportional number of seats in NSW state history with 69 of 93 seats in the lower house (74.2 percent of the chamber)—in contrast, Labor won 69 of 99 seats (69.7 percent of the chamber) at Neville Wran's second "Wranslide" in 1981 election. Labor won 20 seats, the party's smallest presence in Parliament in over a century, and the worst defeat that a sitting government in NSW has ever suffered. Many prominent Labor MPs and ministers lost their seats including Verity Firth, David Borger, Matt Brown, Jodi McKay, Virginia Judge, Phil Costa and Kevin Greene.[10] In the process, the Coalition took dozens of seats in areas considered Labor heartland, such as western Sydney and the Upper Hunter—some on swings of well over 10 per cent. The Liberals actually won 51 seats, enough for a majority in their own right—the first time the main non-Labor party in the state had achieved this since adopting the Liberal banner in 1945. Although O'Farrell thus had no need for the support of the Nationals, he opted to retain the Coalition.

In the upper house however, where half of the chamber was up for election, the landslide was not enough to deliver a Coalition majority. Three additional votes outside of the Liberal/National Coalition were required to pass legislation. The balance of power shifted from the Greens to the Shooters and Fishers Party and Christian Democratic Party. With two seats each held by the latter two parties, both needed to give legislative support if Labor and the Greens opposed legislation.[11][12]

Retiring members

Where a Member of the Legislative Assembly or Legislative Council did not renominate to contest the election, their term ended at the dissolution of the parliament. Members who confirmed their retirement were:

Legislative Assembly

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Legislative Council

Labor (4)

Greens (1)

Opinion polling

Opinion polling was conducted by firms such as Newspoll, Galaxy and Nielsen via random telephone number selection in city and country areas Sampling sizes consist of around 1200–1300 electors. The declared margin of error is ±3 percentage points.

Graphical summary

Primary votes

Graphical summary of primary voting opinion polls for the 2011 New South Wales state election (legislative assembly).

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Two-party preferred

Graphical summary of two-party-preferred opinion polling for the 2011 New South Wales state election (legislative assembly).

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Voting intention

Legislative Assembly polling
Date Firm Primary vote TPP vote
ALP L/NP GRN OTH ALP L/NP
26 March 2011 Nielsen 22% 50% 13% 15% 36% 64%
21–24 March 2011 Newspoll 23% 49% 12% 15% 35.9% 64.1%
23 March 2011 Galaxy 22% 51% 12% 15% 34% 64%
23 March 2011 Essential 23% 55% 11% 11% 34% 66%
18 March 2011 Essential 24% 54% 12% 11% 35% 65%
9–11 March 2011 Newspoll 26% 50% 11% 13% 37% 63%
4 March 2011 Galaxy 23% 50% 14% 13% 36% 64%
18 February 2011 Essential 27% 51% 12% 10% 41% 59%
Jan-Feb 2011 Newspoll 23% 46% 17% 14% 38% 62%
16 February 2011 Nielsen 22% 53% 13% 12% 34% 66%
20 January 2011 Nielsen 20% 51% 15% 14% 34% 66%
Nov-Dec 2010 Newspoll 23% 46% 17% 14% 37% 63%
Oct-Dec 2010 Morgan 22% 53% 13.5% 11.5% 35% 65%
Sep-Oct 2010 Newspoll 23% 46% 17% 14% 37% 63%
Jul-Aug 2010 Newspoll 25% 46% 14% 15% 39% 61%
May-Jun 2010 Newspoll 25% 46% 16% 12% 39% 61%
Mar-Apr 2010 Newspoll 31% 42% 14% 13% 45% 55%
22 March 2010 Galaxy 29% 44% 14% 13% 43% 57%
14 January 2010 Galaxy 29% 43% 15% 13% 44% 56%
4 December 2009 Kristina Keneally replaces Nathan Rees as Labor leader and Premier
Nov-Dec 2009 Newspoll 26% 44% 17% 13% 41% 59%
28 November 2009 Taverner 31% 43% 26% 45% 55%
Sep-Oct 2009 Newspoll 30% 42% 12% 16% 45% 55%
Jul-Aug 2009 Newspoll 32% 41% 14% 13% 46% 54%
May-Jun 2009 Newspoll 31% 41% 14% 14% 45% 55%
31 May 2009 Taverner 44% 56%
Mar-Apr 2009 Newspoll 33% 40% 13% 14% 47% 53%
Jan-Feb 2009 Newspoll 30% 42% 15% 13% 44% 56%
Nov-Dec 2008 Newspoll 26% 43% 14% 17% 41% 59%
Sep-Oct 2008 Newspoll 29% 42% 11% 18% 44% 56%
5 September Nathan Rees replaces Morris Iemma as Labor leader and Premier
Jul-Aug 2008 Newspoll 33% 40% 13% 14% 48% 52%
29 June 2008 Taverner 28% 46% 26% 44% 56%
May-Jun 2008 Newspoll 32% 41% 13% 14% 48% 52%
Mar-Apr 2008 Newspoll 35% 38% 14% 13% 51% 49%
Jan-Mar 2008 Newspoll 34% 39% 14% 13% 50% 50%
15–19 February 2008 Nielsen 38% 42% 11% 9% 50% 50%
2 February 2008 Taverner 51% 49%
4 April 2007 Barry O'Farrell succeeds Peter Debnam as Liberal leader and Leader of the Opposition
24 March 2007 election 38.98% 36.99% 8.95% 15.08% 52.26% 47.74%
23 March 2007 Nielsen 41% 36% 10% 13% 56% 44%

Better Premier and satisfaction

Graphical summary

Graphical summary of Better Premier opinion polling

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Graphical summary of approval ratings of Morris Iemma, Nathan Rees and Kristina Keneally as Premiers.

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Graphical summary of approval ratings of Barry O'Farrell as Leader of the Opposition.

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Better Premier and satisfaction polling*
Date Firm Better Premier Keneally O'Farrell
Keneally O'Farrell Satisfied Dissatisfied Satisfied Dissatisfied
26 March 2011 Nielsen 37% 53% 37% 54% 53% 34%
21-24 March 2011 Newspoll 32% 48% 33% 59% 48% 39%
23 March 2011 Galaxy 33% 53%
4 March 2011 Galaxy 34% 50%
Jan-Feb 2011 Newspoll 32% 47% 30% 57% 43% 35%
16 February 2011 Nielsen 38% 52% 36% 58% 55% 33%
14 January 2011 Galaxy 32% 54% 30% 62% 53% 33%
Nov-Dec 2010 Newspoll 35% 40% 35% 49% 42% 33%
Sep-Oct 2010 Newspoll 35% 42% 39% 50% 48% 32%
Jul-Aug 2010 Newspoll 39% 39% 39% 44% 43% 33%
May-Jun 2010 Newspoll 44% 36% 47% 37% 44% 33%
Mar-Apr 2010 Newspoll 45% 30% 47% 31% 41% 34%
22 March 2010 Galaxy 48% 35% 53% 30% 44% 36%
Jan-Feb 2010 Newspoll 40% 31% 41% 26% 44% 30%
14 January 2010 Galaxy 42% 34% 45% 25% 42% 35%
Nov-Dec 2009 Newspoll 35% 34% 44% 30%
4 December 2009 Keneally replaces Rees Rees O'Farrell Rees O'Farrell
28 November 2009 Nielsen 43% 40% 39% 49% 44% 36%
Jul-Aug 2009 Newspoll 32% 33% 33% 51% 36% 36%
May-Jun 2009 Newspoll 33% 32% 30% 49% 34% 34%
31 May 2009 Taverner 33% 50%
Mar-Apr 2009 Newspoll 33% 31% 34% 46% 35% 37%
Jan-Feb 2009 Newspoll 34% 29% 37% 42% 39% 32%
Nov-Dec 2008 Newspoll 30% 33% 34% 47% 40% 32%
Sep-Oct 2008 Newspoll 35% 28% 39% 26% 41% 30%
5 September 2008 Rees replaces Iemma Iemma O'Farrell Iemma O'Farrell
May-Jun 2008 Newspoll 32% 39% 26% 63% 37% 34%
Mar-Apr 2008 Newspoll 36% 33% 28% 56% 33% 34%
19 February 2008 Nielsen 45% 30% 34% 44% not asked
17 February 2008 Taverner 51% 29% 18% 19%
4 April 2007 O'Farrell replaces Debnam Iemma Debnam Iemma Debnam
24 March 2007 election
22 March 2007 Newspoll 58% 24% 47% 43% 31% 55%
*Remainder were "uncommitted", "fair" or "other/neither".

Newspaper endorsements

Newspaper Endorsement
The Australian
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The Australian Financial Review
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Newcastle Herald
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The Daily Telegraph
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The Sydney Morning Herald
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Results

Legislative Assembly

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Legislative Assembly (IRV) – (CV)[16][17][18]
File:2011 NSW Legislative Assembly.svg
Party Votes % Swing Seats Change
  Template:Australian party style |   Liberal 1,602,457 38.58 Increase+11.64 51 Increase 27
Template:Australian party style |   National 521,864 12.56 Increase+2.51 18 Increase 5
Coalition total 2,124,321 51.15 Increase+14.16 69 Increase 32
Template:Australian party style |   Labor 1,061,352 25.55 Decrease–13.43 20 Decrease 30
Template:Australian party style |   Greens 427,144 10.28 Increase+1.33 1 Increase 1
Template:Australian party style |   Christian Democrats 129,431 3.12 Increase+0.65 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style|   Hatton's Independent Team 45,969 1.10 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Family First 18,576 0.45 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Socialist Alliance 3,180 0.07 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Social Justice Network 3,173 0.07 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Independent Australia First 2,446 0.06 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Socialist Equality 2,056 0.05 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Democratic Labor 1,855 0.04 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   United We Stand 1,414 0.03 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Progressive Labour 1,372 0.03 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Communist League 1,226 0.03 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Sex Party 676 0.02 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Democrats 617 0.01 Decrease–0.39 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style |   Independent Protectionist 289 0.01 New 0 Steady
Template:Australian party style|   Independents 314,066 7.56 Decrease–1.62 3 Decrease 3
 Formal votes 4,153,335 96.72 Increase+0.18
 Informal votes 137,260 3.20 Increase+0.43
 Total 4,290,595 93
 Registered voters / turnout 4,635,810 92.55 Decrease–0.09
Two-party-preferred vote
Template:Australian party style | Coalition 2,324,226 64.22 Increase+16.48
Template:Australian party style | Labor 1,294,824 35.78 Decrease–16.48
Template:Bar box breakTemplate:Bar box break
Popular vote
Liberal
38.58%
Labor
25.55%
National
12.56%
Greens
10.28%
Independent
8.85%
Christian Democrats
3.12%
Family First
0.45%
Others
0.60%
Coalition
64.22%
Labor
35.78%
Liberal
51
Labor
20
National
18
Independent
3
Greens
1

Legislative Council

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Seats changing hands

Seat Pre-2011 Swing Post-2011
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Balmain Template:Australian party style Labor Verity Firth 3.7 –7.2 3.5* Jamie Parker Greens Template:Australian party style
Bathurst Template:Australian party style Labor Gerard Martin 13.0 –36.7 23.7 Paul Toole National Template:Australian party style
Blue Mountains Template:Australian party style Labor Phil Koperberg 11.1 –15.8 4.7 Roza Sage Liberal Template:Australian party style
Camden Template:Australian party style Labor Geoff Corrigan 3.9 –22.8 18.9 Chris Patterson Liberal Template:Australian party style
Campbelltown Template:Australian party style Labor Graham West 18.5 –21.9 3.4 Bryan Doyle Liberal Template:Australian party style
Charlestown Template:Australian party style Labor Matthew Morris 14.6 –24.5 9.9 Andrew Cornwell Liberal Template:Australian party style
Coogee Template:Australian party style Labor Paul Pearce 7.2 –15.4 8.2 Bruce Notley-Smith Liberal Template:Australian party style
Dubbo Template:Australian party style Independent Dawn Fardell 0.9 –14.6 13.7 Troy Grant National Template:Australian party style
Drummoyne Template:Australian party style Labor Angela D'Amore 7.6 –24.3 16.7 John Sidoti Liberal Template:Australian party style
East Hills Template:Australian party style Labor Alan Ashton 14.1 –14.7 0.6 Glenn Brookes Liberal Template:Australian party style
Gosford Template:Australian party style Labor Marie Andrews 4.9 –16.7 11.9 Chris Holstein Liberal Template:Australian party style
Granville Template:Australian party style Labor David Borger 11.1 –13.7 2.6 Tony Issa Liberal Template:Australian party style
Heathcote Template:Australian party style Labor Paul McLeay 8.8 –21.4 12.7 Lee Evans Liberal Template:Australian party style
Kiama Template:Australian party style Labor Matt Brown 12.0 –19.5 7.5 Gareth Ward Liberal Template:Australian party style
Londonderry Template:Australian party style Labor Allan Shearan 6.9 –19.2 12.3 Bart Bassett Liberal Template:Australian party style
Maitland Template:Australian party style Labor Frank Terenzini 9.7 –16.0 6.3 Robyn Parker Liberal Template:Australian party style
Menai Template:Australian party style Labor Alison Megarrity 2.7 –27.1 24.4 Melanie Gibbons Liberal Template:Australian party style
Miranda Template:Australian party style Labor Barry Collier 0.8 –21.8 21.0 Graham Annesley Liberal Template:Australian party style
Monaro Template:Australian party style Labor Steve Whan 6.3 –8.3 2.0 John Barilaro National Template:Australian party style
Mulgoa Template:Australian party style Labor Diane Beamer 11.1 –23.2 12.0 Tanya Davies Liberal Template:Australian party style
Newcastle Template:Australian party style Labor Jodi McKay 1.2 –3.6 2.4 Tim Owen Liberal Template:Australian party style
Oatley Template:Australian party style Labor Kevin Greene 14.4 –14.9 0.5 Mark Coure Liberal Template:Australian party style
Parramatta Template:Australian party style Labor Tanya Gadiel 13.7 –25.8 12.1 Geoff Lee Liberal Template:Australian party style
Port Macquarie Template:Australian party style Independent Peter Besseling 28.2** –35.1 6.9 Leslie Williams National Template:Australian party style
Riverstone Template:Australian party style Labor John Aquilina 10.1 –30.3 20.2 Kevin Conolly Liberal Template:Australian party style
Rockdale Template:Australian party style Labor Frank Sartor 10.3 –13.9 3.6 John Flowers Liberal Template:Australian party style
Smithfield Template:Australian party style Labor Ninos Khoshaba 15.5 –20.3 4.8 Andrew Rohan Liberal Template:Australian party style
Strathfield Template:Australian party style Labor Virginia Judge 15.1 –19.3 4.3 Charles Casuscelli Liberal Template:Australian party style
Swansea Template:Australian party style Labor Robert Coombs 10.8 –11.9 1.1 Garry Edwards Liberal Template:Australian party style
Tamworth Template:Australian party style Independent Peter Draper 4.8 –12.5 7.8 Kevin Anderson National Template:Australian party style
The Entrance Template:Australian party style Labor Grant McBride 4.9 –17.3 12.5 Chris Spence Liberal Template:Australian party style
Wollondilly Template:Australian party style Labor Phil Costa 3.3 –18.0 14.7 Jai Rowell Liberal Template:Australian party style
Wyong Template:Australian party style Labor David Harris 6.9 –9.4 2.5 Darren Webber Liberal Template:Australian party style
  • *Figure is Greens v Liberal
  • **Figure is from the 2007 state election, where Rob Oakeshott was the independent candidate.
  • In addition, the Liberals won Ryde and Penrith, which were gained from Labor at by-elections.
  • Members listed in italics did not contest their seat at this election.

Every seat in New South Wales swung to the Coalition on a two-party-preferred basis. The Coalition won the largest government in New South Wales history in a huge landslide, while Labor suffered the largest swing against a sitting government anywhere in Australia (and on any level) since World War II, as well as one of the worst defeats of a state government since Federation. This led to 12 consecutive years of Coalition government in New South Wales (the longest Coalition government and the third-longest state government overall in New South Wales history), until the Coalition was narrowly defeated in 2023.

The Liberals alone won more first preference votes than Labor (usually it takes both Coalition parties, the Liberals and the Nationals, to have a higher first preference vote than Labor).

Labor only had two safe seats after the defeat, both of which were in Western Sydney. The seats were Bankstown (on a 10.3% margin) and Liverpool (on a 14.7% margin). Labor only held five seats outside of Sydney (Cessnock, Keira, Shellharbour, Wallsend and Wollongong).

Ultimately, the Liberals won 27 seats from Labor (Blue Mountains, Camden, Campbelltown, Charlestown, Coogee, Drummoyne, East Hills, Gosford, Granville, Heathcote, Kiama, Londonderry, Maitland, Menai, Miranda, Mulgoa, Newcastle, Oatley, Parramatta, Riverstone, Rockdale, Smithdale, Strathfield, Swansea, The Entrance, Wollondilly and Wyong) while the Nationals won two seats from Labor (Bathurst and Monaro). The Nationals gained three seats from independents (Dubbo, Port Macquarie and Tamworth), which were Nationals seats held by personally popular independents. It is likely that Port Macquarie and Tamworth were regained by the Nationals easily due to a move by two independents in the federal seats of Lyne (Rob Oakeshott) and New England (Tony Windsor), which partially overlap with the respective state seats, which angered the locals, who are mostly liberal conservatives in some of the most safely-held Coalition seats in the country. The move that supposedly caused this was the decision of these two independents to support Julia Gillard, who formed a Labor minority government, over the Coalition under Tony Abbott (although Oakeshott stated that he would have supported the Coalition if Malcolm Turnbull was their leader instead of Abbott). Oakeshott and Windsor were personally popular in these seats (with Oakeshott even being an ex-National), but on traditional two-party-preferred contests, the Nationals were well ahead of Labor. The member for Port Macquarie, Peter Besseling, was friends with Oakeshott and previously worked as his advisor, thus angering Port Macquarie locals. Independents held just three seats after the election: Lake Macquarie, Northern Tablelands and Sydney.

The Greens won their first ever seat in New South Wales, the formerly-safe Labor seat of Balmain in inner-city Sydney, despite the Liberals winning the first preference vote.

See also

References

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External links

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