Division of Boothby

Coordinates: 35°00′43″S 138°35′46″E / 35.012°S 138.596°E / -35.012; 138.596
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Boothby
Australian House of Representatives Division
Division of Boothby in South Australia, as of the 2016 federal election.
Created1903
MPNicolle Flint
PartyLiberal
NamesakeWilliam Boothby
Electors107,323 (2016)
Area130 km2 (50.2 sq mi)
DemographicOuter Metropolitan

The Division of Boothby is an Australian electoral division in South Australia. The division was one of the seven established when the former Division of South Australia was redistributed on 2 October 1903 and is named for William Boothby (1829–1903), the Returning Officer for the first federal election.[1]

The 130 km² seat currently extends from Clarence Gardens and Urrbrae in the north to Marino and part of Happy Valley in the south, including the suburbs of Aberfoyle Park, Belair, Blackwood, Brighton, Daw Park, Eden Hills, Flagstaff Hill, Marion, Mitcham, Seacliff, St Marys and Panorama.

History

Before 1949 and the creation of the Division of Sturt, Boothby covered most of the southern and eastern suburbs of Adelaide, and changed hands several times between the Liberal Party of Australia (and its predecessors) and the Australian Labor Party. The 1949 expansion of parliament saw parts of the southern portion transferred to the newly created Division of Kingston and parts of the eastern portion transferred to the newly created Division of Sturt. The redistribution prior to the 1949 election saw Boothby change from a marginal Labor seat on a 1.8 percent two-party margin to a marginal Liberal seat on a two percent two-party margin. However, as part of the massive Liberal victory in the 1949 election, the Liberals picked up a 9.3 percent two-party swing, turning it into a safe seat in one stroke, and has been a fairly safe to safe Liberal seat ever since.

There was only one substantial redistribution in the past few decades, when Boothby absorbed parts of the abolished Division of Hawker prior to the 1993 election. This cut the Liberal margin by more than half, from a safe 10.7 two-party margin to a marginal notional 4.5 percent two-party margin. However, the Liberals won the seat on a fairly safe 7.8 percent two-party margin. Today Boothby extends from Mitcham and Belair in the east to Brighton and Seacliff in the west.[2]

At the 2004 election, despite a solid national two-party swing and vote to the Liberals, Boothby became a marginal Liberal seat for the first time in over half a century, with Labor's Chloë Fox reducing the Liberals to a marginal 5.4 percent two-party margin. Labor's Nicole Cornes reduced the Liberals to a marginal 2.9 percent two-party margin at the 2007 election, while at the 2010 election Labor's Annabel Digance reduced the Liberals to just a 0.75 percent two-party margin (638 votes), which made Boothby the most marginal seat in South Australia. However, Boothby became a fairly safe Liberal seat again at the 2013 election.

Boothby's most prominent members were Sir John McLeay, who was Speaker 1956-66, his son John, Jr., a minister in the Fraser government, and former state premier Steele Hall.

Boothby has been held by backbencher Andrew Southcott since the 1996 election. In 2015, Southcott announced his retirement from parliament to take effect at the 2016 federal election. The Liberals have preselected doctoral student and newspaper columnist Nicolle Flint.[3] Labor has preselected 2015 Davenport state by-election candidate Mark Ward.[4] The Nick Xenophon Team announced Mitcham councillor Karen Hockley as their candidate.[5] ABC psephologist Antony Green's 2016 federal election guide for South Australia states NXT has a "strong chance of winning lower house seats and three or four Senate seats".[6] Flint won the contest.

Members

Member Party Term
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Labor Lee Batchelor Labour 1903–1911
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Commonwealth Liberal David Gordon Commonwealth Liberal 1911–1913
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Labor George Dankel Labor 1913–1916
Template:Australian politics/party colours/National Labor National Labor 1916–1917
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Nationalist Nationalist 1917–1917
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Nationalist William Story Nationalist 1917–1922
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Liberal (1922) Jack Duncan-Hughes Liberal Union 1922–1925
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Nationalist Nationalist 1925–1928
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Labor John Price Labor 1928–1931
Template:Australian politics/party colours/UAP United Australia 1931–1941
Template:Australian politics/party colours/UAP Grenfell Price United Australia 1941–1943
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Labor Thomas Sheehy Labor 1943–1949
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Liberal (Sir) John McLeay Liberal 1949–1966
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Liberal John McLeay Liberal 1966–1981
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Liberal Steele Hall Liberal 1981–1996
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Liberal Andrew Southcott Liberal 1996–2016
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Liberal Nicolle Flint Liberal 2016–present

Election results

Australian federal election, 2013: Boothby
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Andrew Southcott 47,484 50.35 +6.08
Labor Annabel Digance 29,018 30.77 −4.81
Greens Stephen Thomas 11,287 11.97 −1.46
Family First Natasha Edmonds 3,683 3.91 +1.09
Palmer United Sally Cox 2,835 3.01 +3.01
Total formal votes 94,307 96.52 +1.24
Informal votes 3,400 3.48 −1.24
Turnout 97,707 93.92 +1.96
Two-party-preferred result
Liberal Andrew Southcott 53,866 57.12 +6.50
Labor Annabel Digance 40,441 42.88 −6.50
Liberal hold Swing +6.50

See also

References

Notes

External links

35°00′43″S 138°35′46″E / 35.012°S 138.596°E / -35.012; 138.596