on 14-03-2014 07:52 PM
A friend was telling me today that she had a list of party preferances but couldn't remember where she found them. Is there a single website that shows this information? I have tried googling but can't find what I want.
As for my local electorate, it's very disallusioning. I'm in a rural area so my choices include the Liberal candidate thats had the job for years (and will likely win again), an 87 year old Family First candidate, 2 candidates that live 400km's away and haven't bothered to campaign here at all and a very right wing independant who scares me a little 😧
The woes of living in a very safe seat, fat lot of good that it does us, we seem to be used as a cash cow to fund city development.
on 15-03-2014 09:52 PM
@silverfaun wrote:Labor really should have been removed last election, everybody expected it.
Was discussing along those lines earlier tonight. In 2010, Labor got the minority of actual votes, both first preferences, and 2 party preferred after preferences, yet an overwhelming majority of seats. One of the flaws (IMO) in the Westminster system. You can win with less votes.
on 15-03-2014 10:49 PM
on 16-03-2014 12:13 AM
Federal election 1998
house of reps
ALP 4,454,306 40.10%
liberal Party 3,764,707 33.89 %
One Nation 936,621 8.43 %
senate alp 4,182,963
liberal national (joint ticket) 2,452,407
liberal party 1,528,730
one nation 1,007,439
in the lower house percentages do not equate to seats. Despite winning almost 51 percent of the two-party-preferred vote and regaining much of what it had lost in its severe defeat of two years earlier, Labor fell short of forming government. The government was re-elected with 49.02% of the two-party-preferred vote, compared to 50.98% for the Australian Labor Party, the largest difference of six election results where the winner did not gain a two-party preferred majority, since 2PP results first estimated from 1937.