2013 Lyndhurst state by-election

A by-election for the seat of Lyndhurst in the Victorian Legislative Assembly was held on 27 April 2013. The by-election was triggered by the resignation of Labor Party (ALP) member Tim Holding on 18 February 2013.[1] Martin Pakula retained the seat for Labor.[2]

2013 Lyndhurst state by-election

27 April 2023
  First party Second party Third party
 
Candidate Martin Pakula Stephen Nowland Geraldine Gonsalvez
Party Labor Family First DLP
Popular vote 12,899 4,454 3,467
Percentage 41.0% 14.1% 11.0%
Swing Decrease 14.5 Increase 9.3 Increase 9.8
TPP 57.0% 43.0%
TPP swing Decrease 6.9 Increase 43.0

MP before election

Tim Holding
Labor

Elected MP

Martin Pakula
Labor

Dates

The writ for the by-election was issued on 5 March 2013. The electoral roll in Lyndhurst closed on 12 March, and the final date for candidates to nominate was 28 March. Registration of how-to-vote cards[3] closed on 18 April. Polling day was 27 April.[4]

Candidates

Candidates in ballot paper order for the by-election were:[2]

Candidate nominations
  Australian Sex Party Martin Leahy Contested Ferntree Gully for the Sex Party in 2010.
  Greens Nina Springle Community worker. Contested Lyndhurst for the Greens in 2010.
  Independent Hung Vo Contested Lyndhurst as an independent in 2010.
  Independent Bobby Singh Contested Division of Holt for the Palmer United Party in 2013.[5]
  Family First Party Stephen Nowland School worker, registered builder.
  Independent David Linaker Lost VCAT case to appear on the electoral roll as David Linaker-Liberal. Contested 2012 Niddrie by-election as an independent.
  Labor Party Martin Pakula Lawyer and previously an industrial officer, state secretary, and national vice-president of the NUW. Labor member of the Victorian Legislative Council seat of Western Metropolitan Region from 2006 to 2013.
  Democratic Labour Party Geraldine Gonsalvez Dandenong councillor from 2000 to 2003. Contested Victorian Legislative Council seat of South Eastern Metropolitan Region for the DLP in 2006 and 2010 and was on the Victorian DLP Senate ticket in 2010.

The Liberal Party declined to nominate a candidate for the by-election.[1]

How-to-vote cards

How-to-vote cards are distributed to voters at polling stations to provide information with how the candidate suggests preferences be allocated. Candidates and parties suggesting preferences are shown in each column of the table below. The Sex Party released a card with two preferences allocated, one favouring Labor and the other favouring the Greens. The Greens ran an open card at this by-election.[6]

Sex Greens Vo Singh Family First Linaker Labor DLP
Sex 1 1 8 5 7 7 3 7
Greens 3 2 1 6 7 8 8 4 8
Vo 4 4 1 4 3 2 5 3
Singh 5 5 7 1 5 5 6 4
Family First 7 7 3 2 1 3 7 2
Linaker 6 6 2 8 4 1 8 5
Labor 2 3 5 6 6 6 1 6
DLP 8 8 4 3 2 4 2 1

Results

Lyndhurst state by-election, 2013[7][8]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Martin Pakula 12,899 41.0 –14.5
Family First Stephen Nowland 4,454 14.1 +9.3
Democratic Labour Geraldine Gonsalvez 3,467 11.0 +9.8
Independent Hung Vo 3,070 9.7 +6.2
Greens Nina Springle 2,960 9.4 +3.3
Sex Party Martin Leahy 2,635 8.4 +8.4
Independent David Linaker 1,370 4.4 +4.4
Independent Bobby Singh 639 2.0 +2.0
Total formal votes 31,494 90.5 –2.4
Informal votes 3,288 9.5 +2.4
Turnout 34,782 80.1 −12.4
Two-candidate-preferred result
Labor Martin Pakula 17,961 57.0 –6.9
Family First Stephen Nowland 13,533 43.0 +43.0
Labor hold SwingN/A

Results are final.[9] Pre-poll and postal votes were included on election night upon which media outlets called the by-election for Labor.[10][11][12] The full preference distribution occurred on 1 May.[13]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.