Division of Tangney
Tangney Australian House of Representatives Division |
|
---|---|
Created | 1974 |
MP | Dennis Jensen |
Party | Independent |
Namesake | Dorothy Tangney |
Electors | 93,090 (1 December 2014)[1] |
Area | 83 km2 (32.0 sq mi) |
Demographic | Inner Metropolitan |
The Division of Tangney is an Australian electoral division in the state of Western Australia. The Division was named after Dame Dorothy Tangney, the first female member of the Australian Senate, and is at present a safe Liberal seat held by Dr Dennis Jensen, a physicist and defence analyst, since the retirement of high-profile former Attorney General Daryl Williams at the 2004 election.
Jensen lost Liberal preselection in Tangney for the 2016 election.[2] Jensen is now running as an independent candidate for the seat of Tangney.
History
Tangney was established at the Western Australia redistribution of 19 April 1974 and was first contested at the 1974 election. Until the 1984 redistribution, the seat included a much wider area including the traditional Labor areas of Spearwood and Gosnells, and the seat was a bellwether seat represented by the party of government. In 1984, the seat was confined to its present borders and has been held by the Liberal Party ever since.
It was first held by John Dawkins, later a Treasurer of Australia (as Member for Fremantle), and was held from 1993 until 2004 by Daryl Williams, former Attorney-General of Australia and Rhodes Scholar.[3]
The seat briefly made national headlines in August 2006 when Matt Brown, once a chief-of-staff to former Defence Minister Robert Hill, defeated incumbent MP Dr Dennis Jensen for preselection, despite support for the latter from John Howard. However, on 7 October 2006, the decision was overturned by the Liberals' Western Australian state council and Jensen was once again confirmed as the candidate for the 2007 election.[4]
Geography
The seat presently contains most of the City of Melville, a part of the City of Canning and a small portion of the City of Cockburn and is located south of the Swan and Canning rivers. Suburbs presently included are:[5]
|
Members
Member | Party | Term | |
---|---|---|---|
John Dawkins | Labor | 1974–1975 | |
Peter Richardson | Liberal | 1975–1977 | |
Progress | 1977–1977 | ||
Peter Shack | Liberal | 1977–1983 | |
George Gear | Labor | 1983–1984 | |
Peter Shack | Liberal | 1984–1993 | |
Daryl Williams | Liberal | 1993–2004 | |
Dennis Jensen | Liberal | 2004–2016 | |
Independent | 2016–present |
Election results
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Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Dennis Jensen | 48,752 | 57.17 | +1.48 | |
Labor | Luke Willis | 20,744 | 24.33 | -1.47 | |
Greens | Peter Best | 8,882 | 10.42 | -3.07 | |
Palmer United | Wayne Driver | 3,738 | 4.38 | +4.38 | |
Christians | John Wieske | 2,236 | 2.62 | +2.62 | |
Rise Up Australia | Stephen Carson | 922 | 1.08 | +1.08 | |
Total formal votes | 85,274 | 95.88 | -0.69 | ||
Informal votes | 3,707 | 4.17 | +0.69 | ||
Turnout | 88,981 | 93.81 | -0.41 | ||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Liberal | Dennis Jensen | 55,144 | 64.67 | +2.35 | |
Labor | Luke Willis | 30,130 | 35.33 | -2.35 | |
Liberal hold | Swing | +2.35 |
References
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- ↑ Dennis Jensen, West Australian MP, blames 'dirty tricks' after being dumped by Liberal preselectors: ABC 3 April 2016
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External links
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