North Eastern Province (Victoria)
North Eastern Province Victoria—Legislative Council | |
---|---|
State | Victoria |
Created | 1882 |
Abolished | 2006 |
North Eastern Province (originally North-Eastern Province) was an electorate of the Victorian Legislative Council. It was created in the redistribution of provinces in 1882 when the original provinces[1] of Central and Eastern Provinces were abolished. The new North Eastern, North Central, Melbourne East, Melbourne North, Melbourne South and Melbourne West Provinces were then created.[2]
North Eastern Province was created and defined by the Legislative Council Act 1881 (taking effect from the 1882 elections) as consisting of the following divisions: Chiltern, Rutherglen, North Ovens, Beechworth, Bright, Oxley, Benalla, Euroa, Yarrawonga, Shepparton, Mansfield, Howqua, Goulburn and Seymour .[3]
North Eastern Province was abolished at the 2006 state election in the wake of the Bracks Labor government's reform of the Legislative Council.
Members for North Eastern Province
[edit]Three members initially, two after the 1904 redistribution of provinces, Melbourne East Province and others were created.[2]
Member 1 | Party | Year | Member 2 | Party | Member 3 | Party | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Robert Anderson | 1882 | Patrick Hanna | John Wallace | ||||||
Frederick Brown | 1883 | ||||||||
1884 | |||||||||
1886 | |||||||||
1888 | John Turner | ||||||||
1888 | James Butters | ||||||||
1890 | |||||||||
1892 | Arthur Sachse | ||||||||
1892 | |||||||||
1894 | |||||||||
1896 | |||||||||
1898 | |||||||||
1900 | |||||||||
1901 | William Orr | ||||||||
1902 | |||||||||
Willis Little | 1903 | ||||||||
1904 | |||||||||
1907 | |||||||||
1910 | |||||||||
1913 | |||||||||
William Kendell | Non-Labor | 1916 | |||||||
1916 | |||||||||
Nationalist | 1917 | Nationalist | |||||||
1919 | |||||||||
1920 | John Harris | Country | |||||||
1922 | |||||||||
Albert Zwar | Country | 1922 | |||||||
1925 | |||||||||
1928 | |||||||||
1931 | |||||||||
1934 | |||||||||
Percival Inchbold | Country | 1935 | |||||||
1937 | |||||||||
Liberal Country | 1938 | ||||||||
1940 | |||||||||
Country | 1943 | ||||||||
1946 | Ivan Swinburne | Country | |||||||
1949 | |||||||||
1952 | |||||||||
Keith Bradbury | Country | 1953 | |||||||
1955 | |||||||||
1958 | |||||||||
1961 | |||||||||
1964 | |||||||||
1967 | |||||||||
1970 | |||||||||
1973 | |||||||||
1976 | David Evans | National | |||||||
Bill Baxter | National | 1978 | |||||||
1979 | |||||||||
1982 | |||||||||
Bill Baxter | National | 1985 | |||||||
1985 | |||||||||
1988 | |||||||||
1992 | |||||||||
1996 | Jeanette Powell | National | |||||||
1999 | |||||||||
2002 | Wendy Lovell | Liberal |
Election results
[edit]Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Wendy Lovell | 41,725 | 33.3 | +32.4 | |
Labor | Jackie Crothers | 40,279 | 32.2 | −3.4 | |
National | Kerrin Chambers | 30,134 | 24.1 | −31.4 | |
Greens | Carol Kunert | 7,243 | 5.8 | +5.8 | |
Democrats | Leanne Pleash | 3,465 | 2.8 | −5.2 | |
Christian Democrats | Phil Seymour | 2,332 | 1.9 | +1.9 | |
Total formal votes | 125,178 | 95.7 | −1.2 | ||
Informal votes | 5,576 | 4.3 | +1.2 | ||
Turnout | 130,754 | 93.3 | |||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Liberal | Wendy Lovell | 73,538 | 58.7 | +58.7 | |
Labor | Jackie Crothers | 51,640 | 41.3 | +1.4 | |
Liberal gain from National | Swing | N/A |
References
[edit]- ^ Edward Sweetman (1920). Constitutional Development of Victoria, 1851-6. Whitcombe & Tombs Limited. p. 182. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
- ^ a b "Re-Member (Former Members)". State Government of Victoria. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
- ^ "The Legislative Council Act 1881". Australasian Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 14 June 2013.