Pre-election pendulum for the 2013 Australian federal election
The following is a pendulum based on the outcome of the 2010 federal election and changes since, including the redistributions of seats in South Australia and Victoria. It is a Mackerras pendulum, invented by psephologist Malcolm Mackerras, which works by lining up all of the seats held in Parliament (71 Labor, 72 Coalition, 1 Green, 1 KAP and 5 independent) according to the percentage point margin on a two-candidate-preferred basis.[1] The two-party result is also known as the swing required for the seat to change hands. Given a uniform swing to the opposition or government parties in an election, the number of seats that change hands can be predicted. Swings are never uniform, but in practice variations of swing among the Australian states usually tend to cancel each other out. Seats are arranged in safeness categories according to the Australian Electoral Commission's (AEC) classification of safeness. "Safe" seats require a swing of over 10 per cent to change, "fairly safe" seats require a swing of between 6 and 10 per cent, while "marginal" seats require a swing of less than 6 per cent.[2] The swings for South Australian and Victorian seats are notional, based on calculations by the AEC.[3]
Pendulum
[edit]See also
[edit]- 2013 Australian federal election
- House of Representatives results for the Australian federal election, 2010
- Senate results for the Australian federal election, 2010
- Members of the Australian House of Representatives, 2010–2013
- Post-election pendulum for the 2010 Australian federal election
Notes
[edit]- ^ This seat is held by an Independent MP who was formerly a Labor MP but switched to Independent following allegations of criminal misconduct currently (Aug 2013) before the courts. It has a notional majority of Labor Party voters.
- ^ This seat is held by an Independent MP, but has a notional majority of Liberal Party voters.
References
[edit]- ^ Two Candidate Preferred by Division: AEC
- ^ Electoral matrix: APH Archived 2008-02-20 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "National seat status" (PDF). Australian Electoral Commission. April 2013. pp. 5–6, 8. Retrieved 13 April 2013.