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Labor claims victory in Batman byelection as Liberals edge ahead in South Australia – live Liberals to win South Australian election as Labor claims victory in Batman byelection – live
(35 minutes later)
We’ve received results from the first pre-poll booth. It’s come from the Labor heartland of Bundoora at the northern end of the seat. The Greens gained swings in both election-day booths in Bundoora, but has gone backwards by 2.7% in Bundoora’s pre-poll booth.
This is a small booth, but it seems clear that the Greens will not pick up the vote they need in the pre-poll, which confirms that Labor’s Ged Kearney will win the Batman by-election.
We don’t know precisely how many votes are yet to report in Batman, but my rough count suggests the Greens would need at least 57% of the remaining votes to win. That’s not going to happen.
There are a lot of very disappointed faces at the Greens party, not counting Alex Bhathal and Richard Di Natale’s.
Given what we saw come out internally within the Greens during the byelection (with a pretty big fight between an increasingly factionally divided party) and the fight over what the Greens should be standing for, expect to see more fallout over the next couple of months, and not just in Victoria.
Di Natale just predicted Bhathal would come back and win Batman (or whatever it is renamed) at the next federal election, but I wouldn’t be so sure about that. Ged Kearney was chosen for a reason. Labor has also just proven its taxation policies are not the election poison, as has been predicted, and has earmarked inequality as the foundation of its campaign heading into the next election - which has already begun.
Bhathal has now lost Batman six times.
Some readers may be confused about how the Liberal party is on track for a majority despite pretty much no seats changing hands.
This is because the recent electoral redistribution radically redraw the map to turn a number of Labor seats into notional Liberal seats.
The Liberal party managed a majority of the statewide two-party-preferred vote in 2010 and 2014, winning 53% in 2014, but couldn’t manage to form government at either election.
South Australian law required the electoral commission to draw boundaries which would give a majority of seats to a party who has won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote.
The commission threw up its hands after the 2010 election and insisted it couldn’t achieve this outcome, but did do so after the 2014 election. It looks as though the Liberal party has mostly won those redrawn seats, without winning much more.
Adam Bandt has taken the stage at Alex Bhathal’s party and says preferences went against the Greens.
But he is claiming victory in making climate change an issue across Australia.
The party leader, Richard Di Natale, said it was a very “tight-run race” but “because of all the preferences of all the hard-right parties … that we are just going to fall short tonight”.
So for the first time in 16 years, South Australia will have a new government, with the Liberals all but having claimed victory.
Christopher Pyne is having a VERY good night –a not only has Steven Marshall got across the line, but Cory Bernardi’s Australian Conservatives have not had the showing that they may have expected to have, with SA Best taking AC’s portion of the vote.
The Liberal party will form a majority government in South Australia.
Ben Raue is ready to call it:
We have been waiting for votes from Liberal leader Steven Marshall’s seat, and we’ve now received these, confirming his re-election, with votes firming up in some other close races.
The current count has the Liberal party on 25 seats, Labor on 18, independents on three, with Heysen remaining in doubt.
The most interesting seat in South Australia right now is in Heysen.
Right now the Liberal Party’s Josh Teague leads SA Best’s John Illingworth with 51.8% after preferences.
The ABC computer suggests this is enough for SA Best to squeak into the lead once the remaining booths report. But it assumes SA Best stay in the top two.
SA Best is on 24% of the primary vote, with Labor on 19% and the Greens on 12.5%. The Greens recommended preferences to Labor. If their votes tend to favour Labor, that could well see Labor’s candidate overtake Illingworth, at which point SA Best preferences would presumably help the Liberal Party to win the seat.
Unless the Liberal Party gains ground on SA Best in the remaining booths, We definitely won’t be able to call this seat until those Greens preferences are distributed.
The Liberal party looks like having 23 seats in South Australia, winning three seats from Labor (Colton, King and Mawson), which, if that count holds, means they just need one more to win government in their own right for the first time in 16 years.
Fun fact: this is the first election that the Liberals have used the i360 system, which, in its most basic form, allows for targeted campaigning. It’s a system which takes information people give, through surveys and what not, and then builds a targeted response – what exactly will win that person’s vote?
The Liberals have been a little behind in using technology, but it looks as though that is changing. Seriously, the next federal election is going to be INSANE.
At SA Best function at Palace Nova in Adelaide, the mood was getting grim with results below expectations among the crowd watching the ABC News results come in.
A groan that greeted projections that Nick Xenophon would lose in Hartley turned into a cheer as the man himself walked in.
A subdued, tired-looking Xenophon declared that SA Best had broken the two-party duopoly by coming second in a range of seats, highlighting Joe Hill’s performance in Finnis and a potential victory in Heysen.
There were some pantomime boos at mention of the underhanded tactics by the major parties and the pokies lobby.
The biggest cheer came when Xenophon said it wasn’t over in Hartley, urging everyone to wait for the preferences to come in (even though Labor, the Liberals, the Greens and the Australian Conservatives have all preferenced against him).
He concluded with a promise to “make the parliament a work horse not a rocking horse”, and a movie suggestion: “Not sure if you all want to watch something other than the election. Maybe Winston Churchill, Our Darkest Hour?”
It looks as though the Turnbull government is about to get another state on board for its national energy guarantee (remember that?).
From Ben Raue:
The Liberal party is getting closer to winning a majority in South Australia.By my count, they are on 22 seats, with Labor trailing on 18 seats.
The Liberal party are still competing with Labor in Adelaide and Waite, and with SA Best in Heysen.
We have on data from the marginal Liberal seat of Dunstan. If they can hold the other seats they are leading, and win two of these four, they’ll hold a majority.
The Greens have not conceded as yet but Labor is confident enough to declare Ged Kearney as the winner of the Batman byelection contest.The Greens have not conceded as yet but Labor is confident enough to declare Ged Kearney as the winner of the Batman byelection contest.
And they tell me, they look like doing it with a slight swing to them to boot. And the party tells me, it looks like doing it with a slight swing to it to boot.
BREAKING: Labor has just called it. They have claimed Batman #BatmanVotes #auspol @AmyRemeikisBREAKING: Labor has just called it. They have claimed Batman #BatmanVotes #auspol @AmyRemeikis
And from my feverish, tea-stained throne, this is also what I am hearing:And from my feverish, tea-stained throne, this is also what I am hearing:
Labor still a bit cautious about pre-poll, but braver souls are now prepared to say they've got this #BatmanVotes #auspol @AmyRemeikisLabor still a bit cautious about pre-poll, but braver souls are now prepared to say they've got this #BatmanVotes #auspol @AmyRemeikis
We now have all but two election-day booths reporting results in Batman and the swing to Labor has blown out to 1.7%.We now have all but two election-day booths reporting results in Batman and the swing to Labor has blown out to 1.7%.
We are still waiting for up to 30,000 pre-poll and postal votes, with Labor leading by about 3,000 votes. The Greens would need about 55% of the remaining votes, which would be quite remarkable.We are still waiting for up to 30,000 pre-poll and postal votes, with Labor leading by about 3,000 votes. The Greens would need about 55% of the remaining votes, which would be quite remarkable.
I’m not calling Batman for Labor quite yet but we’re getting close.I’m not calling Batman for Labor quite yet but we’re getting close.
Nick Xenophon has not conceded but he has admitted he is not having the night he thought he would be having when he announced his campaign:Nick Xenophon has not conceded but he has admitted he is not having the night he thought he would be having when he announced his campaign:
This is, this is not the beginning of the end, it’s actually the end of the beginning. Because I think we’re going to see some very interesting things happening. We’ll have a presence in the state parliament and we’ll build on that presence and build on it, so that every day, for the next four years, we’ll hold the government, the next government of South Australia, to account. We’ll hold the opposition to account, we’ll make the parliament a work house, not the rocking horse it is now. Let’s wait and see what happens. It will be a long night. We won’t have an idea for three or four days as to what is happening. It could be some issues about some of the misleading material put out by the major parties and the hotels association. My final remarks to you is thank you to the bottom of your heart, to the campaign team, to all the candidates who did a very brave thing. It takes a lot of courage to run for parliament and it’s been pretty nerve-wracking for a lot of people, pretty daunting. But every one of the candidates I ran with did SA Best proud and did the state proud for the way they conducted themselves.This is, this is not the beginning of the end, it’s actually the end of the beginning. Because I think we’re going to see some very interesting things happening. We’ll have a presence in the state parliament and we’ll build on that presence and build on it, so that every day, for the next four years, we’ll hold the government, the next government of South Australia, to account. We’ll hold the opposition to account, we’ll make the parliament a work house, not the rocking horse it is now. Let’s wait and see what happens. It will be a long night. We won’t have an idea for three or four days as to what is happening. It could be some issues about some of the misleading material put out by the major parties and the hotels association. My final remarks to you is thank you to the bottom of your heart, to the campaign team, to all the candidates who did a very brave thing. It takes a lot of courage to run for parliament and it’s been pretty nerve-wracking for a lot of people, pretty daunting. But every one of the candidates I ran with did SA Best proud and did the state proud for the way they conducted themselves.
The South Australian result is looking fairly dismal for SA Best at the moment. By my quick count, I have the Liberals on 19 seats, Labor on 17 seats, three independents, and Labor and Liberal still competing for five close seats (with no data from two other marginal seats).The South Australian result is looking fairly dismal for SA Best at the moment. By my quick count, I have the Liberals on 19 seats, Labor on 17 seats, three independents, and Labor and Liberal still competing for five close seats (with no data from two other marginal seats).
SA Best only appears to have a good shot at winning a single seat – the Adelaide Hills district of Heysen, in the heart of the federal seat of Mayo.SA Best only appears to have a good shot at winning a single seat – the Adelaide Hills district of Heysen, in the heart of the federal seat of Mayo.
It has come in the top two in quite a few seats but in most of them it is not polling enough to have a chance of winning. It is sitting on just under 15% of the statewide vote right now.It has come in the top two in quite a few seats but in most of them it is not polling enough to have a chance of winning. It is sitting on just under 15% of the statewide vote right now.
SA Best’s leader, Nick Xenophon, is sitting on a primary vote of 26% in Hartley. That’s about 15 percentage points behind the Liberal MP, Vincent Tarzia. He’s only managing 42% of the vote after preferences. Unless there is a dramatic shift in the remaining booths, Xenophon will be without a seat at the end of the night.SA Best’s leader, Nick Xenophon, is sitting on a primary vote of 26% in Hartley. That’s about 15 percentage points behind the Liberal MP, Vincent Tarzia. He’s only managing 42% of the vote after preferences. Unless there is a dramatic shift in the remaining booths, Xenophon will be without a seat at the end of the night.
I’m listening to a lot of commentary, and it might be the fact that I am still slightly feverish, but I’m a little shocked at the number of people pointing out that the primary vote for the major parties in the South Australian election looks like being fairly low.
If anyone has been paying attention to politics at any time in the last few years, a low primary vote for the majors is nothing new. The Liberals primary vote is traditionally higher than Labor’s but even that has been dropping. Because, and I know this probably shouldn’t be the newsflash it seems to be, people are sort of sick of politics.
And so they lodge their votes with the third-party choices. Which we are seeing growing. And the biggest problem the Liberals will have moving forwards is there seems to be more third-party choices emerging among its voters, cannibalising its vote, then there is on the Labor side of the political fence.
And the biggest issue for both major parties there is those preference flows can go anywhere. One Nation, SA Best and to a lesser extent, Australian Conservative voters do not follow how-to-vote cards.
There is a trend towards voters changing how they view elections. But the political parties still seem a little behind that -– it is going to be a very interesting time ahead of us.
“It has been quite an election campaign,” Nick Xenophon tells his party, acknowledging that the results “have been mixed”.
“We have come second in a whole swag of seats … so that is a pretty good foundation to build on,” he says, adding: “This has been an incredible campaign, when you consider we did this on a shoestring, when you consider the major parties spent more time fighting SA Best [than each other].”
He also mentions the campaign the hotels industry ran against his party in “a brutal and bruising campaign”.
The swing to Labor is now up over 1% in Batman, which would double their margin in the seat from 1% to 2%.
Labor has gained a swing of almost 11% in the Northcote South booth in the Greens’ heartland. The Greens polled about 66% after preferences at this booth in 2016 but this has dropped to about 55%.
There are a bunch of quite strong swings to the Greens at the northern end of the seat, gaining 5.1% in Kingsbury and 4.6% in Burbank.
But these booths are being outweighed by a lot of small swings to Labor in the centre of the seat and some whacking big swings to Labor at the southern end.
The longtime Labor strategist Bruce Hawker just told the Sky News panel he is sitting on that “obviously, they are not going to win” in relation to Labor’s chances in South Australia.
He thinks it is an “extraordinary result” though, that Labor has held on to some core seats, given the Queensland experience in 2012 (which he has intimate knowledge of) which saw the party there wiped out to just seven seats after 14 years in power.
Take from that what you will.
Christopher Pyne is counting 22 seats for the Liberals – you need 24 to win in SA. He is basing his count on what his people are reporting from the vote.
Red-clad volunteers at the event at Thornbury theatre erupted intocheers at the ABC election analyst Antony Green’s prediction of a Labor win.
They are now handing out party poppers in anticipation of Ged Kearney’s arrival, which is expected imminently. Everyone here sees it as a solid Labor victory, despite nearly 30% of the vote being in pre-poll or postal.
Labor’s social media team is on it in South Australia.
Congratulations @JayWeatherill! pic.twitter.com/12RXQbj0iK
#prayforCalla
Terrible songs though. @AmyRemeikis pic.twitter.com/EaGN1krC7C
At least three independents look set to retain their seats in South Australia (not including any SA Best candidates).
The sitting independent Geoff Brock looks set to win a third full term in Frome. The Liberal-turned-independent Troy Bell has a substantial lead in Mount Gambier, while the ex-Labor MP Frances Bedford has a substantial lead in Florey.
The larger the crossbench, the more likely we will end up with a hung parliament, so these results improve the chances we won’t see a clear result.
Antony Green is predicting a Labor win in Batman (50% of the vote has been counted and Labor is ahead).
Reaction at the Labor party to @AntonyGreenABC predicting Ged to win. #batmanvotes @AmyRemeikis pic.twitter.com/qlF6KFzoTJ
Ben Raue is still crunching the Batman numbers:
Twenty-eight booths have reported two-candidate-preferred votes in Batman and the vote is ticking up slowly for Labor. Their swing is now 0.69%.
I’ve divided up polling booths into three areas: the centre, north and south. The swing to Labor in the south is running at just over 5%, with a swing of 2.6% in the centre. Meanwhile the Greens vote is up 2.5% in the north.
29 of 46 polling places returned and 40.06% votes counted, Labor 52% Greens 48% #BatmanVotes #auspol @AmyRemeikis