Politics of New South Wales

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New South Wales politics takes place in context of a bicameral parliamentary system. The main parties are the Liberal and National parties of the governing Coalition and the Australian Labor Party. Other minor political parties include the Greens, Shooters, Fishers and Farmers Party and One Nation, along with multiple independents.

The New South Wales government is sometimes referred to informally as "the bear pit", as a mark of perceived unruly behaviour within the parliamentary chambers, and 'Macquarie Street', a metonym of the street of that name where Parliament House is located, in Sydney's CBD.

State politics[edit]

Parliament of New South Wales[edit]

The Australian state of New South Wales has a bicameral parliament. The Legislative Assembly (lower house) is composed of 93 members of parliament, each of whom represents a single electorate. The voting system is preferential. Until the mid-1990s, members of the Assembly served for up to four years, until the Greiner government made terms a fixed length of four years. The Legislative Council (upper house) comprises 42 members, who serve terms of 8 years. The King is represented by the governor, who formally appoints the premier, as nominated by the majority party in the Assembly.

Office holders[edit]

The formal chief executive of New South Wales is the governor, who is appointed as the King's representative on the advice of the head of the governing party. The current governor is Margaret Beazley. The governor holds limited reserve powers, but with few exceptions is required by convention to act on the advice of the government.

The Premier of New South Wales is currently Chris Minns of the Labor Party. The 48th Premier, Minns assumed office on 28 March 2023. The Deputy Premier of New South Wales is Prue Car.

Officially opposing the New South Wales government is the opposition Liberal–National Coalition

The government is decided every four years by election. The most recent election was held in 2023, with the next in 2027.

Political parties[edit]

New South Wales is currently governed by the Labor Party. The two main parties are the Liberal Party/National Party Coalition, and the Labor Party. Other currently elected parties in New South Wales politics include the Greens, the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers Party, the Animal Justice Party and One Nation, along with multiple independents.

State party support by region[edit]

Liberal[edit]

The Liberals strongest base has always been on the North Shore and Northern Beaches as well as the Hills and Forest districts, creating a 'bloc' on the northern side of Sydney Harbour. The last time the Labor party won an electorate wholly within any of these districts was the electorates of Manly, Wakehurst and Willoughby in the 1978 'Wranslide' election. The electoral districts of North Shore and the single Liberal held electorate of Vaucluse in the Eastern Suburbs are the most affluent areas in the state and have never been lost to the Labor party. The Liberals have consistently held the regional electorates of Albury, Bega and Wagga Wagga.

Nationals[edit]

The Nationals (formally the Country Party) are a party representing country issues and farmers and only generally seek to represent rural and regional electorates. They are ideologically conservative and sit on the centre-right of the political spectrum. Their strongest base within the state has always been the New England, Northern Tablelands, Northern Rivers, Mid North Coast, Riverina and the Central West. The Nationals biggest competitors are the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers and well as local independents from time to time. When there is no incumbent, it is not uncommon for the Liberals to run candidates against the Nationals creating three cornered contests in semi-rural electorates such as Cessnock, Monaro, Goulburn and Wagga Wagga.

Labor[edit]

Labor was traditionally strongest in the Inner West, Western Sydney and South Western Sydney however their status has diminished since the late 2000s in the Inner West with the rise of the left-wing Greens in the electorates of Balmain and Newtown. The continued success of the Liberals in Western Sydney has seen Labor unable to recover over the last decade electorates for which they normally held uninterrupted for multiple electoral cycles including Penrith, East Hills and Parramatta. Labor's significant majorities and continual hold-outs with its highest two-party preferred votes are in the electorates with the highest concentration of lower socioeconomic groups such as Mount Druitt, Blacktown and Canterbury. Labor are equally unchallenged in the electorates with known ethnic enclaves such as Lakemba, Cabramatta, Bankstown and Fairfield respectively.

Outside metropolitan Sydney, Labor have consistently recorded majorities in the regions of the Hunter and Central Coast with the Coalition holding only a single electorate in each without interruption, being: Upper Hunter and Terrigal. Labor generally perform well in the Illawarra and in the Far West mining town of Broken Hill.

Greens[edit]

The Greens have solidified support within the Inner West city region of metropolitan Sydney at the expense of Labor. There has been little to no opposition from the Liberals or their predecessors in seats where left-wing candidates have always won by substantial margins such as the current Balmain and Newtown and the former related seats such as Leichhardt, Phillip, Elizabeth, Rozelle and Port Jackson. With the loss of these reliable seats, this creates a harder task for Labor to form majority government into the future. The Greens have seen localised success in the Northern Rivers seat of Ballina which entirely encompasses the Byron Bay district.

'Blue Ribbon' and 'Hard Labor' electorates[edit]

The following lists current electorates where the opposing party (Liberal/National versus Labor/Greens) have never won each seat or its direct predecessor following a redistribution or since the abolition of proportional representation of the lower house in 1927:

Note: Labor and Greens have been grouped together as it is historically evident that the electorates of Newtown and Balmain would likely never be won by a centre-right candidate and were held by the Labor party for nearly 80 years.

Marginal seats[edit]

For governments to change hands, generally there is a quantity of marginal electorates that determine the result of the election which sustain the most attention from the major parties. In New South Wales, most of these electorates are located in Western Sydney and surrounds and generally after redistribution by the New South Wales Electoral Commission they remain marginal or ± 5% of the previous margin. In the case of electorates that more than often side with the incoming or continuing government, known as a bellwether, the electorate of Monaro holds the record for all but one (1995) election since 1927 in having sided with the government of the day, the other common bellwethers being Oatley (formerly Georges River) and Ryde (formerly Gladesville and Fuller). Other electorates that often change hands between the major parties include: Drummoyne, Gosford, Maitland, Heathcote, Holsworthy and Wollondilly.

Federal politics[edit]

New South Wales has 47 seats in the Australian House of Representatives, the most of any state. As such, it is nearly impossible to win government without a strong base in New South Wales, while a decent showing in New South Wales can usually make up for a poor night elsewhere. Labor has never won an election without winning a majority in New South Wales.[1]

The 1996 federal election was an example of how critical New South Wales is in federal elections. The election turned into a Coalition rout in large part due to Labor losing 13 of its 33 seats in New South Wales.

Party support by region[edit]

Liberals[edit]

Like at the state level, the federal party draws most of its continuous support from north-west Sydney and the surrounds of the Hawkesbury River. The Liberal Party of Australia has never lost the divisions of Berowra or Bradfield, on the northern side of the harbour. The Party also has strong bases in Southern Sydney and Southern NSW, having continuously held the divisions of Cook, Hughes (excluding party resignations), Farrer and Hume for several decades. The party lost its traditional harbour-side base of seats including North Sydney, Warringah, Warringah and Wentworth to the teal movement between 2018 and 2022.

Labor[edit]

Unlike with state results, Labor has consistently maintained dominance over the Greens in the Inner West and the Liberals through the bulk of the Western Sydney basin to the Blue Mountains. The only inner-metropolitan Sydney seat that changes between Labor and Liberal is the division of Reid (formerly Lowe) which is currently held by Labor as of 2022. Labor dominate the Hunter, Illawarra and South Coast regions, as of 2022 holding every seat but the divisions of Gilmore, Hunter and Paterson are considered winnable seats for the Liberals in each region. The Central Coast seats of Dobell and Division of Robertson swing between both parties.

Referendum results in NSW[edit]

Results of referendums[edit]

[2]
Year No. Name National Voters States NSW
1906 1 Senate Elections 82.65% 6:0 83.85%
1910 2 State Debts 54.95% 5:1 33.34%
3 Surplus Revenue 49.04% 3:3 47.35%
1911 4 Trade and Commerce 39.42% 1:5 36.11%
5 Monopolies 39.89% 1:5 36.72%
1913 6 Trade and Commerce 49.38% 3:3 46.93%
7 Corporations 49.33% 3:3 46.79%
8 Industrial Matters 49.33% 3:3 46.88%
9 Trusts 49.78% 3:3 47.12%
10 Monopolies 49.33% 3:3 46.85%
11 Railway Disputes 49.13% 3:3 46.70%
1919 12 Legislative Powers 49.65% 3:3 39.95%
13 Monopolies 48.64% 3:3 38.31%
1926 14 Industry and Commerce 43.50% 2:4 51.53%
15 Essential Services 42.80% 2:4 50.39%
1928 16 State Debts 74.30% 6:0 64.47%
1937 17 Aviation 53.56% 2:4 47.25%
18 Marketing 36.26% 0:6 33.76%
1944 19 Post-War Reconstruction and Democratic Rights 45.99% 2:4 45.44%
1946 20 Social Services 54.39% 6:0 54.00%
21 Marketing 50.57% 3:3 51.83%
22 Industrial Employment 50.30% 3:3 51.72%
1948 23 Rents and Prices 40.66% 0:6 41.66%
1951 24 Communists and Communism 49.44% 3:3 47.17%
1967 25 Parliament 40.25% 1:5 51.01%
26 Aboriginals 90.77% 6:0 91.46%
1973 27 Prices 43.81% 0:6 48.55%
28 Incomes 34.42% 0:6 40.31%
1974 29 Simultaneous Elections 48.30% 1:5 51.06%
30 Mode of Altering the Constitution 47.99% 1:5 51.35%
31 Democratic Elections 47.20% 1:5 50.55%
32 Local Government Bodies 46.85% 1:5 50.79%
1977 33 Simultaneous Elections 62.22% 3:3 70.71%
34 Senate Casual Vacancies 73.32% 6:0 81.62%
35 Referendums 77.72% 6:0 83.92%
36 Retirement of Judges 80.10% 6:0 84.84%
1984 37 Terms of Senators 50.64% 2:4 52.86%
38 Interchange of Powers 47.06% 0:6 49.04%
1988 39 Parliamentary Terms 32.92% 0:6 31.66%
40 Fair Elections 37.60% 0:6 35.57%
41 Local Government 33.62% 0:6 31.70%
42 Rights and Freedoms 30.79% 0:6 29.65%
1999 43 Establishment of Republic 45.13% 0:6 46.43%
44 Preamble 39.34% 0:6 42.14%
2023 [a] 45 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice 39.24% 0:6 40.33%

Notable New South Wales political figures[edit]

  • Henry Parkes, 6th premier of New South Wales, longest-serving premier, regarded as the Father of Australian Federation
  • Jack Lang, 23rd premier. Dismissed by the governor in 1932.
  • Sir Robert Askin, 32nd premier, notable for his long tenure in office and corrupt behaviour.
  • Nick Greiner, 37th premier. Widespread reforms and turbulent premiership.
  • Bob Carr, 39th premier. Longest continual premiership and continued electoral success.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Results for this referendum are preliminary, and percentages may change, however the result is very likely not to change.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Green, Antony 2016 federal election preview in New South Wales. ABC News, 2016
  2. ^ Handbook of the 44th Parliament (2014) "Part 5 – Referendums and Plebiscites – Referendum results". Parliamentary Library of Australia..