federal2013a

New Zealand electorate review prospects

christchurch varianceIn New Zealand, the Census is usually conducted once every five years. The last Census was due in 2011, but due to the Canterbury earthquakes they were postponed until early 2013.

Following the Census, the country has undergone the Māori Electoral Option, where Māori voters were given the option to choose whether they vote on the Maori roll or the general roll.

Last week, the latest statistics were released showing the number of people enrolled in each electorate following the Census and the Māori Electoral Option.

The statistics show dramatic shifts in the Christchurch area, and a booming population in Auckland, while overall the New Zealand population grew only slightly.

The increasing population in Auckland will require a new seat to be created somewhere in the Auckland area, while post-earthquakes shifts in the Christchurch population will require the seats in central Christchurch to stretch further out into the suburbs to capture the large boosts in population in nearby seats.

Read on for more information, including statistics and a map with clickable information about each electorate.

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Labor leadership: Shorten wins

The ALP has just announced the result of the Labor leadership election – the first election that gave a say to members.

Overall, Bill Shorten won a large majority amongst MPs, while Anthony Albanese won a large majority amongst members. Shorten’s majority in the caucus was larger, and that produced a 52.02% majority.

Candidate MPs MPs % Members Members % Overall %
Bill Shorten 55 63.95% 12,196 40.08% 52.02%
Anthony Albanese 31 36.05% 18,230 59.92% 47.98%
Total 86 30,426

Overall, the result was quite close and was ultimately decided by a very solid victory for Bill Shorten amongst fellow MPs.

While Shorten’s victory amongst MPs was decisive, winning almost 60% of the grassroots vote was very impressive from the Albanese campaign. No-one had any experience running such a ballot in Australian politics, and the Albanese campaign were first out of the blocks.

While it was a positive move giving members the vote, it remains to be seen whether Labor members will feel empowered by a result where one candidate won the membership vote by over 6,000 votes and failed to win the election.

NZ councils up for election

nzcouncils

Territorial authorities of New Zealand

As part of my project to cover the 2014 New Zealand general election in more depth, I’ve just completed a Google Earth map of New Zealand’s Territorial Authorities, or local councils.

New Zealand’s local council elections are currently being held by postal ballot, and will conclude tomorrow, on Saturday 12 October. The election will cover elections for New Zealand local territorial authorities, as well as the regions and district health boards across the country.

New Zealand’s north and south islands are covered by 66 territorial authorities: 43 on the north island and 23 on the south island. New Zealand is also covered by 16 regional councils: five of which are the same as the territorial authorities.

I haven’t been able to complete the map of the 16 regions, but will do so in coming days.

Download the Google Earth map of New Zealand local councils here.

The most interesting election taking place in New Zealand is the election for Auckland Council. In the lead-up to the last election in 2010, all of the local councils in the Auckland region were merged together to form a ‘super-city’.

In Auckland (and, it seems, most of the country), national political parties do not contest local elections, but alliances are formed that roughly align with right and left. In Auckland, incumbent centre-left mayor Len Brown is again leading the CityVision ticket, which seems to have the support of Labour and Green Party activists.

Interestingly, while New Zealand general elections are held using proportional representation, most local councils still use ‘first past the post’ to elect their council. Councils can choose between FPP and Single Transferable Vote (STV), which is similar to Australia system of proportional representation using preferences. STV is the only form of PR that works without political parties, and is gradually gaining popularity amongst NZ councils.

In Christchurch, Lianne Dalziel, Labour MP for Christchurch East, has resigned her seat to run for the Christchurch mayoralty. The seat has traditionally been safe for Labour, but the Nationals topped the party vote in the seat in 2011. Christchurch East has experienced a massive population drop since the last census, largely due to the Christchurch earthquakes.

Christchurch East will vote in a by-election on November 30 to fill the seat, and I plan on doing a profile of this seat. We will also be seeing a draft redistribution of New Zealand’s electoral boundaries in November, which I plan on covering as well.

University elections – peculiar but fascinating

I’m a graduate of the University of Sydney, and today ballots were sent out to all graduates of the university to vote in the quadrennial election of five Graduate Fellows to sit on the Senate.

The University Senate is the governing body, and also includes four representatives of academic staff, one representative of non-academic staff and one representative each for undergraduate and postgraduate students. There are also other fellows appointed by the minister and in other ways. Despite a large proportion of its membership being elected, the body tends to not operate along partisan or factional lines.

In some ways it’s unusual to write a blog post about what is a rather unusual election only of interest to a small community, but the politics of the candidates’ factional alliances and the peculiar and concerning electoral system has been fascinating me.

Continue reading below the fold. If you’re not interested, I’ll return to your regular schedule tomorrow with a post on the New Zealand council elections.

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Miranda by-election guide

miranda1-2ppA by-election will be held in the NSW state seat of Miranda on 19 October. Miranda covers parts of the Sutherland Shire in southern Sydney.

The seat has traditionally voted Liberal but Barry Collier held the seat for Labor from 1999 to 2011.

In 2011, Collier retired and the Liberal Party’s Graham Annesley won the seat – with a massive swing of 21.8% across the seat.

Annesley was a former senior executive at the NRL and was appointed immediately as Minister for Sport and Recreation. In August 2013 he resigned both as a minister and as Member for Miranda to take up the CEO’s role at the Gold Coast Titans NRL team.

The Liberal Party should comfortably hold Miranda, which they now hold with a 21% margin. But that 2011 margin was inflated, and if the ALP has made any kind of recovery in its performance in NSW state politics, it should be able to drag that margin down. The seat will be interesting to watch to see whether this happens.

Read the Miranda profile here.

New Zealand election maps updated

Moving on from the Australian federal election, I have gone through my New Zealand election map and clarified the boundaries to ensure they are as accurate as possible.

While doing this, I have produced time-series maps for the general electorates and the Māori electorates. Each file includes the national map for both the candidate and party vote at the 2008 and 2011 elections, which you can toggle.

The electoral boundary review for the 2014-2017 elections will announce the number of general and Māori electorates, with the electorates to be redrawn over the next few months. The draft boundaries will be released in November, with the final maps released in April.

Under New Zealand law, the South Island is guaranteed 16 general electorates. A quota is struck as the general electoral population of South Island divided by 16, which is used to determine the number of Māori electorates and the number of general North Island electorates.

You can read more about the redistribution process here.

German map follow-up

I’ve finally finished my post-election maps for Germany, for those who may be interested.

I have updated the maps for the 2013 election on the Maps page to reflect the ‘first vote’ results in each constituency. I have also added a map for the 2005 election. I am missing maps for the four Lander that changed boundaries between 2005 and 2009. If you have any data you can share to help with this, please let me know.

I have also added a German time-series map that has the results of the last three federal elections, both first vote and second vote. You can toggle between all six of these maps to see the changes in the election results over the last eight years.

Germany 2013 – Merkel gains swing at expense of allies

Angela Merkel’s CDU/CSU parties have gained the largest swings towards them at the 2013 German federal election, with minor parties generally losing ground.

The CDU/CSU gained a large 7.8% swing towards them, with the centre-left Social Democrats gaining a smaller 2.7% swing. The three minor parties with parliamentary seats all suffered negative swings. The left-wing Left Party lost 3.3% and the Greens lost 2.3%.

The biggest loser was the centre-right Free Democratic Party, the junior coalition partner in the centre-right government. The FDP suffered a swing of just under 10%, and will miss out on representation in the Bundestag for the first time in post-war history, with only 4.8% of the national ‘second vote’.

The Alternative for Germany, a new Euroskeptic party, also polled just below 5%. The combination of AfD and the FDP both missing out on the 5% threshold means that close to 10% of the vote was locked up in right-wing parties that didn’t get a single seat.

So while the CDU and CSU won a massive victory on their own, the three centre-left parties collectively hold a majority in the Bundestag, 319 votes to 311.

Despite this it seems most likely that we will see a return to the CDU/CSU and SPD grand coalition as existed from 2005 to 2009.

The German electoral system is a proportional representation system. 299 local constituencies each elect a single member by first past the post voting. Voters then cast a second vote to elect members off the party list. Parties need to poll at least 5% of the national ‘second vote’ to be entitled to list members, although list members are allocated by state.

You can download the Google Earth maps of the 2009 and 2013 constituencies, with the winners of the ‘first vote’ in each constituency added to the 2013 map, from the Tally Room maps page.

You can also download a time-series map which allows you to alternate between the two election results. I’ll be adding the 2009 and 2013 results in the ‘second vote’ to this map over coming days.

Below the fold are a series of maps showing the results in the constituencies for each part of Germany, which was dominated by the CDU and CSU, who won 236 out of 299 constituency seats. The SPD lost a batch of seats, but the Left Party, who won a swathe of constituencies across East Germany in 2009, have been restricted to the Berlin area.

But of course the election was decided by the ‘second vote’, and is easiest to analyse on a state basis.

The CDU gained a swing in every states, ranging from 4.3% in Hamburg to over 11% in three states. The Social Democrats suffered a 2% swing in Brandenburg, and their vote was steady in Saxony, but gained swings in every other state, peaking at a swing of 5.4% in Bremen.

The Left Party suffered a 3.3% swing nationally, with the state-based swings ranging from 1.7% in Berlin to 11.2% in Saarland. The Greens polled behind the Left for the second election in a row, but by a smaller margin after suffering a 2.3% national swing. The smallest swings against the Greens were 1.1% in Thuringia and Saarland, with the biggest being 3.3% in Bremen and Schleswig-Holstein.

The Free Democratic Party suffered a devastating 9.8% national swing. The biggest state swing was 11.1% in Rhineland-Palatinate, and managed to limit the swing to only 6.8% in Brandenburg.

The Alternative for Germany (AfD) polled 4.7% nationally, with the state votes varying from 3.7% in Bremen and Lower Saxony to 6.8% in Saxony.

Keep reading to view some election results maps. I’ll be doing some more analysis on the German elections and coming back with another post later this week.

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German election coming up this Sunday

Just a quick post to let people know that the next major election will be the German federal election, to be held this Sunday 22 September.

Due to the Australian federal election, I haven’t had time to engage in this campaign, but polling suggests a collapse in support for the junior government party Free Democratic Party, a decline for the Left Party and an increase for the Christian Democrats and Social Democrats.

You can download the German federal constituency maps for 2009 and 2013 on the Tally Room maps page.

Post-election gender balance update

After an election where the vast majority of candidates running were men, the male-dominated Coalition won seats, and today a new cabinet will be sworn in with only one woman, it may be surprising to know that the number of women in the new Parliament will be increased.

In the House of Representatives, the number of women has increased from 37 in 2010 to 39 in 2013, out of a total of 150.

In the Senate, the number of female Senators will fall from thirty to 28 when the new Senate takes office on 1 July 2014.

Overall, this results in a net increase of one woman in the new Parliament, although the number of Senators could vary from 27 to 31.

Both Labor and the Coalition have increased their proportions of women in their House delegations. The ALP lost three men and three women in the Senate, while the Coalition has the exact same number of men and women in the Senate as before the election.

The Greens Senate delegation has only changed slightly, with the addition of a seventh woman to their team of ten.

The main backwards move is the non-Greens crossbench in the Senate. Nick Xenophon and John Madigan are currently on track to be joined by five more men, with only a small chance that one woman could be elected for the Palmer United Party in Tasmania.

Party House Senate Total
Coalition 18/90 8/34 26/124
Labor 20/55 13/25 33/80
Greens 0/1 7/10 7/11
Other 1/4 0/7 1/11

Correction: due to a coding error I had one LNP member from Queensland listed as female, when he is actually male. The attached spreadsheet and the table above have been adjusted.

I’ve identified six seats where I think it’s conceivable there could be a change to effect these numbers:

  • Fairfax – Clive Palmer is currently leading by an extremely slim margin over the LNP’s Ted O’Brien. His election wouldn’t effect the overall gender balance but would have increased the proportion of men in the Coalition party room.
  • ACT Senate – The Liberal Party’s Zed Seselja is likely but not certain in winning over the Greens’ Simon Sheikh. Again no change in overall balance but would reduce male proportion of Coalition and increase male proportion of Greens.
  • NSW Senate – The Liberal Party’s Arthur Sinodinos is very likely to win, but slim chance for Greens’ Cate Faehrmann, which would change gender balance.
  • Tas Senate – The favourite for the final seat is the Liberal candidate, a woman, but there is a possibility either a female Palmer United Party candidate or a male Sex Party candidate could win.
  • Vic Senate – The male Motoring Enthusiasts Party could lose to the Liberal Party’s Helen Kroger.
  • WA Senate – The male Greens Senator Scott Ludlam could lose to female Labor Senator Louise Pratt.

You can also download an updated list of all candidates who ran in the election, including their gender.