North-Eastern Metropolitan Region

Electoral region of the Victorian Legislative Council From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

North-Eastern Metropolitan Region, previously Eastern Metropolitan Region between 2006 and 2022, is one of the eight electoral regions of Victoria, Australia, which elects five members to the Victorian Legislative Council (also referred to as the upper house) by proportional representation. The region was created in 2006 following the 2005 reform of the Victorian Legislative Council. The region was renamed to its current name since the 2022 state election.[1]

Created2006
MPRichard Welch (Liberal)
Shaun Leane (Labor)
Nick McGowan (Liberal)
Aiv Puglielli (Greens)
Sonja Terpstra (Labor)
Party  Labor (2)
  Liberal (2)
  Greens (1)
Quick facts North-Eastern Metropolitan Region Victoria—Legislative Council, State ...
North-Eastern Metropolitan Region
VictoriaLegislative Council
Interactive map of electoral region boundaries from the 2022 state election, along with its composition of electoral districts
StateVictoria
Created2006
MPRichard Welch (Liberal)
Shaun Leane (Labor)
Nick McGowan (Liberal)
Aiv Puglielli (Greens)
Sonja Terpstra (Labor)
Party  Labor (2)
  Liberal (2)
  Greens (1)
Electors546,503 (2022)
Area509 km2 (196.5 sq mi)
DemographicMetropolitan
Coordinates37°48′S 145°11′E
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The region extends from Melbourne's inner eastern suburbs of Bulleen and Doncaster, north across the Yarra River to Lower Plenty and Eltham, and across to Bayswater, Croydon and Ferntree Gully (in the Dandenong Ranges) in the east below the Dandenong Ranges. It comprises the Legislative Assembly districts of Bayswater, Box Hill, Bulleen, Bundoora, Croydon, Eltham, Glen Waverley, Ivanhoe, Mill Park, Ringwood and Warrandyte.

Members

More information Year, Member ...
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Returned MLCs by seat

Election results

Labor and the Liberal Party were defending two seats each. The Transport Matters Party were defending one seat.[5]

More information Party, Candidate ...
2022 Victorian state election: North-Eastern Metropolitan
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Quota 80,147
Labor 1. Shaun Leane (elected 1)
2. Sonja Terpstra (elected 3)
3. Nildhara Gadani
4. Rana Shahid Javed
5. Kieran Simpson
162,183 33.73 −3.24
Liberal 1. Matthew Bach (elected 2)
2. Nick McGowan (elected 4)
3. Kirsten Langford
4. Irene Ling
5. Sally Houguet
145,788 30.32 −5.81
Greens 1. Aiv Puglielli (elected 5)
2. Sophia Sun
3. Liz Chase
4. Asher Cookson
5. Sarah Newman
49,934 10.38 +1.39
Democratic Labour 1. Hugh Dolan
2. Brenton van der Ende
3. George Tsingopoulos
4. James Tra
25,055 5.21 +3.51
Liberal Democrats 1. Maya Tesa
2. Josh Lay
20,379 4.24 +0.07
Legalise Cannabis 1. Nicholas Wallis
2. Anna Negri
15,357 3.19 +3.19
Family First 1. Alister Cameron
2. Nina van Strijp
10,063 2.09 +2.09
Animal Justice 1. Chris Delforce
2. Angel Aleksov
6,799 1.41 −0.99
Justice 1. Judith Thompson
2. Annette Philpott
6,759 1.41 −1.12
One Nation 1. Peter Richardson
2. William Turner
6,086 1.27 +1.27
Reason 1. Nina Springle
2. Francis Cairns
4,774 0.99 −0.20
Freedom 1. Greg Cheesman
2. Daniella Heatherich
4,684 0.97 +0.97
Shooters, Fishers, Farmers 1. Chris Banhidy
2. Hugh Hanson
4,401 0.92 −0.33
Sack Dan Andrews 1. Serife Cobankara
2. Husyin Cobankara
3,236 0.67 +0.67
Health Australia 1. Leesa Michelle Munro
2. Andrew Hicks
3,171 0.66 +0.08
Victorian Socialists 1. Lucas Moore
2. Lillian Kopschewa
2,585 0.54 +0.09
United Australia 1. Nathan Scaglione
2. Irene Zivkovic
2,436 0.51 +0.51
Sustainable Australia 1. Jack Corcoran
2. William Clow
1,875 0.39 −0.42
Companions and Pets 1. Craig Reid
2. Julia Jones
1,738 0.36 +0.36
Angry Victorians 1. Wally Edwards
2. Joe Gianfriddo
1,673 0.35 +0.35
Transport Matters 1. Rod Barton
2. Kim Guest
1,023 0.21 −0.41
New Democrats 1. Darshan Lal Jaisinghani
2. Rajat Garg
3. Pushpdeep Narang
879 0.18 +0.18
Total formal votes 480,878 97.21 +0.33
Informal votes 13,484 2.79 −0.33
Turnout 494,672 91.68 −2.04
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References

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