Eastern Victoria Region

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

Eastern Victoria Region 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.

Created2006
MPMelina Bath (National)
Jeff Bourman (Shooters)
Renee Heath (Liberal)
Tom McIntosh (Labor)
Harriet Shing (Labor)
Party  Labor (2)
  Liberal (1)
  National (1)
  Shooters, Fishers, Farmers (1)
Quick facts Eastern Victoria Region Victoria—Legislative Council, State ...
Eastern Victoria Region
VictoriaLegislative Council
Interactive map of electoral region boundaries from the 2022 state election, along with its composition of electoral districts
StateVictoria
Created2006
MPMelina Bath (National)
Jeff Bourman (Shooters)
Renee Heath (Liberal)
Tom McIntosh (Labor)
Harriet Shing (Labor)
Party  Labor (2)
  Liberal (1)
  National (1)
  Shooters, Fishers, Farmers (1)
Electors546,122 (2022)
Area44,420 km2 (17,150.7 sq mi)
DemographicRural
Coordinates37°53′S 147°19′E
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The region comprises the Legislative Assembly districts of Bass, Evelyn, Gippsland East, Gippsland South, Hastings, Monbulk, Mornington, Morwell, Narracan, Nepean and Pakenham.

Members

Returned MLCs by seat

Election results

Labor and the Liberal/National coalition were defending two seats each. The Shooters, Farmers and Fishers were defending one seat.[4]

More information Party, Candidate ...
2022 Victorian state election: Eastern Victoria
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Quota 78,887
Liberal/National Coalition 1. Renee Heath (elected 1)
2. Melina Bath (elected 3)
3. David Burgess
4. Sharn Coombes
5. Mick Harrington
172,208 36.38 +2.28
Labor 1. Tom McIntosh (elected 2)
2. Harriet Shing (elected 4)
3. Amie Templar-Kanshlo
4. Jannette Langley
5. Marg D'Arcy
125,481 26.51 −7.07
Greens 1. Mat Morgan
2. Adam Frogley
3. Jessica Wheelock
4. Lynda Wheelock
5. Rodrigo Bardales
37,795 7.99 +1.26
Legalise Cannabis 1. Thomas Forrest
2. Mark Smith
19,654 4.15 +4.15
Democratic Labour 1. Philip Semmel
2. Catherine Kennedy
18,117 3.83 +2.32
One Nation 1. Warren Pickering
2. Jeff Waddell
16,964 3.58 +3.58
Shooters, Fishers, Farmers 1. Jeff Bourman (elected 5)
2. Kerrie-Anne Muir
14,217 3.00 −2.01
Liberal Democrats 1. Rob McCathie
2. Angus Ward
12,130 2.56 −1.47
Justice 1. Ruth Stanfield
2. Lachlan O'Connell
9,500 2.00 −2.47
Animal Justice 1. Austin Cram
2. Jennifer McAdam
8,413 1.78 −1.45
Freedom 1. Greg Hansford
2. Ray Akers
8,385 1.77 +1.77
Family First 1. Milton Wade
2. Natasha Sawtell
7,634 1.61 +1.61
Sack Dan Andrews 1. Cengiz Coskun
2. Connie Coskun
3,984 0.84 +0.84
Reason 1. Dean Barnes
2. Eve Cash
3,498 0.74 −0.07
United Australia 1. James William Unkles
2. Paul Wilson
3,382 0.71 +0.71
Victorian Socialists 1. Richard Mann
2. Natalie Acreman
2,300 0.49 +0.27
Angry Victorians 1. Shane Casey
2. Virginia Rizzo
3. Ben Marshall
2,280 0.48 +0.48
Companions and Pets 1. John Hutchison
2. Sean Eddy
2,251 0.48 +0.48
Health Australia 1. Kristy Michelle Wallace
2. Tania White
1,921 0.41 −0.48
Sustainable Australia 1. Sophie Paterson
2. Anthony Cresswell
1,772 0.37 −0.50
Transport Matters 1. Ralf Troshen
2. Mark Dunn
729 0.15 −0.41
New Democrats 1. Srilakshmi Ajjampura
2. Komalben Rasiklal Darji
3. Namrata Rajan Shah
533 0.11 +0.11
Independent 1. John O'Brien 170 0.04 +0.04
Total formal votes 473,318 96.94 +0.73
Informal votes 14,948 3.06 −0.73
Turnout 488,266 89.41 −1.67
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References

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