Northern Metropolitan Region

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

Northern Metropolitan 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
MP
Party
  •   Labor (2)
  •   Greens (1)
  •   Liberal (1)
  •   Independent (1)
Quick facts Northern Metropolitan Region Victoria—Legislative Council, State ...
Northern Metropolitan Region
VictoriaLegislative Council
Interactive map of electoral region boundaries from the 2022 state election, along with its composition of electoral districts
StateVictoria
Created2006
MP
Party
  •   Labor (2)
  •   Greens (1)
  •   Liberal (1)
  •   Independent (1)
Electors552,071 (2022)
Area603 km2 (232.8 sq mi)
DemographicMetropolitan
Coordinates37°40′S 144°58′E
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The region comprises the Legislative Assembly districts of Broadmeadows, Brunswick, Essendon, Greenvale, Kalkallo, Melbourne, Northcote, Pascoe Vale, Preston, Richmond and Thomastown.

Members

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

Election results

Labor were defending two seats. The Liberal Party, Greens, and Reason were defending one seat each.[4]

More information Party, Candidate ...
2022 Victorian state election: Northern Metropolitan
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Quota 75,406
Labor 1. Sheena Watt (elected 1)
2. Enver Erdogan (elected 4)
3. Susie Byers
4. Chloe Gaul
5. Ramy Aljalil
151,062 33.39 −9.18
Liberal 1. Evan Mulholland (elected 2)
2. Owen Guest
3. Tim Staker-Gunn
4. Melinda Tempany
5. Hafiz Qadeer
85,359 18.87 +2.41
Greens 1. Samantha Ratnam (elected 3)
2. Esther Kennedy
3. Sarah Jefford
4. Michael Leach
5. Kenna Morrison
84,127 18.59 +1.86
Democratic Labour 1. Adem Somyurek (elected 5)
2. Cary De Wit
21,684 4.79 +0.62
Victorian Socialists 1. Jerome Small
2. Cathy Lewis
21,305 4.71 +0.52
Reason 1. Fiona Patten
2. Judy Ryan
3. Jenn Clark
4. Marcella Brassett
5. Tali Siani Jagielski
16,322 3.61 +0.24
Legalise Cannabis 1. Andrew Hale
2. Renee Thompson
13,822 3.06 +3.06
Family First 1. Imad Hirmiz
2. Denise Lowry
11,646 2.57 +2.57
Animal Justice 1. Leah Horsfall
2. Bruce Poon
6,320 1.40 −0.62
Liberal Democrats 1. Paul Silverberg
2. Rachel Versteegen
5,612 1.24 −0.13
United Australia 1. Kelly Moran
2. Scott McCamish
5,601 1.24 +1.24
Freedom 1. Damien Richardson
2. Cameron Stoddart
4,937 1.09 +1.09
Justice 1. Simone Philpott-Smart
2. Thomas Stanfield
4,773 1.05 −0.97
One Nation 1. Jessica Davis
2. Matthew Considine
4,251 0.94 +0.94
Shooters, Fishers, Farmers 1. Ethan Constantinou
2. Ben Podger
3,470 0.77 −0.43
Sack Dan Andrews 1. Hatice Yesilagac
2. Berke Yolcu
2,711 0.60 +0.60
Transport Matters 1. Georgia Diamantopoulos
2. Francesco Raco
1,964 0.43 −0.17
Health Australia 1. Lisa Taggart
2. Gabrielle Brodie
1,642 0.36 −0.46
Companions and Pets 1. Pauline Grutzner
2. Linda Pullen
1,582 0.35 +0.35
Sustainable Australia 1. Alison Pridham
2. Daryl Budgeon
1,480 0.33 −0.38
New Democrats 1. Amita Ros
2. Pushpinder Singh
3. Vikram Bhinder
1,456 0.32 +0.32
Angry Victorians 1. Nickee Freeman
2. Jake Cashion
1,186 0.26 +0.26
Ind. (Indigenous) Colin John Mancell 118 0.03 +0.03
Total formal votes 452,430 96.33 +1.13
Informal votes 17,223 4.80 −1.13
Turnout 496,653 85.07 −2.94
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References

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