Southern Metropolitan Region

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

Southern 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
Party  Labor (2)
  Liberal (2)
  Greens (1)
Quick facts Southern Metropolitan Region Victoria—Legislative Council, State ...
Southern Metropolitan Region
VictoriaLegislative Council
Interactive map of electoral region boundaries from the 2022 state election, along with its composition of electoral districts
StateVictoria
Created2006
MPRyan Batchelor (Labor)
John Berger (Labor)
Katherine Copsey (Greens)
Georgie Crozier (Liberal)
David Davis (Liberal)
Party  Labor (2)
  Liberal (2)
  Greens (1)
Electors542,200 (2022)
Area243 km2 (93.8 sq mi)
DemographicMetropolitan
Coordinates37°53′S 145°2′E
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The region comprises the Legislative Assembly districts of Albert Park, Ashwood, Bentleigh, Brighton, Caulfield, Hawthorn, Kew, Malvern, Oakleigh, Prahran and Sandringham. The region covers most of the wealthiest areas of Melbourne, with only a few traditional Labor areas (Oakleigh being the only historically safe Labor seat).[citation needed]

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. Sustainable Australia was defending one seat.[4]

More information Party, Candidate ...
2022 Victorian state election: Southern Metropolitan
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Quota 78,309
Liberal/National Coalition 1. David Davis (elected 1)
2. Georgie Crozier (elected 3)
3. Nick Stavrou
4. Andrew Litwinow
5. Monica Clark
169,681 36.11 −1.78
Labor 1. John Berger (elected 2)
2. Ryan Batchelor (elected 5)
3. Clive Crosby
4. Lynn Psaila
5. Muhammad Shahbaz
139,722 29.74 −5.45
Greens 1. Katherine Copsey (elected 4)
2. John Friend-Pereira
3. Anna Parker
4. Kylie Rocha
5. Shanae Rowick
72,410 15.41 +2.31
Legalise Cannabis 1. Marc Selan
2. Ben Howman
13,681 2.91 +2.91
Liberal Democrats 1. Matthew Ford
2. David Segal
11,696 2.49 +0.96
Democratic Labour 1. Theodore Tsoingas
2. Dean Chambers
10,385 2.21 +0.02
Reason 1. Andrew Johnson
2. Stephen Jasper
9,511 2.02 +0.07
Animal Justice 1. Ben Schultz
2. Michelle McGoldrick
6,698 1.43 −0.72
Sustainable Australia 1. Clifford Hayes
2. Allan Doensen
5,170 1.10 −0.19
Family First 1. Vickie Janson
2. Alex Van Der End
4,734 1.01 +1.01
Justice 1. Ellie Jean Sullivan
2. Michaele Dale
3,807 0.81 −0.67
Sack Dan Andrews 1. Nursin Akdogan
2. Reyhan Adonir
3,542 0.75 +0.75
One Nation 1. Chris Bradbury
2. Craig Pickering
3,072 0.65 +0.65
Freedom 1. Natasha Kons
2. Madeleine Kons
2,810 0.60 +0.60
Victorian Socialists 1. Jack Todaro
2. Liam Kruger
2,516 0.54 +0.07
United Australia 1. Leon Kofmansky
2. Julie McCamish
2,177 0.46 +0.46
Shooters, Fishers, Farmers 1. Nicole Bourman
2. Michelle Collyer
1,966 0.42 −0.22
Health Australia 1. Kellie Thomas
2. Mark Lambrick
1,935 0.41 −0.07
Transport Matters 1. Paul Tammesild
2. Marc Peters
1,480 0.31 −0.04
Companions and Pets 1. Joan Molyneux
2. Max Winch
1,257 0.27 +0.27
Angry Victorians 1. Dean Hurlston
2. Robert John Kamp
915 0.19 +0.19
New Democrats 1. Krishna Dharmeshkumar Brahmbhatt
2. Jigarkumar Ahbaysinh Chaudhary
3. Ravinder Singh Marwaha
688 0.15 +0.15
Total formal votes 469,853 97.98 +0.45
Informal votes 9,702 2.02 −0.45
Turnout 479,555 88.45 −0.88
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References

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