Electoral district of Perth
{{Short description|State electoral district of Western Australia}}
{{About|the Western Australian state electorate|the Australian federal electorate|Division of Perth|the Legislative Council constituency (1870–1890)|Electoral district of Perth (Legislative Council)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Use Australian English|date=April 2024}}
{{Infobox Australian electorate |
|name = Perth
|state = wa
|image = {{switcher
|{{maplink|frame=yes|plain=yes|from=WA Electoral Districts (2021)/Perth.map|frame-height=300|frame-width=400|overlay-horizontal-alignment=right|overlay-vertical-alignment=bottom|overlay=x100px
}}
|From the 2021 state election to 2025
|{{maplink|frame=yes|plain=yes|from=WA Electoral Districts (2025)/Perth.map|frame-height=300|frame-width=400|overlay-horizontal-alignment=right|overlay-vertical-alignment=bottom|overlay=x100px
}}
|From the 2025 state election
|default=2
}}
|caption = Interactive map of district boundaries
|lifespan = 1890–1950, 1962–present
|mp = John Carey
|mp-party = Labor
|namesake = Perth
|electors = 31903
|electors_year = 2025
|area = 20
|class = Metropolitan
|near-n = Balcatta
|near-ne = Mount Lawley
|near-nw = Churchlands
|near-e = Victoria Park
|near-w = Nedlands
|near-s = South Perth
|near-se = Victoria Park
|near-sw = Nedlands
|coordinates = {{coord|31.95|S|115.84|E|display=inline,title}}
}}
The electoral district of Perth is a Legislative Assembly electorate in the state of Western Australia. Perth is named for the capital city of Western Australia whose central business district falls within its borders. It is one of the oldest electorates in Western Australia, with its first member having been elected in the inaugural 1890 elections of the Legislative Assembly.
Perth has traditionally been a safe Labor seat, but was briefly held by Liberal Eleni Evangel between 2013 and 2017. Perth is currently held by Labor MLA John Carey.
Geography
File:Electorate Perth 1962 2005.gif
File:Electorate Perth 2005 2009.png
Perth is bounded by the Swan River to the south and southeast, Mitchell Freeway and Thomas Street to the west, Green Street to the north, and Walcott Street to the northeast. Its boundaries include the suburbs of East Perth, Highgate, Leederville, Mount Hawthorn,This includes a section formerly part of Glendalough which merged with Mount Hawthorn in 2007. See {{cite web|url=http://www.vincent.wa.gov.au/cproot/1815/16417/Glendalough%20Name%20Change.pdf|title=Media release - What's in a name?|author=Town of Vincent|author-link=Town of Vincent|date=1 March 2007|access-date=2008-01-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080411053431/http://www.vincent.wa.gov.au/cproot/1815/16417/Glendalough%20Name%20Change.pdf|archive-date=2008-04-11|url-status=dead}} Northbridge, North Perth, Perth and West Perth along with part of Mount Lawley southwest of Walcott Street.{{cite web|url=http://www.boundarieswa.com/2007/Final-Boundaries/Metropolitan-Area/--North-Metropolitan-/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171114093350/http://www.boundarieswa.com/2007/Final-Boundaries/Metropolitan-Area/--North-Metropolitan-/|url-status=dead|archive-date=14 November 2017|title=2007 Electoral Distribution - Final Boundaries - Metropolitan Area - North Metropolitan Region|author=Western Australian Electoral Commission|date=29 October 2007|access-date=2008-01-12}} Major features inside the electorate include Perth's central business district, Kings Park, the East Perth redevelopment precinct and Hyde Park.
Historically, the boundaries included a much smaller area. In 1911, it only covered the central business district and Northbridge, and in 1929, a section between Newcastle and Bulwer Streets was added. When it was recreated from parts of the abolished West Perth and East Perth districts at the 1961 redistribution,{{Gazette WA | title = Electoral Districts Act 1947-1955 - Order in Council | page = 1961:3651-3702 | date = 14 December 1961 }} the Perth electorate included all of West Perth and part of Kings Park, but its northern boundary only extended to Vincent Street, Hyde Park and the East Perth railway station. The 1972 redistribution{{Gazette WA | title = Electoral Districts Act 1947-1965 - Order in Council | page = 1972:1833-1893 | date = 14 June 1972 }} added part of West Leederville east of Kimberley Street, and extended the northern boundary to include southern Leederville and parts of North Perth and Mount Lawley. By 1982, it extended to Walcott Street, and the 1994 redistribution saw it extend well into the former seat of Mount Lawley.{{Gazette WA | title = Electoral Distributions Act 1947 - Division of the State into Six Electoral Regions and 57 Electoral Districts by the Electoral Distribution Commissioners | page = 1994:6135-6327
| date = 28 November 1994 }}
The 2007 redistribution, which came into effect at the 2008 election, removed Menora and parts of Mount Lawley northeast of Walcott Street, while including all of West Perth as well as Kings Park, which had previously been part of Nedlands.{{cite web|url=http://www.boundarieswa.com/2003/Boundaries/North-Metropolitan/Perth/|title=2003 Electoral Distribution - Final Boundaries - - North Metropolitan - Perth|author=Western Australian Electoral Commission|date=4 August 2003|access-date=2008-01-12}}
Demographics
As redistributions alter an electorate's area and demographic profile, the 2006 Census conducted by the Australian Bureau of Statistics on the boundaries prior to the redistribution is the main source of information on the electorate's current profile. At the 2006 census, the median age of the electorate's residents was 35 years, compared to 36 across metropolitan Perth—only 12.1% of the electorate's population (compared with 19.5%) were below 15, but the 25–54 age group was significantly greater.{{Census 2006 AUS|id=SED54304|name=Perth (North Metropolitan) (State Electoral Division)|quick=on|access-date=2008-12-10}}
* For statistics for the whole of Perth, see {{Census 2006 AUS|id=505|name=Perth (Statistical Division)|quick=on|access-date=2008-12-10}} Only 53.7% of its residents were born in Australia, compared to 61.5% in Perth, and much less of the remainder were from northwestern Europe (10.78% as against 13.93%). At home, significantly more electorate residents spoke Italian, Cantonese, Mandarin and Greek at home, and whilst the top three religions (Catholicism, no religion and Anglicanism) differed little from other parts of Perth, Buddhism and Eastern Orthodox adherents outnumbered those of the Uniting Church. Only 36% were married compared to 49% across Perth, whilst only 47.7% of homes (compared to 67.2%) were fully owned or being purchased. The median income in the electorate was $606 compared with $513, and 49.5% of the electorate's workers were professionals or managers compared with 31.8%.
In the 2007 redistribution, Menora, with a median income of $397 and a median age of 48, with 42.5% being 55 years or over, was removed, whilst West Perth, with a slightly larger population and a median income of $698 and a median age of 34, and a higher percentage of professionals and managers than the electorate's average, was added.{{Census 2006 AUS|id=SSC51926|name=Menora (State Suburb)|quick=on|access-date=2008-12-10}}{{Census 2006 AUS|id=SSC52516|name=West Perth (State Suburb)|quick=on|access-date=2008-12-10}}
The Australian Bureau of Statistics do not collect data on sexuality, but the electorate is home to a significant portion of Perth's gay community.{{cite web|url=http://www.pollbludger.com/wa2005.htm#perth|title=Western Australian Election 2005: Legislative Assembly|last=Bowe|first=William|year=2005|access-date=2008-12-10|archive-date=2 July 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080702230553/http://www.pollbludger.com/wa2005.htm#perth|url-status=dead}}O'Brien, Natalie. "Gay candidate trusts electorate's tolerance", The West Australian, 17 January 2001, p.6. Perth's main gay venues, Connections Nightclub and the Court Hotel,Lingane, Dennis. (1999) "Drag on draught", The Sunday Times (Checkout section), 20 June 1999, p.10. as well as events such as the Pride Parade and Fairday, are located in the electorate.Smith, Megan. (2008) "[http://www.outinperth.com/index.php/life/people/representing-northbridge-john-hyde Representing Northbridge - John Hyde] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090223203844/http://www.outinperth.com/index.php/life/people/representing-northbridge-john-hyde |date=February 23, 2009 }}", Out in Perth, 26 September 2008. Accessed 3 January 2009.
History
The electoral district of Perth was created as one of the initial 30 single-member districts, and one of only six in the Perth–Fremantle area.{{cite Q |Q125995168 |mode=cs1 |last=de Garis |first=Brian |author-link=Brian De Garis |chapter=Self-government and the evolution of party politics }}{{rp|p=336}}Its first member, who was elected on 10 December 1890, was Dr Edward Scott, a doctor by training who had been elected as Mayor of Perth the previous year. He resigned in December 1891, and was replaced at the resulting by-election on 12 January 1892 by Thomas Molloy. Molloy became embroiled in a controversy regarding provision of state aid to private schools, which he and fellow Catholic MLAs Timothy Quinlan and Alfred Canning supported. The Catholic Vicar General, Father Anselm Bourke, established the Education Defence League with their assistance. However, the issue became a major one in the 1894 election amongst the voting public, and all three MLAs lost their seats, Molloy losing to George Randell, a prominent Congregationalist who had led the cause against state aid.{{rp|pp=342–343}} Randell became the Opposition Leader to Premier John Forrest, but stepped down from that role a year later in July 1895, and did not contest the 1897 election, which was won by a supporter of Forrest.{{rp|pp=342–343}}
In the 1901 election, after which the Oppositionists under George Leake were able to form a minority government, Frank Wilson, formerly the member for Canning, won the seat. After five months, the Leake government failed, and the governor eventually invited Alf Morgans of the Ministerial Party to form a government and appoint a six-member Ministry. Morgans appointed Wilson minister of mines and commissioner of railways on 21 November 1901. Until 1947, members of parliament who were appointed as ministers were required to resign their seat and recontest it at a ministerial by-election, which was normally a fairly non-eventful matter.Black, D., in Stannage (1981), p.390.{{full citation needed |date=January 2025}} However, Leake and his allies contested the six by-elections with such organised campaigning that three of the six ministers, including Wilson, were defeated.de Garis (1981), p.348.
* {{Australian Dictionary of Biography|last=de Garis|first= Brian|year= 1986 |id=A100035b |title=Leake, George (1856 - 1902)|access-date= 2008-01-14}}
* Dates from {{cite book|last=Black|first=David|author2=Prescott, Valerie|title=Election statistics, Legislative Assembly of Western Australia, 1890-1996|year=1997|publisher=Parliamentary History Project and Western Australian Electoral Commission|location=Perth|isbn=0-7309-8409-5}}
In 1911, the seat was won for the first time for the Labor Party by Walter Dwyer, a lawyer who helped to draft the Industrial Arbitration Act 1912 during the first Scaddan administration;{{Australian Dictionary of Biography|last=Dunphy|first= Edward|year= 1981 |id=A010231b |title=Dwyer, Sir Walter (1875 - 1950)|access-date= 2008-12-08}} however, he was defeated by James Connolly of the new Liberal Party in 1914. Connolly became a minister without portfolio in the new Wilson government in 1916, but resigned in June 1917 when appointed to the role of Agent General for Western Australia.{{Australian Dictionary of Biography|last=Bolton|first= Geoffrey|year= 1981 |id=A080100b |title=Connolly, Sir James Daniel (1869 - 1962)|access-date= 2008-12-08}} Robert Pilkington of the Nationalist Party won the subsequent by-election on 21 July 1917 and election two months later, before leaving for England in 1921. Harry Mann, a former detective who, amongst other things, oversaw gaming and racing, was elected in his place.Stoddart, Brian. (1981) "Sport and Society 1890–1940", in Stannage, p. 672.{{full citation needed |date=January 2025}}
A controversy erupted in 1933 upon the establishment of a Lotteries Commission, to which Mann, along with John Scaddan and Legislative Council member Alec Clydesdale, were appointed. Several profitable newspaper competitions, including that of The Sunday Times, were prohibited due to being thinly disguised forms of gambling. In response, a Citizens' Reform League was formed to defend the crosswords, and at the elections later that year, both Mann and Scaddan lost their seatsBlack (1981), p.422. Also see {{cite book|last=Bolton|first=Geoffrey|title=A fine country to starve in|publisher=University of Western Australia Press|year=1972|isbn=0-85564-061-8|pages=244–246}}—with Perth being won by former Labor Senator Ted Needham, who was to hold the seat until its abolition at the 1950 election, and North Perth for the following three years until his retirement.{{Black and Bolton 2001}} One sideline to Needham's campaigns was watchmaker and jeweller William Murray, who had placed a public notice in The West Australian on 28 October 1930 stating that Parliament "has become an out-of-date instrument for achieving the will of Anglo-Saxon peoples" and seeking names and addresses of anyone wishing to work towards overthrowing it—and then ran for election as a Nationalist in 1936 and 1943.{{cite book |title = The house on the hill: A history of the Parliament of Western Australia 1832-1990 |last=Bolton |first=Geoffrey |editor = Black, David |year= 1991 |publisher= Parliament of Western Australia |location=West Perth |isbn=0-7309-3983-9 |chapter = Good name of Parliament |page= 482}}
The seat was re-established at the 1962 election with different boundaries—the neighbouring seats of West Perth, East Perth and North Perth having all been abolished in the 1961 redistribution—and was won by Labor's Stanley Heal, the previous member for West Perth. He was defeated at the 1965 election by Peter Durack of the Liberal Country League, who was in turn defeated by Terry Burke in 1968.{{cite book|last=Black|first=David|author2=Prescott, Valerie|title=Election statistics, Legislative Assembly of Western Australia, 1890-1996|year=1997|publisher=Parliamentary History Project and Western Australian Electoral Commission|location=Perth|isbn=0-7309-8409-5}} Burke, the brother of Brian Burke who went on to serve as Premier from 1983 until 1988, went on to hold the seat for 19 years until 1987. He faced some high-profile Liberal opponents, including future Legislative Councillor Bob Pike in 1971, historian and author Hal G.P. Colebatch in 1977 and Olympic swimmer Peter Evans in 1986.
Burke resigned in 1987, and Labor's Dr Ian Alexander, a City of Perth councillor and town planner from the party's left faction, won the subsequent by-election on 9 May 1987. He spent much of his parliamentary time on Aboriginal issues, sustainability and the environment and the Northern Suburbs Transit System project. On 4 March 1991, Ian Alexander resigned from the Labor party citing "frequent breaches of the party's basic principles and platforms", and sat as an independent until the 1993 election.{{cite news|title=WA's Labor sinks towards minority government|last=Humphries|first=David|date=6 March 1991|work=The Age|page=6}}
{{cite news|title=Labor in trouble in the West|date=6 March 1991|work=The Sydney Morning Herald|page=14}} Dr Alexander did not stand for election in 1993, and Labor's Diana Warnock, a former radio talk-show host, won the seat with 50.29% of the two-party-preferred vote against the Liberals' Hal G.P. Colebatch.
On 21 October 1999, Warnock announced her departure at the next election for personal reasons, and threw her support behind former Town of Vincent mayor John Hyde, a member of the Centre faction of the Labor Party who had the support of the Left faction and some Centre members of Parliament. However, the key Centre unions had backed former ministerial adviser Adele Farina for the post, and Labor's affirmative action policy for candidates in winnable seats meant that failing to pick a female candidate would risk sitting male MPs. A week later, the Centre faction openly split, with a breakaway group endorsing Hyde. On 5 November, Farina withdrew from the contest, leaving Hyde to be preselected unopposed ahead of the 2001 election.Mallabone, Mark. "State Labor MP to call it quits", The West Australian, 22 October 1999, p.12; Burns, Anne. "Labor caught in battle of sexes", The West Australian, 22 October 1999, p.22; Burns, Anne. "Seat fight leads to new Labor factions", The West Australian, 28 October 1999, p.10; "ALP gets behind Hyde", The West Australian, 6 November 1999, p.6. He maintained the seat for Labor at the election, becoming the first openly gay man to sit in the Western Australian parliament.
On 9 March 2013, Liberal candidate and City of Perth councillor Eleni Evangel defeated Hyde and Labor in an upset victory with a significant swing amid the Liberals' decisive victory that year, becoming the first Liberal member for Perth since the 1960s. However, Evangel was herself swept out four years later by Labor's John Carey, the mayor of the City of Vincent, amid the Liberals' collapse in the metropolitan area.
Members for Perth
File:John Carey MLA speaking at Transition Town Vincent September 2017 cropped.jpg, the current member for Perth|alt=Man with glasses speaking at a microphone]]
class="wikitable" | ||
colspan="4" | Perth (1890–1950) | ||
---|---|---|
colspan="2"|Member | Party | Term |
{{Australian party style|none}}|
| Non-aligned | 1890–1892 | ||
{{Australian party style|none}}|
| Non-aligned | 1892–1894 | ||
{{Australian party style|Opposition (WA)}}|
| 1894–1897 | ||
{{Australian party style|Ministerial (WA)}}|
| 1897–1901 | ||
{{Australian party style|Ministerial (WA)}}|
| Ministerialist | 1901 | ||
{{Australian party style|Opposition (WA)}}|
| Oppositionist | 1901–1904 | ||
{{Australian party style|Ministerial (WA)}}|
| Ministerialist | 1904–1911 | ||
{{Australian party style|Labor}}|
| Sir Walter Dwyer | Labor | 1911–1914 | ||
{{Australian party style|Nationalist}}|
| Sir James Connolly | Liberal | 1914–1917 | ||
{{Australian party style|Nationalist}}|
| 1917–1921 | ||
{{Australian party style|Nationalist}}|
| Nationalist | 1921–1933 | ||
{{Australian party style|Labor}}|
| Labor | 1933–1950 | ||
colspan="4" | Perth (1961–present) | ||
colspan="2"|Member | Party | Term |
{{Australian party style|Labor}}|
| Labor | 1962–1965 | ||
{{Australian party style|LCL WA}}|
| LCL | 1965–1968 | ||
{{Australian party style|Labor}}|
| Labor | 1968–1987 | ||
{{Australian party style|Labor}}|
| rowspan="2"|Dr Ian Alexander | Labor | 1987–1991 | ||
{{Australian party style|Independent}}|
| 1991–1993 | ||
{{Australian party style|Labor}}|
| Labor | 1993–2001 | ||
{{Australian party style|Labor}}|
| Labor | 2001–2013 | ||
{{Australian party style|Liberal}}|
| Liberal | 2013–2017 | ||
{{Australian party style|Labor}}|
| Labor | 2017–present |
Election results
{{main|Electoral results for the district of Perth}}
{{Excerpt|Results of the 2025 Western Australian state election (Legislative Assembly)|section=Perth}}
References
{{Reflist|30em}}
External links
- {{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/elections/wa/2005/guide/pert.htm|title=Electorate Profile|last=Green|first=Antony|author-link=Antony Green|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation}}
{{Electoral districts of Western Australia}}
{{Good article}}