electoral district of Flinders

{{about|the electorate in South Australia|the former Queensland electorate |Electoral district of Flinders (Queensland)|the Federal electorate in Victoria|Division of Flinders}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2019}}

{{Infobox Australian electorate

|name = Flinders

|state = sa

|image = Electoral district of Flinders 2022.svg

|image_alt=Map of South Australia with electoral district of Flinders highlighted

|caption = Electoral district of Flinders (green) in South Australia

|created = 1857

|abolished=

|mp = Sam Telfer

|mp-party = Liberal Party of Australia (SA)

|namesake = Matthew Flinders

|electors = 22756

|electors_year = 2018

|area = 58901

|class = Rural and remote

| near-nw = W. A.

| near-n = Giles

| near-ne = Giles

| near-e = Narungga

| near-se = Mawson

| near-s = Great Australian Bight

| near-sw = Great Australian Bight

| near-w = W. A.

|footnotes=Electoral District map{{cite map |url=https://www.ecsa.sa.gov.au/publications/electoral-district-of-flinders-pdf/download |title=Electoral District of Flinders |publisher=Electoral Commission of South Australia |date=2018 |access-date=1 April 2018 }}{{Dead link|date=March 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}

}}

Flinders is a single-member electoral district for the South Australian House of Assembly. It is named after explorer Matthew Flinders, who was responsible for charting most of the state's coastline. It is a 58,901 km² coastal rural electorate encompassing the Eyre Peninsula and the coast along the Nullarbor Plain, based in and around the city of Port Lincoln and contains the District Councils of Ceduna, Cleve, Elliston, Lower Eyre Peninsula, Streaky Bay and Wudinna; as well as the localities of Fowlers Bay, Nullarbor and Yalata in the Pastoral Unincorporated Area. The seat was expanded in 2002 to include a western strip of land all the way to the Western Australia border.

Flinders is the only one of the original 17 electorates to be contested at every election.{{cite web |url=http://www.parliament.sa.gov.au/AboutParliament/From1836/Documents/StatisticalRecordoftheLegislature1836to20093.pdf |title=Statistical Record of the Legislature 1836 to 2009 |publisher=Parliament of South Australia |access-date=7 January 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190311113513/http://www.parliament.sa.gov.au/AboutParliament/From1836/Documents/StatisticalRecordoftheLegislature1836to20093.pdf |archive-date=11 March 2019 |url-status=dead }} Created as a single-member electorate in 1857, it was a dual-member electorate 1862–1875, 1884–1902 and 1915–1938, and a three-member electorate 1875–1884 and 1902–1915.

A single-member electorate since 1938, it was held by Edward Craigie of the Single Tax League from 1938 to 1941. It has been in the hands of a conservative party–the Liberals (and their predecessors, the Liberal and Country League) or the Nationals–ever since. For most of that time, it has been safely conservative even by the standards of rural South Australia, although Labor came close to winning it with a 46.5 percent two-party vote at the 1962 election. Members have typically held the seat for 10 to 20 years.

The LCL/Liberal hold on the seat was broken in 1973 when Peter Blacker claimed the seat for the Nationals, then known as the Country Party. He held it until 1993, when Kangaroo Island was briefly redistributed to Flinders, allowing Liberal Liz Penfold to take the seat on a large swing of over 14 percent. Penfold actually won enough votes on the first count to win the seat outright. Blacker sought a rematch in 1997, after Kangaroo Island was removed. However, without the advantages of incumbency, Blacker not only lost, but suffered a further swing of three percent. The seat has reverted to form, and has been a comfortably safe Liberal seat ever since.

Flinders was also the name of an electoral district of the unicameral South Australian Legislative Council from 1851 until its abolition in 1857.

Members for Flinders

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| Marshall MacDermott

|

| 1857–1859

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| W. J. Browne

|

| 1860–1862

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

! colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="2"|Alfred Watts

| rowspan="2"|

| rowspan="2"|1862–1866

| {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| Charles Lindsay

|

| 1862–1865

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="2" {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="2"|John Williams

| rowspan="2"|

| rowspan="2"|1865–1868

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| Augustine Stow

|

| 1866–1868

rowspan="3" {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="3"|Alfred Watts

| rowspan="3"|

| rowspan="3"|1868–1875

| {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| W. R. Mortlock

|

| 1868–1870

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| Hampton Gleeson

|

| 1870–1871

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| W. R. Mortlock

|

| 1871–1875

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

! colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

! colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="2"|P. B. Coglin

| rowspan="2"|

| rowspan="2"|1875–1881

| {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| John Williams

|

| 1875–1878

| rowspan="3" {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="3"|Ebenezer Cooke

| rowspan="3"|

| rowspan="3"|1875–1882

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="3" {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="3"|W. R. Mortlock

| rowspan="3"|

| rowspan="3"|1878–1884

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="2"|Andrew Tennant

| rowspan="2"|

| rowspan="2"|1881–1884

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| P. B. Coglin

|

| 1882–1884

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

! colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| Andrew Tennant

|

| 1884–1887

| rowspan="3" {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="3"|John Moule

| rowspan="3"|

| rowspan="3"|1884–1896

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| William Horn

|

| 1887–1893

{{Australian party style|Labor}}| 

| rowspan="3"|Alexander Poynton

| rowspan="3"|Labor

| rowspan="3"|1893–1901

{{Australian party style|Labor}}| 

| {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| W. T. Mortlock

|

| 1896–1899

{{Australian party style|Labor}}| 

| rowspan="2" {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="2"|David McKenzie

| rowspan="2"|

| rowspan="2"|1899–1902

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| W. T. Mortlock

|

| 1901–1902

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

! colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

! colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

{{Australian party style|National Defence League}}| 

| rowspan="3"|Richard Foster

| National League

| 1902–1904

| rowspan=2 {{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan=2|David McKenzie

| rowspan=2|

| rowspan=2|1902–1905

| {{Australian party style|National Defence League}}| 

| rowspan="7"|Thomas Burgoyne

| National League

| 1902–1904

rowspan=2 {{Australian party style|Farmers and Producers Political Union}}| 

| rowspan=2|Farmers and Producers

| rowspan=2|1904–1906

| rowspan=2 {{Australian party style|Farmers and Producers Political Union}}| 

| rowspan=2|Farmers and Producers

| rowspan=2|1904–1906

{{Australian party style|Other}}| 

| rowspan="2"|A. H. Inkster

|

| 1905–1906

rowspan="2" {{Australian party style|Liberal and Democratic Union}}| 

| rowspan="2"|John Travers

| rowspan="2"|Liberal and Democratic

| rowspan="2"|1906–1910

| {{Australian party style|Liberal and Democratic Union}}| 

| Liberal and Democratic

| 1906–1907

| rowspan=2 {{Australian party style|Liberal and Democratic Union}}| 

| rowspan=2|Liberal and Democratic

| rowspan=2|1906–1910

{{Australian party style|Farmers and Producers Political Union}}| 

| E. H. Warren

| Farmers and Producers

| 1907–1910

{{Australian party style|Labor}}| 

| James O'Loghlin

| Labor

| 1910–1912

| rowspan="2" {{Australian party style|Liberal}}| 

| rowspan="2"|James Moseley

| rowspan="2"|Liberal Union

| rowspan="2"|1910–1915

| rowspan="2" {{Australian party style|Liberal}}| 

| rowspan="2"|Liberal Union

| rowspan="2"|1910–1915

{{Australian party style|Liberal}}| 

| John Travers

| Liberal Union

| 1912–1915

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

! colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

{{Australian party style|Liberal}}| 

| John Travers

| Liberal Union

| 1915–1918

| rowspan="2" {{Australian party style|Liberal}}| 

| rowspan="8"|James Moseley

| rowspan="2"|Liberal Union

| rowspan="2"|1915–1923

rowspan="2" {{Australian party style|Nationals}}| 

| rowspan="2"|John Chapman

| rowspan="2"|Country

| rowspan="2"|1918–1924

rowspan="5" {{Australian party style|Liberal}}| 

| rowspan="5"|Liberal Federation

| rowspan="5"|1923–1932

{{Australian party style|Labor}}| 

| John O'Connor

| Labor

| 1924–1927

{{Australian party style|Nationals}}| 

| rowspan=2|Edward Coles

| Country Party

| 1927–1928

{{Australian party style|Liberal}}| 

| Liberal Federation

| 1928–1930

{{Australian party style|Single Tax League}}| 

| rowspan="3"|Edward Craigie

| rowspan="3"|Single Tax

| rowspan="3"|1930–1938

{{Australian party style|Single Tax League}}| 

| {{Australian party style|LCL}}| 

| Liberal and Country

| 1932–1933

{{Australian party style|Single Tax League}}| 

| {{Australian party style|LCL}}| 

| Arthur Christian

| Liberal and Country

| 1933–1938

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Member

! Party

! Term

{{Australian party style|Single Tax League}}| 

| Edward Craigie

| Single Tax

| 1938–1941

{{Australian party style|LCL}}| 

| Rex Pearson

| Liberal and Country

| 1941–1951

{{Australian party style|LCL}}| 

| Glen Pearson

| Liberal and Country

| 1951–1970

{{Australian party style|LCL}}| 

| John Carnie

| Liberal and Country

| 1970–1973

{{Australian party style|Nationals}}| 

| Peter Blacker

| Nationals SA

| 1973–1993

{{Australian party style|Liberal}}| 

| Liz Penfold

| Liberal

| 1993–2010

{{Australian party style|Liberal}}| 

| Peter Treloar

| Liberal

| 2010–2022

{{Australian party style|Liberal}}| 

| Sam Telfer

| Liberal

| 2022–present

Election results

{{see also|Electoral results for the district of Flinders}}

{{Excerpt|Results of the 2022 South Australian state election (House of Assembly)|section=Flinders}}

Notes

{{Reflist}}

References

  • [https://www.ecsa.sa.gov.au/electoral-districts/electoral-district-profiles?view=article&id=827:flinders ECSA profile for Flinders: 2018]
  • [http://www.abc.net.au/news/elections/sa-election-2018/guide/flin/ ABC profile for Flinders: 2018]
  • [https://www.pollbludger.net/sa2018/Flinders.htm Poll Bludger profile for Flinders: 2018]