2016 Australian federal election|
|
|
|
| Opinion polls |
| Registered | 15,671,551 |
|---|
| Turnout | 91.01% |
|---|
|
|
Results by winning party by division for the House of Representatives.
Results by popular vote by state and territory.[1] |
|
The 2016 Australian federal election was an election held on Saturday 2 July to elect all 226 members of the 45th Parliament of Australia. It lasted eight weeks. It was the first under a new voting system for the Senate that replaced group voting tickets with optional preferential voting.[2] Incumbent Malcolm Turnbull was narrowly re-elected by forming a coalition government with other smaller parties.
Opinion polls
Results
House of Representatives
| Popular vote |
|
|
| |
|
| Labor |
|
34.73% |
| Liberal |
|
28.67% |
| Greens |
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10.23% |
| LNP (QLD) |
|
8.52% |
| National |
|
4.61% |
| NXT |
|
1.85% |
| Katter's |
|
0.54% |
| CLP (NT) |
|
0.24% |
| Independents |
|
2.81% |
| Other |
|
7.79% |
|
| Two-party-preferred vote |
|
|
| |
|
| Coalition |
|
50.36% |
| Labor |
|
49.64% |
|
| Seats |
|
|
| |
|
| Coalition |
|
50.67% |
| Labor |
|
46.00% |
| Greens |
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0.67% |
| NXT |
|
0.67% |
| Katter's |
|
0.67% |
| Independents |
|
1.33% |
|
Senate
| Popular vote |
|
|
| |
|
| Labor |
|
29.79% |
| Liberal/National |
|
20.01% |
| Greens |
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8.65% |
| Liberal |
|
7.71% |
| LNP (QLD) |
|
6.94% |
| NXT |
|
3.30% |
| CLP (NT) |
|
0.27% |
| National |
|
0.25% |
| Other |
|
23.08% |
|
| Seats |
|
|
| |
|
| Coalition |
|
39.47% |
| Labor |
|
34.21% |
| Greens |
<div style="background:Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'Module:Political party/G' not found.; width:11.84%; overflow:hidden"> |
11.84% |
| NXT |
|
3.95% |
| CLP (NT) |
|
1.32% |
| Other |
|
10.52% |
|
Results aftermath
After a week of vote counting, no party had won enough seats in the House of Representatives to form a majority government.[3][4] Neither the Liberal/National Coalition's incumbent Turnbull Government nor the Australian Labor Party's Shorten Opposition were in a position to claim victory.[5][6] Turnbull talked with the crossbench. He won a confidence and supply support from Bob Katter, Andrew Wilkie and Cathy McGowan in the event of a hung parliament and resulting minority government.[7][8] On 10 July, Shorten conceded defeat. Turnbull claimed victory later that day.[9]
The election is the closest federal majority result since 1961, the ABC declared on 11 July that the Coalition could form a one-seat majority government.[10]
2016 Australian Federal Election Media
Malcolm Turnbull visits Sir Peter Cosgrove on 8 May 2016 to request a double dissolution
David Feeney's $2.3 million house in Northcote not declared on his parliamentary register of interests
Senate ballot paper used in Victoria.
2016-ballot-paper-Higgins.png
House of Representatives ballot paper used in the Division of Higgins.
References
Other websites