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Importing Wikidata short description: "Was an electoral province in Perth, Western Australia" (Shortdesc helper)
 
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{{Short description|Was an electoral province in Perth, Western Australia}}
The '''East Metropolitan Province''' was a two-member electoral province of the [[Western Australia]]n [[Western Australian Legislative Council|Legislative Council]], located in metropolitan [[Perth, Western Australia|Perth]]. It was created by a redistribution in 1976, and took effect on 22 May 1977 following the [[Western Australian state election, 1977|1977 state election]]. It was formed from parts of the [[North-East Metropolitan Province|North-East Metropolitan]] and [[South-East Metropolitan Province|South-East Metropolitan]] provinces, and was a safe [[Australian Labor Party|Labor]] seat.
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2019}}
The '''East Metropolitan Province''' was a two-member electoral province of the [[Western Australia]]n [[Western Australian Legislative Council|Legislative Council]], located in metropolitan [[Perth, Western Australia|Perth]]. It was created by a redistribution in 1976, and took effect on 22 May 1977 following the [[1977 Western Australian state election|1977 state election]]. It was formed from parts of the [[North-East Metropolitan Province|North-East Metropolitan]] and [[South-East Metropolitan Province|South-East Metropolitan]] provinces, and was a safe [[Australian Labor Party (Western Australian Branch)|Labor]] seat.


The province had two concurrent members during its brief history — [[Bob Hetherington]] and [[Fred McKenzie]], both of the [[Australian Labor Party]]. The 1982 redistribution increased the number of metropolitan provinces from 6 to 7 (as against 10 in the rural and peri-urban areas), but abolished the East Metropolitan Province. Its members won election in neighbouring provinces at the [[Western Australian state election, 1983|1983 election]].
The province had two concurrent members during its brief history — [[Bob Hetherington]] and [[Fred McKenzie (politician)|Fred McKenzie]], both of the [[Australian Labor Party (Western Australian Branch)|Labor Party]]. The 1982 redistribution increased the number of metropolitan provinces from 6 to 7 (as against 10 in the rural and peri-urban areas), but abolished the East Metropolitan Province. Its members won election in neighbouring provinces at the [[1983 Western Australian state election|1983 election]].


The province was made up of four complete [[Western Australian Legislative Assembly|Legislative Assembly]] [[Electoral districts of Western Australia|districts]] — those of [[Electoral district of Ascot|Ascot]], [[Electoral district of Canning|Canning]], [[Electoral district of Victoria Park|Victoria Park]] and [[Electoral district of Welshpool|Welshpool]]. At its creation, it represented 62,396 electors (9.86% of the State).
The province was made up of four complete [[Western Australian Legislative Assembly|Legislative Assembly]] [[Electoral districts of Western Australia|districts]] — those of [[Electoral district of Ascot|Ascot]], [[Electoral district of Canning|Canning]], [[Electoral district of Victoria Park|Victoria Park]] and [[Electoral district of Welshpool|Welshpool]].

==Geography==
The province was made up of several complete [[Western Australian Legislative Assembly|Legislative Assembly]] [[Electoral districts of Western Australia|districts]], which changed at each distribution.

{|class="wikitable"
|-
!Redistribution!!Period!!Electoral districts!!Electors!!% of State
|-
| 1976
| 22 May 1977 – 22 May 1983
| width=200 |
[[Electoral district of Ascot|Ascot]],
[[Electoral district of Canning|Canning]],
[[Electoral district of Victoria Park|Victoria Park]],
[[Electoral district of Welshpool|Welshpool]]
| align=right | 62,396
| align=right | 9.86
|}

==Representation==
===Members===
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Member 1 !! colspan=2 | Party !! Term !! !! Member 2 !! colspan=2 | Party !! Term
|-
| [[Bob Hetherington]]
| {{Australian party style|Labor}} |  
| [[Australian Labor Party (Western Australian Branch)|Labor]]
| 1977–1983
|  
| [[Fred McKenzie (politician)|Fred McKenzie]]
| {{Australian party style|Labor}} |  
| [[Australian Labor Party (Western Australian Branch)|Labor]]
| 1977–1983
|}


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:Former electoral provinces of Western Australia]]
[[Category:Former electoral provinces of Western Australia]]


{{WesternAustralia-gov-stub}}

Latest revision as of 13:18, 31 March 2021

The East Metropolitan Province was a two-member electoral province of the Western Australian Legislative Council, located in metropolitan Perth. It was created by a redistribution in 1976, and took effect on 22 May 1977 following the 1977 state election. It was formed from parts of the North-East Metropolitan and South-East Metropolitan provinces, and was a safe Labor seat.

The province had two concurrent members during its brief history — Bob Hetherington and Fred McKenzie, both of the Labor Party. The 1982 redistribution increased the number of metropolitan provinces from 6 to 7 (as against 10 in the rural and peri-urban areas), but abolished the East Metropolitan Province. Its members won election in neighbouring provinces at the 1983 election.

The province was made up of four complete Legislative Assembly districts — those of Ascot, Canning, Victoria Park and Welshpool.

Geography

[edit]

The province was made up of several complete Legislative Assembly districts, which changed at each distribution.

Redistribution Period Electoral districts Electors % of State
1976 22 May 1977 – 22 May 1983

Ascot, Canning, Victoria Park, Welshpool

62,396 9.86

Representation

[edit]

Members

[edit]
Member 1 Party Term Member 2 Party Term
Bob Hetherington   Labor 1977–1983   Fred McKenzie   Labor 1977–1983

References

[edit]
  • "Electoral Districts Act 1947-1975 - Order in Council". Western Australia Government Gazette. 9 June 1976. p. 1975:1781-1847.
  • "Electoral Districts Act 1947-1981 - Order in Council". Western Australia Government Gazette. 20 January 1982. p. 1982:113-173.