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Electoral division of Nelson (Northern Territory): Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 12°33′19″S 131°04′07″E / 12.555285°S 131.068505°E / -12.555285; 131.068505
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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox Australian Electorate |
{{Infobox Australian electorate |
|name = Nelson
|name = Nelson
|state = nt
|state = nt
|image = {{Maplink|frame=yes|from=NT Electoral Divisions/Nelson.map|plain=yes|frame-height=300|frame-width=400|overlay=[[File:NT Election 2024 - Nelson.svg|120px]]|overlay-horizontal-alignment=right|overlay-vertical-alignment=bottom}}
|image = NT Election 2020 - Nelson.png
|caption = Nelson in the Darwin/Palmerston area, Northern Territory
|caption = Interactive map of boundaries as of the [[2024 Northern Territory general election|2024 election]]
|created = 1990
|created = 1990
|abolished=
|abolished=
|mp = [[Gerard Maley]]
|mp = [[Gerard Maley]]
|mp-party = [[Country Liberals]]
|mp-party = [[Country Liberal Party|Country Liberal]]
|namesake = [[Harold George Nelson|H. G. Nelson]]
|namesake = [[Harold George Nelson]]
|electors = 5505
|electors = 5505
|electors_year = 2020
|electors_year = 2020
|area = 1415
|area = 1415
|class = Rural
|class = Rural
|near-n = ''[[Timor Sea]]''
|near-ne = ''[[Timor Sea]]''
|near-nw = ''[[Timor Sea]]''
|near-e = [[Electoral division of Goyder|Goyder]]
|near-w = ''[[Timor Sea]]''<br>[[Electoral division of Wanguri|Wanguri]]<br>[[Electoral division of Karama|Karama]]
|near-s = [[Electoral division of Goyder|Goyder]]
|near-se = [[Electoral division of Goyder|Goyder]]
|near-sw = [[Electoral division of Spillett|Spillett]]<br>[[Electoral division of Drysdale|Drysdale]]<br>[[Electoral division of Blain|Blain]]
}}
}}


'''Nelson''' is an [[electoral divisions of the Northern Territory|electoral division]] of the [[Northern Territory Legislative Assembly|Legislative Assembly]] in Australia's [[Northern Territory]]. It was first created in 1990 as a replacement for [[electoral division of Koolpinyah|Koolpinyah]], and was named after [[Harold Nelson (Australian politician)|Harold Nelson]], the first member for the federal [[Division of Northern Territory|Northern Territory electorate]]. Nelson is a largely rural electorate, covering 1,415&nbsp;km² and taking in the small towns of [[Howard Springs, Northern Territory|Howard Springs]], [[McMinns Lagoon, Northern Territory|McMinn's Lagoon]] and part of [[Humpty Doo, Northern Territory|Humpty Doo]], and some areas between [[Darwin, Northern Territory|Darwin]] and [[Palmerston, Northern Territory|Palmerston]]. There were 5,505 people enrolled in the electorate as of August 2020.
'''Nelson''' is an [[electoral divisions of the Northern Territory|electoral division]] of the [[Northern Territory Legislative Assembly|Legislative Assembly]] in Australia's [[Northern Territory]]. It was first created in 1990 as a replacement for [[electoral division of Koolpinyah|Koolpinyah]], and was named after [[Harold George Nelson]], the first member for the federal [[Division of Northern Territory|Northern Territory electorate]]. Nelson is a largely rural electorate, covering 1,415&nbsp;km² and taking in the small towns of [[Howard Springs, Northern Territory|Howard Springs]], [[McMinns Lagoon, Northern Territory|McMinn's Lagoon]] and part of [[Humpty Doo, Northern Territory|Humpty Doo]], and some areas between [[Darwin, Northern Territory|Darwin]] and [[Palmerston, Northern Territory|Palmerston]]. There were 5,505 people enrolled in the electorate as of August 2020.


[[File:Harold Nelson.png|thumb|right|Harold Nelson, c. 1919.]]
[[File:Harold Nelson.png|thumb|right|Harold Nelson, c. 1919.]]
Nelson is also a rarity among Northern Territory electorates in that it has traditionally been an independent-held seat, as opposed to being held by either of the major parties. Long-serving independent [[Noel Padgham-Purich]] held the seat for the last few years of her career, having previously represented most of the area as the member for Koolpinyah from 1983 to 1990. She only narrowly failed in installing another independent, [[Dave Tollner]], as her replacement. [[Country Liberal Party]] member [[Chris Lugg]], held the seat for one term before being defeated by another independent, [[Gerry Wood]]. Wood was easily re-elected at the [[2005 Northern Territory general election|2005 election]], polling more than double the vote of his nearest rival, Lugg. He increased his vote by over 20% for the second election in a row in [[2008 Northern Territory general election|2008]], winning 72.2% of the primary vote with a two-party preferred margin of 28.7% over the CLP, the safest seat in the Territory. His margin dwindled to 9.2 percent when the CLP regained government in [[2012 Northern Territory general election|2012]], but ballooned to 23.7 percent during Labor's victory in [[2016 Northern Territory general election|2016]].

Nelson is also a rarity among Northern Territory electorates in that it has traditionally been an independent-held seat, as opposed to being held by either of the major parties. Long-serving independent [[Noel Padgham-Purich]] held the seat for the last few years of her career, having previously represented Koolpinyah from 1983 to 1990. She only narrowly failed in installing another independent, [[Dave Tollner]], as her replacement. After four years of [[Country Liberal Party]] control under [[Chris Lugg]], another independent candidate, [[Gerry Wood]], was successful in winning the seat. Wood was easily re-elected at the [[2005 Northern Territory general election|2005 election]], polling more than double the vote of his nearest rival, Lugg. He increased his vote by over 20% for the second election in a row in [[2008 Northern Territory general election|2008]], winning 72.2% of the primary vote with a two-party preferred margin of 28.7% over the CLP, the safest seat in the Territory. His margin dwindled to 9.2 percent when the CLP regained government in [[2012 Northern Territory general election|2012]], but ballooned to 23.7 percent during Labor's victory in [[2016 Northern Territory general election|2016]].


Wood retired at the [[2020 Northern Territory general election|2020 election]]. [[Gerard Maley]] won the seat for the CLP on his second attempt after losing to Wood in 2016. Maley actually garnered enough primary votes to win the seat on the first count. However, for most of its existence, Nelson has been a comfortably safe CLP seat in "traditional" two-party matchups against [[Australian Labor Party (Northern Territory Branch)|Labor]], so Maley's victory was not considered an upset.
Wood retired at the [[2020 Northern Territory general election|2020 election]]. [[Gerard Maley]] won the seat for the CLP on his second attempt after losing to Wood in 2016. Maley actually garnered enough primary votes to win the seat on the first count. However, for most of its existence, Nelson has been a comfortably safe CLP seat in "traditional" two-party matchups against [[Australian Labor Party (Northern Territory Branch)|Labor]], so Maley's victory was not considered an upset.



==Members for Nelson==
==Members for Nelson==
Line 55: Line 62:
==Election results==
==Election results==
{{see also|Electoral results for the division of Nelson (Northern Territory)}}
{{see also|Electoral results for the division of Nelson (Northern Territory)}}
{{Excerpt|Results of the 2020 Northern Territory general election|section=Nelson}}
{{Excerpt|Results of the 2024 Northern Territory general election|section=Nelson}}


==See also==
==See also==

Latest revision as of 01:15, 5 September 2024

Nelson
Northern TerritoryLegislative Assembly
Map
Interactive map of boundaries as of the 2024 election
TerritoryNorthern Territory
Created1990
MPGerard Maley
PartyCountry Liberal
NamesakeHarold George Nelson
Electors5,505 (2020)
Area1,415 km2 (546.3 sq mi)
DemographicRural
Electorates around Nelson:
Timor Sea Timor Sea Timor Sea
Timor Sea
Wanguri
Karama
Nelson Goyder
Spillett
Drysdale
Blain
Goyder Goyder

Nelson is an electoral division of the Legislative Assembly in Australia's Northern Territory. It was first created in 1990 as a replacement for Koolpinyah, and was named after Harold George Nelson, the first member for the federal Northern Territory electorate. Nelson is a largely rural electorate, covering 1,415 km² and taking in the small towns of Howard Springs, McMinn's Lagoon and part of Humpty Doo, and some areas between Darwin and Palmerston. There were 5,505 people enrolled in the electorate as of August 2020.

Harold Nelson, c. 1919.

Nelson is also a rarity among Northern Territory electorates in that it has traditionally been an independent-held seat, as opposed to being held by either of the major parties. Long-serving independent Noel Padgham-Purich held the seat for the last few years of her career, having previously represented most of the area as the member for Koolpinyah from 1983 to 1990. She only narrowly failed in installing another independent, Dave Tollner, as her replacement. Country Liberal Party member Chris Lugg, held the seat for one term before being defeated by another independent, Gerry Wood. Wood was easily re-elected at the 2005 election, polling more than double the vote of his nearest rival, Lugg. He increased his vote by over 20% for the second election in a row in 2008, winning 72.2% of the primary vote with a two-party preferred margin of 28.7% over the CLP, the safest seat in the Territory. His margin dwindled to 9.2 percent when the CLP regained government in 2012, but ballooned to 23.7 percent during Labor's victory in 2016.

Wood retired at the 2020 election. Gerard Maley won the seat for the CLP on his second attempt after losing to Wood in 2016. Maley actually garnered enough primary votes to win the seat on the first count. However, for most of its existence, Nelson has been a comfortably safe CLP seat in "traditional" two-party matchups against Labor, so Maley's victory was not considered an upset.

Members for Nelson

[edit]
Member Party Term
  Noel Padgham-Purich Independent 1990–1997
  Chris Lugg Country Liberal 1997–2001
  Gerry Wood Independent 2001–2020
  Gerard Maley Country Liberal 2020–present

Election results

[edit]

Results as of 2:30 UTC, 5 September

2024 Northern Territory general election: Nelson
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Country Liberal Gerard Maley 3,635 71.6 +20.6
Independent Beverley Ratahi 743 14.6 −13.2
Labor Anthony Venes 703 13.8 +1.8
Total formal votes 5,081 97.3 +0.4
Informal votes 5,222 2.7 +0.4
Turnout 5,081 81.9
Two-candidate-preferred result
Country Liberal Gerard Maley 3,811 75.0 +2.7
Independent Beverley Ratahi 1,270 25.0 −2.7
Country Liberal hold Swing +2.7

See also

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Notes

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References

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12°33′19″S 131°04′07″E / 12.555285°S 131.068505°E / -12.555285; 131.068505