Harman Patil (Editor)

Electoral district of Mandurah

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
State
  
Western Australia

Electors
  
28,977 (2017)

Member of parliament
  
David Templeman

Party
  
Australian Labor Party

Dates current
  
1983–present

Area
  
74 km²

Namesake
  
Mandurah

Electoral district of Mandurah httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Demographic
  
Electoral region of South West

Mandurah is an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of Western Australia.

Contents

The district is based on the coastal satellite city of Mandurah to the south of Perth.

The seat has switched between the major parties on a couple of occasions, but has recently become stronger for the Labor Party.

Geography

The district is a compact coastal electorate lying just to the south of the Metropolitan Region Scheme and north of the Peel Inlet. It includes the communities of Coodanup, Greenfields, Lakelands, Madora Bay, Mandurah, Meadow Springs, Parklands, San Remo, Silver Sands which lie to the west of the Mandurah Estuary. The district also extends across the eastury, to include parts of Barragup and Furnissdale.

History

First contested at the 1983 state election, Mandurah was won by Labor candidate John Read. Read lost the seat at the 1989 state election to Liberal candidate Roger Nicholls. Nicholls held the seat for three terms before his defeat at the 2001 state election to Labor candidate David Templeman, who holds the seat to this day.

Mandurah has long been regarded as a non-metropolitan district, despite its close proximity to Perth. It is only 18 km south of Perth--close enough that it is part of the Perth television licence area. Before the one vote one value reforms that took effect at the 2008 state election, this meant that Mandurah had roughly half the enrolment of neighbouring districts to the north. Whilst Mandurah now contains a similar number of enrolled voters to most other electorates, this tradition lives on as it falls inside the non-metropolitan South West Legislative Council region.

The proposed 2011 redistribution would have seen Mandurah transferred to the South Metropolitan region. It would have absorbed the outer southern Perth suburbs of Golden Bay and Singleton, while the more rural suburbs of Barragup and Furnissdale would have shiftedt o Murray-Wellington. However, the final boundaries left Mandurah in the South West region.

References

Electoral district of Mandurah Wikipedia