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Electoral district of Light

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Light
South AustraliaHouse of Assembly
Electoral district of Light (green) in Greater Adelaide
StateSouth Australia
Dates current1857–1902, 1938–present
MPTony Piccolo
PartyAustralian Labor Party (SA)
NamesakeColonel William Light
Electors25,990 (2018)
Area62.36 km2 (24.1 sq mi)
DemographicRural
Electorates around Light:
Frome Frome Schubert
Frome Light Schubert
Taylor Taylor Elizabeth
Footnotes
Electoral District map[1]

Light is a single-member electoral district for the South Australian House of Assembly. Light is named after Colonel William Light (1786 – 1839), who was the first Surveyor-General of South Australia.[2] The electorate was created in 1857, abolished at the 1902 election and recreated at the 1938 election.[3] It is based on the semi-rural township of Gawler, and stretches southwards into the outermost northern suburbs of Adelaide.

Covering a total area of 62.36 km2, Light consists of the suburbs of Buchfelde, Evanston Gardens, Evanston Park, Evanston South, Gawler, Gawler East, Gawler South, Gawler West, Hewett, Hillier, Kudla, Munno Para, Munno Para Downs, Munno Para West, Reid, and Willaston. Although growing urbanisation in recent years has resulted in Adelaide's growth spilling into Gawler, Light is classed as a rural electorate.

The electorate was held by the Liberal Party and its predecessor, the Liberal and Country League, for all but one term from its re-creation in 1938 until 2006. For most of that time, it was a fairly safe to safe LCL/Liberal seat.

A redistribution prior to the 2002 election pushed Light further into the outer Adelaide suburbs, paring back the margin from a fairly safe 6.3 percent to an extremely marginal 1.1 percent. At the 2002 election, Liberal incumbent Malcolm Buckby picked up a small swing in his favour and retained the electorate even as the Liberals lost government. In 2006 Tony Piccolo became the second Labor member to win the electorate, and the first Labor member for the electorate in 62 years. At the 2010 election he increased his margin against the statewide trend and decades of voting patterns in the seat, and became the first Labor member to be re-elected to Light. His victory was one of two that allowed Labor to hold onto a narrow majority despite losing the two-party vote.

A redistribution prior to the 2014 election reduced Labor's margin significantly from 5.3 percent to 2.8 percent, but Labor again retained the electorate with an unchanged margin. After a redistribution slightly increased the Labor margin to 5.4 percent, Piccolo retained the seat in 2018 with a healthy swing of almost six percent, enough to make Light a fairly safe Labor seat (and just on the edge of being safe). This came even as Labor lost government, marking only the second time that the conservatives won government without holding Light.

The electorate's first member in its current incarnation as a single-member seat was Premier and LCL founder Richard Layton Butler, who held the electorate for a few months in 1938 before making an unsuccessful attempt to transfer to federal politics. Other particularly notable members include Bruce Eastick, leader of the LCL/Liberals from 1972 to 1975 and Speaker of the South Australian House of Assembly during the Tonkin government.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/1
    Views:
    3 134 679
  • Why the UK Election Results are the Worst in History.

Transcription

Hello Internet The UK had an election we need to talk about because after the debates finished, the people voted and the ballots tallied the results were this: But parliament ended up looking like this: Which isn't, exactly, representative. And by not exactly, I mean at all. Red earned 30% of the vote and 36% of the seats, which is sort of close, but the rest is madness: Orange earned 8% of the vote but got one eighth of that while Yellow's 5% just about doubled, and purple earned 13% and got squat. Meanwhile blue's 37% of the people booted to 51% of the seats in parliament. The blue boost is even bigger when you consider that 51% of the seats gives basically 100% the control. How'd this happen? In the UK -- national elections aren't really national, they're a bunch of local elections. The UK is divided into constituencies, each of which elects one member of parliament (M.P.) to represent them. This local / national divide is where the trouble begins. Imagine a parliament with just three constituencies, and it's easy to see how it wouldn't always align with citizens. Some people think this sort of result is fine -- “it's all *about* winning local elections,” they’ll say. “Each M.P. represents their constituency.” And while the imbalance in this example is dumb, but it's the same problem in the real election and this same argument is given, but there are two more problems with it in reality land. 1) Few citizens have any idea who their MP is, they just know what party they voted for -- what party they want to represent their views on the national level. And pretending like it's a local election is a bit disingenuous. -- in practice it's an election for now the nation will run -- not really for who is going to represent a tiny part of it. and even if it were 2) The individual constituencies are worse at representing their citizens than parliament. Indulge this spreadsheet-loving nerd for a moment, will you? The difference between what a party earned at the polls and what they got in parliament is the amount of misrepresentation error. If we calculate all the errors for all the parties and add them up we can say the Parliament as a whole has 47% percentage points of misrepresentation error. That sounds bad looks like a utopian rainbow of diversity compared to any local election because the local elections have *one* winner. Out of the 650 constituencies 647 have a higher representation error than parliament. These are the only three that don't and they're really unusual for having so many of a single kind of voter in one place. Most places look the The Wrekin which is dead in the middle a mere one-hundred and one points off. Note that the winning candidate didn't reach a majority here. Which means more than half of constituencies elected their MP with a minority of voters. The worst is Belfast South at the bottom of the list. Hilariously unrepresentative. Less than a quarter of the voters get to speak for the entire place in parliament. This is the the lowest percentage an M.P. has ever been elected by. So when people argue that the UK election is a bunch of local elections 1) people don't act like it, and 2) It's even more of an argument that the elections are broken because they're worse on this level. These local elections are unrepresentative because of the terrible 'First Past the Post' voting system -- which I have complained mightily about and won't repeat everything here -- go watch the video -- but TL;DR it only 'works' when citizens are limited to two choices. Voting for any party except the biggest makes it more likely the biggest will win by a minority -- which is exactly what happened. That citizens keep voting for smaller parties despite knowing the result is against their strategic interests demonstrates the citizenry wants diverse representation -- but that successes is the very thing that's made this the most unrepresentative parliament in the history of the UK. People happy with the results argue the system is working fine -- of course they do. Their team won. Government isn't a sport where a singular 'winner' must be determined. It's a system to make rules that everyone follows and so, we need a system where everyone can agree the process is fair even if the results don't go in their favor. If you support a system that disenfranchises people you don't like and turbo-franchises people you do -- then it doesn't look like you sport representative democracy, it looks like you support a kind of dictatorship light. Where a small group of people (including you) makes the rules for everyone. But as it is now, on election day the more people express what they want the worse the system looks which makes them disengaged at best or angry at worst and GEE I CAN'T IMAGINE WHY. This is fixable, there are many, many better ways the UK could vote -- here are two that even keep local representatives. And fixing voting really matters, because this is a kind of government illegitimacy score -- and it's been going up and may continue to do so unless this fundamentally broken voting system is changed.

Members

Two members (1857–1875)
Member Party Term Member Party Term
  J. T. Bagot 1857–1865   Carrington Smedley 1857–1857
  W. H. Maturin 1858–1858
  David Shannon 1858–1860
  Francis Dutton 1860–1862
  John Rowe 1862–1862
  Francis Dutton 1862–1865
  P. B. Coglin 1865–1868   John Rounsevell 1865–1868
  John Hart Sr. 1868–1870   William Lewis 1868–1870
  Edward Hamilton 1870–1871   James Pearce 1870–1875
  James White 1871–1871
  Mountifort Conner 1871–1873
  R. I. Stow 1873–1875
Three members (1875–1884)
Member Party Term Member Party Term Member Party Term
  James White 1875–1881   David Nock 1875–1878   Jenkin Coles 1875–1878
  James Shannon 1878–1881   F. S. Carroll 1878–1878
  David Moody 1878–1881
  Jenkin Coles 1881–1884   H. V. Moyle 1881–1884   Robert Dixson 1881–1884
Two members (1884–1902)
Member Party Term Member Party Term
  Jenkin Coles 1884–1891   David Moody 1884–1887
  Paddy Glynn 1887–1890
  J. W. White 1890–1891
  Defence League 1891–1896   Defence League 1891–1896
  1896–1902   David Moody 1896–1899
  F. W. Paech 1899–1902
Single-member (1938–present)
Member Party Term
  Richard Layton Butler Liberal and Country 1938–1938
  Herbert Michael Liberal and Country 1939–1941
  Sydney McHugh Labor 1941–1944
  Herbert Michael Liberal and Country 1944–1956
  George Hambour Liberal and Country 1956–1960
  Leslie Nicholson Liberal and Country 1960–1962
  John Freebairn Liberal and Country 1962–1970
  Bruce Eastick Liberal and Country 1970–1974
  Liberal 1974–1993
  Malcolm Buckby Liberal 1993–2006
  Tony Piccolo Labor 2006–present

Election results

2022 South Australian state election: Light
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Tony Piccolo 13,144 57.5 +6.4
Liberal Andrew Williamson 5,468 23.9 −10.5
One Nation David Duncan 1,542 6.8 +6.8
Greens Brett Ferris 1,506 6.6 −0.3
Family First Benjamin Hackett 1,184 5.2 +5.2
Total formal votes 22,844 97.0
Informal votes 704 3.0
Turnout 23,548 88.1
Two-party-preferred result
Labor Tony Piccolo 15,873 69.5 +11.1
Liberal Andrew Williamson 6,971 30.5 −11.1
Labor hold Swing +11.1

Notes

  1. ^ Electoral District of Light (Map). Electoral Commission of South Australia. 2018. Retrieved 1 April 2018.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "Light - Electoral Commission SA". Electoral Commission of South Australia. Archived from the original on 15 March 2022. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  3. ^ "Statistical Record of the Legislature 1836 to 2009" (PDF). Parliament of South Australia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 March 2019. Retrieved 22 December 2013.

References

This page was last edited on 31 March 2024, at 01:01
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