Extract from The Guardian
Some are considering changing seats, others might
change parties after the Electoral Commission removed a seat from
NSW
and changed boundaries.
Daniel
Hurst Political correspondent
Friday 15 January 2016 18.52 AEDT
The Liberal MP Angus Taylor has played down the
prospect of defecting to the Nationals, amid manoeuvring and
number-crunching by all political parties after new political
boundaries changed the electoral landscape across New South Wales.
Labor’s shadow treasurer, Chris Bowen, has ruled
out moving seats but frontbench colleague Anthony
Albanese is considering his options and Joel Fitzgibbon is
negotiating with MPs from neighbouring electorates after his
constituency was radically redrawn.
The Australian Electoral Commission published
new
boundaries for NSW seats on Thursday, a move that has
implications for any federal election called after they are
gazetted
in late February.
Overall, there will be one fewer seat in New
South
Wales because Western Australia is gaining an electorate to
reflect
population trends.
Figures
published
by the ABC’s election analyst, Antony Green, suggest
the number of notionally Coalition seats in NSW will decline from
30
to 27 after the boundaries take effect, a development that is
causing
nervousness in Liberal ranks. The number of notionally Labor seats
will increase from 18 to 20.
Some MPs are likely to seek to change seats,
either because they view their electoral prospects as being better
in
a neighbouring electorate or due to abolition.
Taylor retains a large margin in his regional NSW
seat of Hume but faces a possible preselection challenge from the
Liberal member for Macarthur, Russell Matheson.
In an apparent bid to head off the challenge,
supporters of Taylor told
the
Australian newspaper he might defect to the Nationals to
recontest Hume if Matheson won Liberal preselection in the seat.
Ian
Macfarlane’s attempted defection to the Nationals in Queensland
ended in chaos last month when the
state
executive blocked the move.
Taylor appeared to play down the defection talk
on
Friday by emphasising his plans to nominate for the Liberals.
“Given that the new boundaries have been
finalised, I am now in a position to confirm that I will nominate
for
Liberal
party preselection for the seat of Hume,” he said.
The deputy Liberal leader, Julie
Bishop, underlined the need for unity for the sake of the
Coalition’s electoral prospects.
“I’m confident that our Liberal party will
work in cooperation with the National
party in NSW to make sure that we have the best candidates
in
seats and are able to present to the people of NSW a credible
policy
position for the next election,” she told Sky News.
The most pressing challenge for the Labor side of
politics is how to deal with the changes to the seat of Hunter,
currently held by Fitzgibbon, who is the party’s agriculture
spokesman and a right faction figure.
The Labor seat of Charlton, which the Labor left
MP Pat Conroy holds on a margin of 9.2%, is set to be abolished.
Hunter will live on in name, with Labor’s notional margin
increasing from 3.7% to 6.2%, but most of the voters in the
redrawn
seat will come from the old electorate of Charlton.
Guardian Australia understands the expectation is
there will be a negotiated solution in relation to the future of
Labor MPs in the region. This was reflected in a comment by the
Labor
leader, Bill Shorten, that he did not think Fitzgibbon would be
forced out of parliament.
“Joel’s got my support and he’s a good
operator,” Shorten said on Friday. “He’s got a lot more to
give.”
Other seats in the region include Newcastle, for
which the incumbent MP Sharon Claydon was recently preselected,
and
Shortland, which gains part of Conroy’s old seat and is held by
the
long-serving MP Jill Hall. They both remain safe Labor electorates
but Hall, from the left, could face pressure to bow out of
politics.
The Liberal-held seat of Paterson, which becomes
a
notionally Labor marginal electorate, is another option in the
region
in contention for talks within the party. It is currently held by
Bob
Baldwin, who was dumped from his parliamentary secretary position
in
Malcolm Turnbull’s September reshuffle.
Meanwhile, in Sydney, Albanese is yet to decide
whether he will seek to move from his seat of Grayndler to
neighbouring Barton, both of which are experiencing boundary
changes.
Albanese, Shorten’s rival in the 2013 leadership
battle, was considering his options because of the growing threat
from the Greens in his inner-city seat and because the draft new
boundaries would have moved his electorate office and his home
into
Barton. But the final version of the boundaries has scaled back
the
extent of changes, with his office now staying inside Grayndler.
Labor’s margin in Grayndler was projected to
fall from 20.3% to 14% in the draft boundaries, but the final
decision resulted in a notional margin of 18.1%, according analysis
posted
by Green on his ABC blog.
Barton, currently held by the Liberal MP Nickolas
Varvaris with a narrow 0.3% margin, is set to become a notionally
Labor seat with a 5.4% margin.
Shorten said Albanese would make a decision on
his
return from a holiday in Italy. “I’m very supportive of whatever
decision he makes,” the Labor leader said.
Bowen ruled out moving to a neighbouring seat,
easing pressure on his colleague in Fowler, Chris Hayes, who was
reportedly sounded out.
“I am delighted that the electoral commission
has accepted the ALP’s submission that Fairfield and Smithfield
should be retained in the seat of McMahon,” Bowen said on Friday.
“I will be nominating to be the Labor candidate
for the seat of McMahon at the upcoming election.”
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