One of the big reforms at the last ALP National Conference was the direct election of delegates to National Conference equal to the number of federal electorates. Each branch was allowed to choose the method of election with NSW being the sole branch to elect each delegate by federal electorate instead of via proportional representation through an at-large state or multi-electorate regional ballots like elsewhere.
Almost all state branches have now held their rank-and-file National Conference delegate elections. The results of these elections are listed below:
New South Wales
In New South Wales, there were contested ballots in 26 out of 47 federal electorates. The electorates with ballots and factional alignment of the winners were:
Banks: Left
Bennelong: Left
Berowra: Left
Blaxland: Left
Bradfield: Left
Calare: Right
Cowper: Right
Eden-Monaro: Right
Farrer: Right
Greenway: Right
Hughes: Right
Hume: Right
Hunter: Right
Lindsay: Right
Lyne: unaligned
Mitchell: Left
New England: Right
North Sydney: Right
Page: Left
Parramatta: Right
Reid: Right
Richmond: Right
Riverina: unaligned
Robertson: Right
Sydney: Left
Warringah: Left
Wentworth: Left
Overall, the rank-and-file delegate split was 28 to the National Right, 17 to the National Left and 2 unaligned. My understanding is the number of Left delegates went down by two in NSW compared to the last ALP National Conference. At the time, NSW required a delegate to be elected per federal electorate but there was no requirement for direct election by members.
Victoria
The Victorian ALP had a turnout of 73% for their rank-and-file National Conference delegate elections with 9,609 members returning their ballots. The results were:
National Left |
Unaligned |
National Right |
Socialist Left 13 |
IND 2 |
Mods 10 |
Industrial Left 1 |
|
AWU 7 |
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Con 5 |
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NUW 2 |
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SDA 2 |
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HWU 1 |
The Victorian union component of National Conference delegates is still to be elected but the total Victorian Left delegation to National Conference is expected to be the same or one less than last time.
Concerns have, however, been raised about the conduct of the ballots as the Victorian ALP Returning Officer made a ruling that members could email for a replacement ballot and allow someone else collect their ballot. Overall, 1,085 ballots were re-issued with a high level concentrated in a small number of branches and electorates. Some branches had over 40% ask for a re-issue. It is been suggested that about 1,000 votes were picked up by the Mods (Adem Somyurek) for National Conference delegates that way. It might be what leads to a National Right majority.
Queensland
Queensland is holding their delegate elections for both State and National Conference with the Left faction running under the ticket named ‘Local Left Team’. Voting will close on 8 June.
Western Australia
In Western Australia, the split amongst the elected rank-and-file National Conference delegates was 12 Left, 5 CFMMEU and 5 Right. The delegates are:
- Christy Cain (CFMMEU)
- Magenta Wilders (Right)
- Pierre Yang (Left)
- Carolyn Smith (Left)
- Matthew Swinbourn (CFMMEU)
- Josh Wilson (Left)
- Adrian Evans (CFMMEU)
- Guy Wroth (Left)
- Deana Lawver (CFMMEU)
- Michelle Roberts MLA (Right)
- Anne Aly (Left)
- George Gakis (CFMMEU)
- Matt Keogh (Right)
- Sally Talbot (Left)
- Jess Short (Left)
- Tim Hammond (Right)
- Patrick Dodson (Right)
- Dom Rose (Left)
- Louise Pratt (Left)
- Stephen Dawson (Left)
- Helen Tuck (Left)
- Jessica Shaw (Left)
South Australia
In South Australia, the twelve directly elected National Conference delegates were evenly split between the Left and Right:
South Zone
- Amanda Rishworth (Right)
- Kyam Maher (Left)
Central Zone
- Aemon Bourke (Right)
- Demi Pnevmatikos (Left)
North West Zone
- Stephen Mullighan (Right)
- Karen Grogan (Left)
Regional Zone
- Eddie Hughes (Left)
- Clare Scriven (Right)
North Zone
- Zoe Bettison (Right)
- Steven May (Left)
North East Zone
- Dana Wortley (Right)
- Margot McInnes (Left)
Tasmania
All Tasmanian delegates to ALP National Conference have been elected. The Left will have 19 delegates (including the party leader) while the Right has 4 delegates. This is unchanged from the last National Conference.
Australian Capital Territory
In the Australian Capital Territory, Yvette Berry (Left) and Andrew Leigh (unaligned) were chosen as the directly elected National Conference delegates. The remaining four delegates elected by ACT Labor Conference were split between the CPSU (Left), CFMMEU, SDA (Right) and Gai Brodtmann (Right). The Chief Minister, Andrew Barr (Right), is also a delegate as party leader. The factional split is unchanged from the last National Conference.
Northern Territory
The elected National Conference delegation of six was evenly split between the Left and Right. The Chief Minister, Michael Gunner, sits with the Right faction.
Upcoming State Conferences
There will be three state ALP Conferences in the lead-up to ALP National Conference that will elect some remaining delegates to National Conference (Victoria on 26 May, NSW on 30 June-1 July, Tasmania on 7-8 July). Western Australia, Queensland, the Australian Capital Territory and South Australia will hold their state conferences after ALP National Conference.
If you have any corrections to this post or further information, please send it through.
UPDATE 25/05/18: Reported numbers are that the National Right hold roughly 200 delegates (dependent on whether you include the Queensland “Old Guard”).
UPDATE 13/06/18: Guardian Australia reports that the breakdown is 193 Left, 195 Right, 5 Queensland “Old Guard” and 7 independents.
UPDATE 14/11/18: The Australian reports that the National Right believes it will have at least 201 delegates with the National Left (excluding the Industrial Left) on 171.