Electoral division of Hobart

Coordinates: 42°53′42″S 147°16′41″E / 42.895°S 147.278°E / -42.895; 147.278
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Hobart
TasmaniaLegislative Council
Map

Map showing the electoral division of Hobart, as of the 2017 periodic review.[1]

StateTasmania
Dates current1865–1999, 2008–present
MPCassy O'Connor
PartyGreens
Electors24,007 (January 2019)
Area62 km2 (23.9 sq mi)
DemographicInner-metropolitan
Coordinates42°53′42″S 147°16′41″E / 42.895°S 147.278°E / -42.895; 147.278
Map showing the electoral division of Hobart

The electoral division of Hobart is one of the 15 electoral divisions in the Tasmanian Legislative Council. It was originally created in 1856 when the Council became the upper house of the Parliament of Tasmania. The seat was abolished in 1999 and re-created in 2008 after a redistribution saw the former division of Wellington returned to its former name.

The total area of the division is 62.29 square kilometres (24.05 sq mi), which covers the

.

As of 31 January 2019, there were 24,007 enrolled electors in the division.[2]

From 2012 to 2024, the

Lord Mayor of Hobart from 1999 to 2011. The last election in the division was in May 2024. Cassy O'Connor
was elected.

Members for Hobart

First incarnation

Three members (1856–1946)

Member Party Term Member Party Term Member Party Term
  Edward Bedford
Independent
1856–1859   Thomas Horne
Independent
1856–1860   John Walker
Independent
1856–1859
  William Carter
Independent
1859–1865   James Wilson
Independent
1859–1880
  John Wedge
Independent
1860–1866
  Alfred Kennerley
Independent
1865–1877
  Philip Fysh
Independent
1866–1869
  William Crowther
Independent
1869–1885
  James Agnew
Independent
1877–1881
  Alexander McGregor
Independent
1880–1896
  Thomas Smart
Independent
1881–1886
  William Crosby
Independent
1885–1909
  George Salier
Independent
1886–1892
  Charles Grant
Independent
1892–1901
  Gamaliel Butler
Independent
1896–1914
  William Gibson
Independent
1901–1905
  William Propsting
Independent
1905–1937  
  Frank Bond
Independent
1909–1921  
  Thomas Murdoch
Independent
1914–1916
  William Williams
Independent
1916–1922
  Thomas Murdoch
Independent
1921–1927
  James Chapman
Independent
1922–1925
  Charles Eady
Independent
1925–1945
  James McKenzie
Independent
1927–1933
  Frank Gaha
Labor
1933–1943
  William Strutt
Independent
1938–1946
  Arthur Tyler
Labor
1943–1945
  Dennis Lonergan
Independent
1945–1946

Single-member (1946–1999)

Member Party Term
  John Soundy
Independent
1946–1952
  Phyllis Benjamin
Labor
1952–1976
  Kath Venn
Labor
1976–1982
  Hank Petrusma
Independent
1982–1992
  Jean Moore
Independent
1992–1994
  Doug Parkinson
Labor
1994–1999

Second incarnation (2008–present)

Image Member Party Term Notes
  Doug Parkinson
(b. 1945)
Labor 3 May 2008
5 May 2012
Former MLC for Wellington. Retired
  Rob Valentine
(b. 1950)
Independent
5 May 2012
4 May 2024
Former Lord Mayor of Hobart. Retired
  Cassy O'Connor
(b. 1967)
Greens 4 May 2024
present
Former MHA for Clark and former Tasmanian Greens leader. First Greens member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council. Incumbent

Election results

Cassy O'Connor became the first Tasmanian Greens member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council.[3]

2024 Tasmanian Legislative Council periodic election: Hobart[4][5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Greens Cassy O'Connor 7,104 36.86 +36.86
Independent John Kelly 4,287 22.24 +22.24
Labor John Kamara 3,578 18.57 +18.57
Independent Charlie Burton 2,615 13.57 +13.57
Independent Stefan Vogel 725 3.76 +3.76
Independent Sam Campbell 522 2.71 +2.71
Independent Michael Haynes 441 2.29 +2.29
Total formal votes 19,272 97.49 +0.42
Informal votes 497 2.51 –0.42
Turnout 19,769 80.56 +4.14
Registered electors 24,538
Two-candidate-preferred
result
Greens Cassy O'Connor 11,236 59.70 +59.70
Independent John Kelly 7,586 40.30 +40.30
Greens gain from Independent  

See also

References

  1. ^ Legislative Council Divisions (2016-17 redistribution) from theLIST ©State of Tasmania (Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia Licence).
  2. ^ Legislative Council Divisional Enrolment as at 31 January 2019, Tasmanian Legislative Council, 6 February 2019.
  3. ^ "Facebook". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  4. ^ "The candidates". Tasmanian Electoral Commission. 2024. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
  5. ^ Results in Hobart

External links