Division of Sturt

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The Division of Sturt is an Australian Electoral Division in South Australia.

First proclaimed in 1949, Sturt was named for Captain Charles Sturt, nineteenth century explorer and the first European to discover the Murray River. Stretching from Adelaide's mortgage belt suburbs in the centre-east to the wealthy south-eastern suburbs, Sturt has traditionally been a Liberal Party constituency and has been home to the Wilson political dynasty of father Keith and son Ian.

The 1954 election saw the Hon Norman Makin capture the marginal liberal seat, but in 1955 he shifted to the new, safe seat of Bonython. The 1969 election saw a 16% swing against Ian Wilson temporarily unseating him, but he was returned at the 1972 elections against the flow of Gough Whitlam's federal victory. Wilson was a key early member of the progressive Liberal Movement faction within the Liberal Party but refused to leave the Liberal's when the Liberal Movement became a separate party. To show there was no love lost, the Liberal Movement ran a candidate in Sturt in the 1974 election, polling a healthy 7.2%, much of which derived from Wilson’s vote.

The Liberal Movement's successor party, the Australian Democrats, have traditionally polled well in Sturt, highlighted by 13.5% at their first showing in 1977 and 15% in 1990, the best result by a minor party in Sturt. The Democrats vote has dropped sharply in recent years, they gained only 2.26% in the 2004 elections. Additionally, an independent Liberal contested Sturt at the 1993 elections, polling a respectable 14.6%.

The seat is currently the safest for the Liberal party in metropolitan Adelaide.

2004 Australian federal election
Registered Voters 96,785 Fairly Safe Liberal
Votes Cast 91,743 Turnout % 94.79 -0.84
Informal Votes 4,624 Informal % 5.04 -0.22
Party Candidate Primary Votes Vote % Swing %
  Family First Party Sally McPherson 4,167 4.78 +4.78
  Australian Labor Party Tony Barca 30,099 34.55 +5.21
  Australian Greens Zane Young 5,279 6.06 +2.28
  Australian Democrats Kerrin Pine 1,970 2.26 -9.01
  One Nation Brian Richards 597 0.69 -2.41
  Liberal Party of Australia Christopher Pyne 45,007 51.66 +0.98 Elected
  Neil Aitchison -1.39
Two Candidate Preferred
  Liberal Party of Australia Christopher Pyne 49,481 56.80 -1.69 Elected
  Australian Labor Party Tony Barca 37,638 43.20 +1.69
Total 87,119

Member Party Term
Keith Wilson Liberal Party of Australia 19491954
Hon Norman Makin Australian Labor Party 19541955
Keith Wilson Liberal Party of Australia 19551966
Ian Wilson Liberal Party of Australia 19661969
Norman Foster Australian Labor Party 19691972
Ian Wilson Liberal Party of Australia 19721993
Christopher Pyne Liberal Party of Australia 1993—present

Electoral Divisions of the Australian House of Representatives in South Australia

Adelaide | Barker | Boothby | Grey | Hindmarsh | Kingston | Makin | Mayo | Port Adelaide | Sturt | Wakefield

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