Divisions of the Australian House of Representatives
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Australian House of Representatives is elected from 150 single-member districts called Divisions. They are also commonly known as electorates or seats. The British term "constituencies" is rarely used.
Contents |
| This article or section needs to be updated. Parts of this article or section are no longer up to date. Please update the article to reflect recent events, and remove this template when finished. |
The maps below show the Division boundaries as they existed at the 9 October 2004 House of Representatives election. The maps show each Division as being held by a particular party.
There are 49 Divisions:
There are 37 Divisions:
There are 28 Divisions:
There are 15 Divisions:
- Brand
- Canning
- Cowan
- Curtin
- Forrest
- Fremantle
- Hasluck
- Kalgoorlie
- Moore
- O'Connor
- Pearce
- Perth
- Stirling
- Swan
- Tangney
There are 11 Divisions:
There are 5 Divisions:
There are 2 Divisions:
- Canberra
- Fraser (also covers Jervis Bay Territory)
There are 2 Divisions:
- Lingiari (also covers Christmas Island and Cocos (Keeling) Islands)
- Solomon
These Australian electoral divisions no longer exist.
- For a list of members of the current House of Representatives and the electorates they represent, see List of members of the Australian House of Representatives.
- For a description of how the House of Representatives is elected, see Australian electoral system.
- For an electoral history of each Division since Federation in 1901, see Adam Carr's Electoral Archive: Index of House of Representatives Divisions 1901-2001
|
|
||
|---|---|---|
| Commonwealth | Parliament · House of Representatives · Senate · High Court · Federal Court · Queen · Governor-General · Prime Minister · Cabinet · Executive Council · Ministry | |
| Federal elections | 1901 through to 1966 · 1969 · 1972 · 1974 · 1975 · 1977 · 1980 · 1983 · 1984 · 1987 · 1990 · 1993 · 1996 · 1998 · 2001 · 2004 · 2007 · next | |
| State/territory elections |
ACT (2004 election) · NSW (2007 election) · NT (2005 election) · QLD (2006 election) · SA (2006 election) · TAS (2006 election) · VIC (2006 election) · WA (2005 election) |
|
| Political parties | Australian Democrats · Australian Greens · Australian Labor Party · Family First Party · Liberal Party of Australia · National Party of Australia · Micro-parties | |