Blacktown – NSW 2023

ALP 16.6%

Incumbent MP
Stephen Bali, since 2017.

Geography
Western Sydney. The seat covers central parts of the City of Blacktown, including the suburbs of Blacktown, Arndell Park, Colebee, Doonside, Glendenning, Huntingwood, Kings Park, Marayong and Woodcroft.

Redistribution
Blacktown shifted west, gaining Bungarribee, Arndell Park and Huntingwood from Prospect and also gaining Colebee and Glendenning from Mount Druitt. Blacktown lost Lalor Park to Winston Hills. These changes reduced the Labor margin from 17.7% to 16.6%.

History
The electoral district of Blacktown has existed continuously since 1941. With the exception of the 1959 election, it has always been won by the ALP.

The seat was first won in 1941 by the ALP’s Frank Hill, who held it until 1945. The by-election was won by John Freeman, who held the seat until 1959. In 1959 Blacktown was redistributed into a marginal seat, and Freeman retired after failing to win preselection for the new seat of Merrylands.

The Liberal Party’s Alfred Dennis won Blacktown in 1959, but the next redistribution in 1962 largely reversed the changes, making Blacktown stronger for the ALP. Dennis lost preselection for the new safe Liberal seat of The Hills, and ran for the seat unsuccessfully as an independent.

Jim Southee won Blacktown for the ALP in 1962. He held the seat until 1971, when he moved to the new seat of Mount Druitt, which he held until his retirement in 1973.

Gordon Barnier won Blacktown in 1971. At the 1981 election, he lost preselection to John Aquilina.

Aquilina became a minister for the final two years of the Labor state government from 1986 to 1988. In 1991 he moved to Riverstone, which he held until 2011. He served as a minister from 1995 to 2003 and as Speaker from 2003 to 2007.

In 1991, the seat of Wentworthville was abolished, and Pam Allan, who had won Wentworthville in 1988, moved to Blacktown. She served as a minister in the first term of the Carr government, and held Blacktown until 1999. In 1999 she returned to a recreated Wentworthville, holding it until 2007.

Blacktown was won in 1999 by Paul Gibson, a former rugby league player and Member for Londonderry since 1988. Gibson was appointed a minister following the 2007 state election, but never took office, as allegations of an assault sixteen years earlier against his former partner saw him stood down.

Gibson retired in 2011, and was replaced as Labor MP by John Robertson. Robertson had been a member of the Legislative Council since 2008, and before that secretary of Unions NSW for seven years. Robertson had served as a minister while sitting in the Legislative Council.

Following the 2011 election, Robertson was elected leader of the NSW Labor Party. He served as Leader of the Opposition until he resigned as leader in December 2014.

Robertson was re-elected in 2015, but resigned in 2017. He was succeeded at the 2017 by-election by former Blacktown mayor Stephen Bali. Bali was re-elected in 2019.

Candidates

Assessment
Blacktown is a safe Labor seat.

2019 result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing Redist
Stephen Bali Labor 25,618 54.6 +0.8 54.7
Allan Green Liberal 11,668 24.9 -5.9 26.4
Kirsten Gibbs Greens 2,968 6.3 0.0 6.3
Josh Green Christian Democrats 3,287 7.0 +1.1 6.2
Amit Batish One Nation 3,368 7.2 +7.2 5.7
Others 0.7
Informal 1,942 4.0

2019 two-party-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing Redist
Stephen Bali Labor 28,020 67.7 +4.6 66.6
Allan Green Liberal 13,348 32.3 -4.6 33.4

Booth breakdown

Booths in Blacktown have been split into three parts: central, north-west and south-east.

Labor won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in all three areas, ranging from 58.2% in the north-west to 67.3% in the south-east.

Voter group ALP 2PP % Total votes % of votes
Central 69.0 13,242 27.3
South-East 67.3 11,547 23.8
North-West 58.2 6,047 12.5
Pre-poll 70.9 9,221 19.0
Other votes 63.5 8,455 17.4

Election results in Blacktown at the 2019 NSW state election
Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for Labor and the Liberal Party.

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