Incumbent MLCs
- Georgie Crozier (Liberal), since 2010
- David Davis (Liberal), since 1996
- Enver Erdogan (Labor), since 20191
- Clifford Hayes (Sustainable Australia), since 2018
- Nina Taylor (Labor), since 2018
1Enver Erdogan replaced Philip Dalidakis in August 2019 following Dalidakis’ resignation.
- Geography
- Redistribution
- History
- 2018 result
- Preference flows
- Candidates
- Assessment
- Booth breakdown
- Results maps
Electorate | Margin | Electorate | Margin | Electorate | Margin |
Albert Park | ALP 12.9% | Caulfield | LIB 0.1% | Oakleigh | ALP 16.1% |
Ashwood | ALP 2.3% | Hawthorn | ALP 0.5% | Prahran | GRN 9.4% vs LIB |
Bentleigh | ALP 11.3% | Kew | LIB 4.8% | Sandringham | LIB 0.4% |
Brighton | LIB 0.5% | Malvern | LIB 6.6% |
Southern Metropolitan region covers electorates immediately to the south and east of the Melbourne CBD, stretching as far south as Sandringham, and as far as east as Ashwood and Oakleigh.
The Liberal and Labor parties each hold five seats, with the Greens holding one.
Redistribution
Minor changes were made to the region’s eastern boundary, taking in Mount Waverley, the remainder of Balwyn and part of Burwood East from Eastern Metropolitan, and taking in the remainder of Clayton and Cheltenham and part of Oakleigh South from South Eastern Metropolitan. The region also lost Box Hill South and part of Burwood and Surrey Hills to North Eastern Metropolitan.
These changes increased the Labor vote and cut the Liberal vote.
History
The Southern Metropolitan region was created in 2006, when proportional representation was introduced.
In 2006, the ALP and Liberal Party each won two seats, and the fifth seat was won by the Greens.
In 2010, the Liberal Party won a third seat at the expense of the ALP. The 2010 result was repeated in 2014, with the Liberal Party holding three seats, while Labor and the Greens held one seat each.
The Greens lost their seat in 2018, and the Liberal Party lost one of their three seats. Labor gained a second seat, while Sustainable Australia won a seat.
2018 election | Redistribution | |||||
Party | Votes | % | Swing | Quota | % | Quota |
Liberal | 164,560 | 38.3 | -4.4 | 2.298 | 38.0 | 2.280 |
Labor | 148,541 | 34.6 | +9.4 | 2.074 | 35.1 | 2.104 |
Greens | 57,831 | 13.5 | -2.1 | 0.808 | 13.1 | 0.787 |
Animal Justice | 9,321 | 2.2 | +0.5 | 0.130 | 2.2 | 0.129 |
Reason | 8,635 | 2.0 | -0.4 | 0.121 | 2.0 | 0.118 |
Liberal Democrats | 5,948 | 1.4 | -3.2 | 0.083 | 1.5 | 0.092 |
Derryn Hinch’s Justice | 6,182 | 1.4 | +1.4 | 0.086 | 1.5 | 0.089 |
Democratic Labour | 5,676 | 1.3 | +1.3 | 0.079 | 1.3 | 0.080 |
Sustainable Australia | 5,658 | 1.3 | -0.9 | 0.079 | 1.3 | 0.077 |
Voluntary Euthanasia | 4,351 | 1.0 | +0.2 | 0.061 | 1.0 | 0.059 |
Shooters, Fishers and Farmers | 2,726 | 0.6 | +0.2 | 0.038 | 0.6 | 0.038 |
Others | 10,228 | 2.4 | 0.143 | 2.4 | 0.146 | |
Informal | 11,801 | 2.7 | 2.7 |
Preference flows
On primary votes, the Liberal Party and Labor each retained two seats.
Let’s fast-forward until there were eleven candidates running for the final seat. Sustainable Australia started on about 0.08 quotas and by this point had already climbed to 0.18.
- Sue Pennicuik (GRN) – 0.833 quotas
- Margaret Fitzherbert (LIB) – 0.290
- Clifford Hayes (SUS) – 0.178
- Ben Schultz (AJP) – 0.134
- Jill Mellon-Robertson (RP) – 0.128
- Nikki Nicholls (DHJ) – 0.091
- Robert Kennedy (LDP) – 0.086
- Joel Van Der Horst (DLP) – 0.082
- Jane Morris (VEP) – 0.068
- Judith Armstrong (ALP) – 0.059
- Nicole Bourman (SFF) – 0.041
Most Shooters preferences flowed to Sustainable Australia:
- Pennicuik (GRN) – 0.834
- Fitzherbert (LIB) – 0.292
- Hayes (SUS) – 0.211
- Schultz (AJP) – 0.135
- Mellon-Robertson (RP) – 0.128
- Nicholls (DHJ) – 0.092
- Kennedy (LDP) – 0.087
- Van Der Horst (DLP) – 0.082
- Morris (VEP) – 0.069
- Armstrong (ALP) – 0.060
Labor preferences scattered around, with the most votes going to the Greens and Reason:
- Pennicuik (GRN) – 0.848
- Fitzherbert (LIB) – 0.294
- Hayes (SUS) – 0.213
- Schultz (AJP) – 0.143
- Mellon-Robertson (RP) – 0.140
- Nicholls (DHJ) – 0.092
- Kennedy (LDP) – 0.088
- Van Der Horst (DLP) – 0.083
- Morris (VEP) – 0.071
Voluntary Euthanasia preferences flowed to Reason:
- Pennicuik (GRN) – 0.852
- Fitzherbert (LIB) – 0.295
- Hayes (SUS) – 0.216
- Mellon-Robertson (RP) – 0.191
- Schultz (AJP) – 0.145
- Nicholls (DHJ) – 0.095
- Kennedy (LDP) – 0.088
- Van Der Horst (DLP) – 0.084
DLP preferences mostly flowed to the Liberal Party:
- Pennicuik (GRN) – 0.853
- Fitzherbert (LIB) – 0.370
- Hayes (SUS) – 0.218
- Mellon-Robertson (RP) – 0.192
- Schultz (AJP) – 0.146
- Nicholls (DHJ) – 0.096
- Kennedy (LDP) – 0.089
Liberal Democrats preferences flowed to Sustainable Australia:
- Pennicuik (GRN) – 0.854
- Fitzherbert (LIB) – 0.374
- Hayes (SUS) – 0.296
- Mellon-Robertson (RP) – 0.193
- Schultz (AJP) – 0.146
- Nicholls (DHJ) – 0.097
Hinch preferences flowed strongly to Sustainable Australia:
- Pennicuik (GRN) – 0.857
- Fitzherbert (LIB) – 0.377
- Hayes (SUS) – 0.372
- Mellon-Robertson (RP) – 0.196
- Schultz (AJP) – 0.149
Over two thirds of Animal Justice preferences flowed to Sustainable Australia:
- Pennicuik (GRN) – 0.867
- Hayes (SUS) – 0.487
- Fitzherbert (LIB) – 0.379
- Mellon-Robertson (RP) – 0.207
Reason preferences flowed strongly to Sustainable Australia:
- Pennicuik (GRN) – 0.909
- Hayes (SUS) – 0.619
- Fitzherbert (LIB) – 0.386
Liberal preferences elected Hayes over the sitting Greens MLC:
- Hayes (SUS) – 0.954
- Pennicuik (GRN) – 0.915
- A – Clifford Hayes (Sustainable Australia)
- B – Krishna Dharmeshkumar Brahmbhatt (New Democrats)
- C – Natasha Kons (Freedom Party)
- D – Paul Tammesild (Transport Matters)
- E – Kellie Thomas (Health Australia)
- F – Nursin Akdogan (Restore Democracy Sack Dan Andrews)
- G – Marc Selan (Legalise Cannabis)
- H – Joan Molyneux (Companions and Pets)
- I – Chris Bradbury (One Nation)
- J – Theodore Tsiongas (Democratic Labour)
- K – Matthew Ford (Liberal Democrats)
- L – Andrew Johnson (Reason)
- M – Dean Hurlston (Angry Victorians)
- N – Nicole Bourman (Shooters, Fishers & Farmers)
- O – Katherine Copsey (Greens)
- P – Liberal
- David Davis
- Georgie Crozier
- Nick Stavrou
- Andrew Litwinow
- Monica Clark
- Q – Labor
- John Berger
- Ryan Batchelor
- Clive Crosby
- Lynn Psaila
- Muhammad Shahbaz
- R – Jack Todaro (Victorian Socialists)
- S – Leon Kofmansky (United Australia)
- T – Ben Schultz (Animal Justice)
- U – Ellie Jean Sullivan (Derryn Hinch’s Justice)
- V – Vickie Janson (Family First)
Assessment
This region includes two safe Liberal seats and one Labor seat. In current circumstances it seems likely Labor will also retain their second seat, although if the Liberal Party recovered support they could regain a third seat.
While the Greens will likely be deprived of preferences again in 2022, it would take a relatively small swing to see them regain their seat.
There is also the potential for a smaller party to win a seat, but Sustainable Australia’s incumbent MLC isn’t a particularly strong position personally.
Regional breakdown
The Liberal Party topped the primary vote in the Southern Metropolitan region. The Liberal Party topped the primary vote in seven electorates, while Labor came first in four.
The Liberal vote ranged from 27.7% in Oakleigh to 48.4% in Malvern.
The Labor vote ranged from 27.6% in Malvern and 28.8% in Kew, all the way to 44.4% in Bentleigh and 46.9% in Oakleigh.
The Greens vote ranged from 8.4% in Bentleigh to 23.8% in Prahran.
Results of the 2018 Victorian upper house election in the Southern Metropolitan region
Victorian Greens have announced their Lead Upper House candidates
Samantha Ratnam. Northern Metro
Katherine Copsey. Southern Metro
Sarah Mansfield. Western Victoria
Bernadette Thomas. Western Metropolitan
Dr Cate Sinclair. Northern Victoria
Mat Morgan. Eastern Victoria
Aiv Puglielli. North-Eastern Metropolitan
Alex Breskin. South-Eastern Metropolitan
North Metropolitan is pretty guaranteed for Vic Greens, they should regain South Metro without much trouble despite despite lack of preferences. I think they have a decent chance in Western Metro and North Eastern Metro as well.
A couple of possibilities:
•ALP and Libs 3
Greens 1
Minor parties 1
Or
•ALP and Libs 3
Minor parties 2
Katherine Copsey has somewhat of a local profile as a Port Phillip councillor. If the Greens perform anywhere near as well in the inner south as they did in May, then she should win a Southern Metro seat.
Greens will come 3rd. It didn’t have to be that way but they left preselection far too late and aren’t putting in the work.
Apologies, the comment above was intended for Albert Park. Copsey should get a seat (and she should have run for Albert Park).
From what I have seen Copsey has focused her campaigning on Prahran, which makes sense
Going through some of the Group Voting Tickets, it looks like the Sustainable Australia Party will be a chance at the 5th seat. They’re in 2nd place on ~10 voting tickets.