ALP 12.0%
Incumbent MP
Linda Burney, since 2016. Previously state member for Canterbury, 2003-2016.
Geography
Parts of the St George and Canterbury districts of Sydney. Barton covers parts of the Bayside, Georges River and Canterbury-Bankstown council areas. The main suburbs include Allawah, Arncliffe, Banksia, Bexley, Carlton, Clemton Park, Earlwood, Kogarah, Kingsgrove, Ramsgate, Rockdale, Turrella, Wolli Creek and parts of Beverly Hills, Hurstville and Roselands.
Redistribution
Barton shifted west, losing the bayside suburbs of Brighton-Le-Sands and Kyeemagh to Kingsford Smith and also losing Tempe and the remainder of Hurlstone Park, Dulwich Hill and Marrickville to Grayndler, thus aligning the northern boundary with the Cooks River. Barton then took in part of Roselands and the remainder of Kingsgrove from Watson, gained Allawah and Carlton from Banks, and also gained Beverley Park, Kogarah Bay, Ramsgate and the remainder of Kogarah from Cook. These changes cut the Labor margin from 15.5% to 12.0%.
History
Barton was created for the 1922 election, and has always covered parts of the St George district. The seat was traditionally a marginal seat between the ALP and the major conservative party. Barton has leant towards Labor in recent years, with the Liberal Party winning just once in the last four decades.
The seat was originally a notionally Nationalist seat, but was won in 1922 by ALP candidate Frederick McDonald, who defeated Hector Lamond, the sitting Nationalist Member for Illawarra since 1917. The seat of Illawarra had been abolished before the 1922 election.
McDonald lost to Nationalist candidate Thomas Ley at the 1925 election by a bare 60 votes. McDonald challenged the result in court, before he disappeared in mysterious circumstances. It is believed that Ley was responsible for McDonald’s presumed murder.
Ley, who had been a state MP for Hurstville 1917-20 and St George 1920-25, held the seat for one term before losing to ALP candidate James Tully in 1928. Ley went on to move back to England and in 1945 was convicted of killing a barman who he suspected of having an affair with his mistress, and ended up spending the rest of his life in an insane asylum. While it was never proven, he was suspected in the death of McDonald and Hyman Goldstein, who was a rival of Ley’s and state member for Coogee when he fell to his death in 1927.
Tully held the seat for the ALP with a massive margin in 1929. In 1931 Tully was challenged by John Eldridge, the sitting member for the neighbouring seat of Martin. Eldridge had been an ALP member but had joined Jack Lang’s breakaway party. Both Tully and Eldridge lost to UAP candidate Albert Lane.
Lane was reelected in 1934 and 1937, but never by comfortable margins. In 1940, he was defeated by former High Court judge H.V. Evatt, who retired from the judiciary at the age of 46 to run for federal politics. He was elected with a massive majority, which he maintained at the 1943 and 1946 elections.
Evatt served as a minister in the Curtin and Chifley governments, including as Minister for External Affairs. He played a significant role in the creation of the United Nations and served as President of the UN General Assembly in 1948-9.
Evatt held the seat at the 1949 election, when the Liberal Party defeated the Chifley Labor government, and Evatt became Leader of the Opposition. Evatt held Barton by slim margins in 1949, 1951, 1954 and 1955 elections, and moved to the safer seat of Hunter at the 1958 election, which was his last as Labor leader, retiring in 1960.
ALP candidate Leonard Reynolds won Barton in 1958, never holding it by large margins. He lost the seat to Liberal candidate William Arthur in 1966, but won it back in 1969. Reynolds held the seat until his retirement in 1975.
In 1975 the seat was won by James Bradfield (LIB), who held the seat for the entirety of the Fraser government, losing to ALP candidate Gary Punch in 1983.
Punch joined the Hawke ministry in 1988 before resigning from Cabinet in 1989 at protest over decisions about Sydney Airport. He returned to the ministry after the 1993 election, when he increased his margin to 9.4%.
Punch retired in 1996, and was succeeded by Robert McClelland. McClelland held Barton for the next seventeen years, serving as a frontbencher from 1998 to 2012.
McClelland retired in 2013, and Liberal candidate Nickolas Varvaris won the seat in a very tight contest.
The redistribution prior to the 2016 election pulled Barton north into more Labor-friendly areas, making the seat a notional Labor seat. Linda Burney, a Labor state MP and deputy leader of the state party, defeated Varvaris at the 2016 election. Burney was re-elected in 2019 and 2022. Burney served in cabinet as Minister for Indigenous Australians from 2022 until July 2024, when Burney moved to the backbench.
Candidates
Sitting Labor MP Linda Burney is not running for re-election.
- Ashvini Ambihaipahar (Labor)
- Manal Bahsa (Greens)
- Fiona Douskou (Liberal)
- Vinay Kolthatkar (Libertarian)
Assessment
Barton is a safe Labor seat.
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing | Redist |
Linda Burney | Labor | 46,206 | 50.4 | +1.2 | 48.0 |
John Goody | Liberal | 23,992 | 26.2 | -7.3 | 29.4 |
Taylor Vandijk | Greens | 11,441 | 12.5 | +3.5 | 11.0 |
Dimitri Honos | United Australia | 5,611 | 6.1 | +3.8 | 6.6 |
Phillip Pollard | One Nation | 4,373 | 4.8 | +1.1 | 4.9 |
Others | 0.2 | ||||
Informal | 7,405 | 7.5 | -2.1 |
2022 two-party-preferred result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing | Redist |
Linda Burney | Labor | 60,054 | 65.5 | +6.1 | 62.0 |
John Goody | Liberal | 31,569 | 34.5 | -6.1 | 38.0 |
Polling places in Barton have been divided into four areas: central, east, north and west.
Labor won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in all four areas, ranging from 56.1% in the west to 63.5% in the centre.
The Greens came third, with a primary vote ranging from 8.8% in the west to 12.5% in the east.
Voter group | GRN prim | ALP 2PP | Total votes | % of votes |
East | 12.5 | 62.0 | 17,136 | 17.5 |
North | 10.0 | 62.5 | 14,779 | 15.1 |
Central | 9.0 | 63.5 | 12,682 | 13.0 |
West | 8.8 | 56.1 | 9,043 | 9.3 |
Pre-poll | 11.0 | 63.2 | 29,707 | 30.4 |
Other votes | 13.4 | 61.4 | 14,376 | 14.7 |
Election results in Barton at the 2022 federal election
Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for Labor, the Liberal Party and the Greens.
I’m pretty sure he did.