Gippsland – Australia 2025

NAT 20.6%

Incumbent MP
Darren Chester, since 2008.

Geography
Eastern Victoria. The seat of Gippsland covers most of the East Gippsland and Latrobe Valley regions, stretching as far west as Morwell and Traralgon.

Redistribution
No change.

History
The seat of Gippsland is an original federation electorate. It has always been held by conservative candidates, and has been held by the Country Party and National Party continuously since 1922.

Gippsland was first won in 1901 by Allan McLean, a former Premier of Victoria and opponent of federation. McLean was a member of the Barton-Deakin protectionist party, but was at odds with their alliance with the Labour party. He was re-elected in 1903, but in 1904 he effectively left the Protectionist party to join the Free Trade ministry of George Reid. The ministry lasted for eleven months, and at the 1906 election McLean was defeated by George Wise, a Protectionist candidate.

Wise refused to join the Fusion in 1909 and defeated the Liberal candidate as an independent in 1910. In 1913, however, he lost to Liberal candidate James Bennett. Wise won back the seat, again as an independent, in 1914, and joined the new Nationalist party in 1916. He served briefly as a minister in the Hughes government from 1920 to 1921. Wise lost the seat in 1922 to the Country Party’s Thomas Paterson.

Paterson served as a minister in the Coalition government from 1926 until its defeat in 1929. He served as Deputy Leader of the Country Party from 1929 to 1937, and served as a minister again in the Lyons government from 1934 until the 1937 election. He retired from Parliament at the 1943 election.

The Country Party’s George Bowden won Gippsland in 1943. He held the seat until his retirement in 1961, and despite serving through twelve years of conservative rule, he never reached ministerial rank.

Peter Nixon won Gippsland in 1961. He joined the cabinet in 1967, and served in Coalition governments through to 1972 and again for the entirety of the Fraser government, before retiring at the 1983 election.

In 1983, Gippsland was won by Peter McGauran. McGauran held the seat for the Nationals for the next quarter century. He served as a junior minister in the Howard government from 1996 to 2005, barring a year from 1997 to 1998 when he was forced onto the backbench for his involvement in the ‘travel rorts’ affair. He was promoted to Cabinet in 2005 and was a senior member of the Nationals by the time of the 2007 election. He moved to the backbench in 2007 and retired from Parliament in 2008.

The 2008 Gippsland by-election was won by Nationals candidate Darren Chester, who defeated a challenge from both the Liberal Party and the Labor Party. Chester has been re-elected five times.

Candidates

Assessment
Gippsland is a very safe Nationals seat.

2022 result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Darren Chester Nationals 54,635 54.1 +0.1
Jannette Langley Labor 19,404 19.2 -4.0
Greg Hansford One Nation 9,443 9.4 +9.4
Marjorie Thorpe Greens 8,545 8.5 +2.4
Gregory Forster United Australia 4,593 4.6 +0.2
Jim McDonald Liberal Democrats 4,286 4.2 +4.3
Informal 3,073 3.0 -2.3

2022 two-party-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Darren Chester Nationals 71,205 70.6 +3.9
Jannette Langley Labor 29,701 29.4 -3.9

Booth breakdown

Booths have been divided into four areas. Polling places in East Gippsland and Wellington shires have been grouped together. Polling places in the Latrobe Valley have been split between the towns of Traralgon and Morwell.

The Nationals won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in all four areas, ranging from 59.0% in Morwell to 75.7% in Wellington.

Voter group NAT 2PP Total votes % of votes
Wellington 75.7 14,109 14.0
East Gippsland 73.1 12,793 12.7
Traralgon 67.3 7,501 7.4
Morwell 59.0 5,810 5.8
Pre-poll 71.2 50,627 50.2
Other votes 66.0 10,066 10.0

Election results in Gippsland at the 2022 federal election
Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for the Nationals, Labor and One Nation.

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2 COMMENTS

  1. Like state seat of Morwell Labor seems to be doing worse through here, also Darren Chester appears to be popular.

  2. Like with Mallee, rural Victorian seats that rely more on agriculture and primary industry are moving even further away from Labor, while the seats that contain larger towns (Warrnambool, Shepperton, Wodonga etc) where younger people study or find employment are more open to independent challengers. Hence Nicholls, Wannon and especially Indi have experienced that but not Gippsland

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