Goldstein – Australia 2025

IND 3.9% vs LIB

Incumbent MP
Zoe Daniel, since 2022.

Geography
Inner southern suburbs of Melbourne. Goldstein covers the entirety of Bayside council area, and parts of Glen Eira and Kingston council areas. Key suburbs include Sandringham, Brighton, Hampton,  Beaumaris, Ormond and Bentleigh.

Redistribution
Goldstein expanded slightly east, taking in part of Bentleigh East from Hotham and part of Moorabbin and the remainder of Highett from Isaacs.

History
Goldstein was first created in 1984, but is considered a successor to the previous Division of Balaclava, which existed from the first federal election in 1901 until its abolition in 1984. The two seats have a perfect record of having never been won by the Labor Party, and they have been held continously by the Liberal Party and its predecessors since the two non-Labor parties merged in 1909.

Balaclava was first won in 1901 by Protectionist candidate George Turner. Turner had been Premier of Victoria from 1894 to 1899 and again from 1900 until early in 1901, and was the state MP for St Kilda. Turner was Treasurer in Edmund Barton’s first federal government. He won re-election as a Protectionist in 1903 but he accepted the role of Treasurer in George Reid’s Free Trade government in 1904, which effectively saw him switch parties. Turner retired in 1906.

Balaclava was won in 1906 by Independent Protectionist candidate Agar Wynne. Wynne was a former minister in Victorian colonial governments. He joined the newly created Commonwealth Liberal Party in 1909 and served in Joseph Cook’s government from 1913 to 1914. Wynne did not run for re-election in 1914, although he returned to Victorian state politics from 1917 to 1920 and briefly served as a state minister.

Balaclava was won in 1914 by Liberal candidate William Watt. Watt had been Premier of Victoria from 1912 to 1914, and became a federal minister in 1917 as part of the new Nationalist government led by former Labor prime minister Billy Hughes. Watt was appointed Treasurer in 1918 and served as Acting Prime Minister when Hughes traveled to the Versailles peace conference in 1919.

Watt, however, fell out with Hughes upon his return. He was appointed as a representative of the Australian government at a conference on reparations, but Hughes’ constant meddling led him to resign as Treasurer and return to Australia as a backbencher.

Watt was one of a small group of rebel Liberals who ran as the Liberal Union party in 1922, and won re-election. They rejoined the Nationalists after Hughes was replaced by Stanley Bruce, and Watt became Speaker, serving in the role until 1926. He retired from Balaclava in 1929.

Watt’s retirement triggered a by-election, which was won by Nationalist candidate Thomas White. White served as a minister in the Lyons government from 1933 to 1938, and served as a minister from the election of the Menzies government in 1949 until his resignation in 1951.

Balaclava was won at the 1951 by-election by Liberal candidate Percy Joske. He held the seat until his resignation in 1960, when he was appointed as a judge on the Commonwealth Industrial Court. The 1960 by-election was won by Ray Whittorn, also from the Liberal Party. He held the seat until his retirement at the 1974 election.

Balaclava was won in 1974 by Ian Macphee, who served as a minister in the Fraser government from 1976 to 1983. In 1984, the seat of Balaclava was abolished and replaced by the seat of Goldstein, and Macphee won the new seat.

Macphee was a Liberal moderate, and took Andrew Peacock’s side in his conflict with John Howard throughout the 1980s. Macphee served as a shadow minister under Peacock, but was sacked in 1987 by Howard. He was defeated for preselection before the 1990 election by right-wing candidate David Kemp.

Kemp won Goldstein in 1990, and immediately went onto the opposition frontbench. Kemp joined the ministry upon the election of the Howard government in 1996, and served as a minister until three months before his retirement in 2004.

Goldstein was won in 2004 by the Liberal Party’s Andrew Robb, who had been the party’s Federal Director at the 1996 election. Robb was re-elected four times before retiring in 2016.

Robb was succeeded in 2016 by Tim Wilson, a former Human Rights Commissioner. Wilson was re-elected in 2019.

Wilson was defeated in 2022 by independent candidate Zoe Daniel.

Candidates

Assessment
Goldstein is marginal, but Zoe Daniel as a first-term independent will likely benefit from a personal vote. History suggests that vote could be quite big.

2022 result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing Redist
Tim Wilson Liberal 39,607 40.4 -12.3 39.6
Zoe Daniel Independent 33,815 34.5 +34.5 31.3
Martyn Abbott Labor 10,799 11.0 -17.3 13.6
Alana Galli-McRostie Greens 7,683 7.8 -6.2 8.4
David Segal Liberal Democrats 2,072 2.1 +2.1 2.4
Catherine Reynolds United Australia 1,840 1.9 -0.1 2.1
Lisa Stark One Nation 1,239 1.3 +1.3 1.4
Ellie Jean Sullivan Hinch’s Justice Party 589 0.6 +0.6 0.5
Brandon Hoult Sustainable Australia 443 0.5 -1.2 0.4
Others 0.2
Informal 3,487 3.4 +1.2

2022 two-candidate-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing Redist
Zoe Daniel Independent 51,861 52.9 53.9
Tim Wilson Liberal 46,226 47.1 46.1

2022 two-party-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing Redist
Tim Wilson Liberal 53,750 54.8 -3.0 53.7
Martyn Abbott Labor 44,337 45.2 +3.0 46.3

Booth breakdown

Booths have been divided into four areas. Polling places in Bayside City or Kingston City have been split into three areas. From north to south, these are Brighton, Sandringham and Beaumaris. Booths in Glen Eira council area have been grouped together.

The Liberal Party narrowly won the two-candidate-preferred vote in Brighton. The three other areas include booths added from neighbouring seats, but in those areas the combined independent and Labor two-candidate-preferred vote was a majority, ranging from 53.3% in Beaumaris to 58.8% in Glen Eira.

Voter group ALP prim IND+ALP 2CP Total votes % of votes
Glen Eira 18.0 58.8 16,440 15.2
Sandringham 15.1 58.0 12,688 11.7
Brighton 7.9 49.9 10,427 9.7
Beaumaris 9.8 53.3 7,813 7.2
Pre-poll 12.3 53.3 37,614 34.8
Other votes 15.6 48.1 23,069 21.4

Election results in Goldstein at the 2022 federal election
Toggle between two-candidate-preferred votes (Independent or Labor vs Liberal), two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for the Liberal Party, independent candidates and Labor.

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16 COMMENTS

  1. This is a teal seat that hasn’t been talked about much. It’s the only teal vs Liberal rematch. Out of all the Liberals who lost to teals in 2022, Tim Wilson appeared as the most likely to run again. Dave Sharma is now a senator. The rest have moved on.

    I wouldn’t be surprised if Zoe Daniel retains.

  2. I live in the seat. There is a very very active campaign being run by the Liberals. Lots of conflates and visibility.

  3. The times I’ve been in Goldstein over the past 6 months or so, I’ve seen Zoe Daniels volunteers every time. They seem to have been on the ground early & often. That said it has mostly been around the Bentleigh or Moorabbin areas, not the Liberal heartland.

  4. Her supporters might be there to make her known in the newly-added parts of Goldstein or attract major party voters looking to swing away.

  5. Nick
    There was a poll a few months back that suggested Zoe Daniel was in trouble. From afar, hard to see her losing – at least in 2025. To my mind, much more secure than Monique Ryan. Both could be collateral damage if the Jewish communities in both seats go full Liberal.

  6. i think the libs are a chance here and in kooyong. its certainly low hanging fruit and the swing is gonna on against labor and towards the libs in vic. some of those liberal abd labor voters who vote teal are gonna switch back

  7. Why will Labor voters not preference the teal?same for greens!
    Tim Wilson has terrible pr.. partly because his seat always elected a liberal in past times.

  8. they may switch their vote to the liberal on the primary. maybe not the greens but labor and teal voters could switch to the libs

  9. Cannot say what teal or ex liberal voters will do.
    But why on earth would left of centre voters vote liberal?

  10. Very visible ZD campaign here, and Wilson has quite a few signs up too. My gut says Daniel retain, though that’s partly the apparent volunteer enthusiasm gap between the two, which isn’t the most reliable indicator. My tip would be much the same margin as 2022.

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