ALP 8.9%
Incumbent MP
Mark Butler, since 2019. Previously member for Port Adelaide 2007-2019.
Geography
Hindmarsh covers the western coastal suburbs of Adelaide, stretching from Torrens Island and Port Adelaide to West Beach and Camden Park.
History
Hindmarsh is an original South Australian seat, having been created for the 1903 election. In the first 100 years of the seat, Labor held it for all but one term, before losing the seat again in 2013.
The seat was first held by James Hutchison of the ALP, who held the seat from 1903 to his death in 1909, and he was succeeded by William Archibald at the 1910 election. Archibald served in Andrew Fisher’s third government as Minister for Home Affairs. Archibald followed Prime Minister Billy Hughes out of the ALP in 1916 over conscription, and briefly served as a minister in Hughes’ National Labor minority government before he returned to the backbenches in the new Nationalist government. Archibald was reelected in 1917 before being defeated in 1919.
After Labor won the seat back in 1919, they held it for the next 74 years continuously. The seat was won in 1919 by Norman Makin, who went on to serve as Speaker during the Scullin government and as a minister under Curtin and Chifley, before leaving Parliament in 1946 to serve as Ambassador to the United States.
Albert Thompson won the seat in 1946, and held it for one term before moving to the new seat of Port Adelaide. Hindmarsh was won in 1949 by Clyde Cameron, who was a major figure in the ALP during the long years of opposition of the 1950s and 1960s, serving as Deputy Leader and a leading figure in the Left of the party. He served in the Whitlam ministry from 1972 to 1975 and continued as an opposition backbencher until his retirement in 1980.
The seat was held by John Scott from 1980 until his retirement in 1993. The 1993 election saw the neighbouring marginal Liberal seat of Hawker abolished, and sitting Member for Hawker Christine Gallus won Hindmarsh off the ALP. This was the only time the ALP had lost the seat to another party in ninety years.
Gallus served as a Shadow Minister in the last term of the Keating government and served in the Howard government as a Parliamentary Secretary in the early 2000s before retiring in 2004. In the election to succeed her, Steve Georganas of the ALP defeated Liberal candidate Simon Birmingham by only 108 votes.
Georganas was re-elected in 2007 and 2010, increasing his margin to 5.7%.
In 2013, Georganas lost Hindmarsh to Liberal candidate Matt Williams with a swing of almost 8%.
Georganas returned to Hindmarsh in 2016, defeating Williams in a very close result.
The redistribution prior to the 2019 election saw the neighbouring seat of Port Adelaide abolished. The Labor member for Port Adelaide, Mark Butler, shifted to Hindmarsh, while Georganas shifted to the neighbouring seat of Adelaide. Butler was re-elected in 2022.
- Adrien Aloe (FUSION)
- Mark Butler (Labor)
- Christopher Lehmann (Liberal)
- Alex Tennikoff (Family First)
- Andrew Townsend (Trumpet of Patriots)
- Matthew Wright (Greens)
Assessment
Hindmarsh is now a reasonably safe Labor seat.
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing |
Mark Butler | Labor | 46,547 | 42.2 | -0.9 |
Anna Finizio | Liberal | 36,072 | 32.7 | -4.1 |
Patrick O’Sullivan | Greens | 15,310 | 13.9 | +2.9 |
Walter Johnson | One Nation | 4,341 | 3.9 | +3.9 |
George Melissourgos | United Australia | 3,896 | 3.5 | -0.8 |
Matt Pastro | Animal Justice | 2,340 | 2.1 | -0.8 |
Jamie Witt | Great Australian Party | 1,184 | 1.1 | +1.1 |
Dianne Richards | Federation Party | 653 | 0.6 | +0.6 |
Informal | 6,686 | 5.7 | +1.4 |
2022 two-party-preferred result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing |
Mark Butler | Labor | 65,043 | 58.9 | +2.4 |
Anna Finizio | Liberal | 45,300 | 41.1 | -2.4 |
Booths have been divided into three parts: central, north and south.
Labor won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in all three areas, ranging from 53.4% in the south to 67.4% in the north.
The Greens came third, with a primary vote ranging from 14.7% in the south to 16% in the north.
Voter group | GRN prim | ALP 2PP | Total votes | % of votes |
North | 16.0 | 67.4 | 23,233 | 21.1 |
Central | 15.0 | 58.7 | 21,447 | 19.4 |
South | 14.7 | 53.4 | 12,359 | 11.2 |
Pre-poll | 12.6 | 56.4 | 30,026 | 27.2 |
Other votes | 11.8 | 57.0 | 23,278 | 21.1 |
Election results in Hindmarsh at the 2022 federal election
Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for Labor, the Liberal Party and the Greens.
Hindmarsh is now a safe Labor seat due to its merge with the abolished seat of Port Adelaide. The only area for concern for the ALP is the southern end, the state seat of Colton, which takes into account SA’s more coastal affluent suburbs – lots of retirees and Italian and Greeks in the Fulham and Kidman Park areas.
The former candidate Anna Finizio is now tipped as the LIB candidate for Dunstan, a seat in the eastern suburbs of adelaide no where near Hindmarsh, should the former Premier Steven Marshall resign – he holds it by a louzy 500 votes. Shame to see career politicians…