ALP 1.6%
Incumbent MP
Marion Scrymgour, since 2022.
Geography
Lingiari covers the vast majority of the Northern Territory, with the exception of Darwin and Palmerston. The seat covers Katherine and Alice Springs, as well as many indigenous communities throughout the Territory.
Redistribution
Lingiari previously covered the Palmerston suburbs of Farra, Johnston, Mitchell, Yarrawonga and Zuccoli, but those areas were moved to Solomon, unifying the Darwin-Palmerston area in one seat. This change increased the Labor margin in Lingiari from 0.9% to 1.6%.
History
The Northern Territory first elected a Member of the House of Representatives in 1922, but this person was only given full voting rights in 1968.
The seat was held by the Country Party and then the Country Liberal Party from then until 1983, before Labor and then the CLP each held the seat for one term, before Warren Snowdon won the seat for the ALP in 1987. Snowdon lost the seat for one term in 1996 before being returned for one more term in 1998.
The 2000 redistribution saw the Northern Territory gain a second seat for the first time, and the seats of Solomon, covering Darwin and Palmerston, and Lingiari, covering the rest, were created.
Warren Snowdon shifted to the new seat of Lingiari in 2001, and held the seat for the next 21 years, retiring in 2022.
Snowdon was succeeded by the ALP’s Marion Scrymgour. Scrymgour had previously held the Northern Territory assembly seat of Arafura from 2001 until 2012. Scrymgour served as a minister from 2003 until 2009, including as Deputy Chief Minister from 2007. Scrymgour briefly moved to the crossbench as an independent for two months in 2009 before rejoining Labor.
Assessment
Lingiari is a very marginal seat, even if the Country Liberal Party have never held it. Labor suffered a large swing here in 2022, at least in part due to the retirement of longstanding member Snowdon. Scrymgour’s incumbency may help boost her margin, but the seat still remains very marginal.
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing | Redist |
Marion Scrymgour | Labor | 16,747 | 36.6 | -8.2 | 37.3 |
Damien Ryan | Country Liberal | 15,893 | 34.7 | -2.2 | 34.5 |
Blair McFarland | Greens | 5,018 | 11.0 | +2.7 | 11.0 |
Tim Gallard | One Nation | 2,470 | 5.4 | +5.4 | 5.3 |
George Kasparek | Liberal Democrats | 1,948 | 4.3 | +4.3 | 4.1 |
Allan McLeod | United Australia | 1,882 | 4.1 | +1.3 | 4.0 |
Michael Gravener | Independent | 948 | 2.1 | +2.1 | 2.0 |
Thong Sum Lee | Citizens Party | 497 | 1.1 | +1.1 | 1.1 |
Imelda Agars | Independent | 409 | 0.9 | +0.9 | 0.9 |
Informal | 3,647 | 7.4 | +2.3 |
2022 two-party-preferred result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing | Redist |
Marion Scrymgour | Labor | 23,339 | 50.9 | -4.5 | 51.6 |
Damien Ryan | Country Liberal | 22,473 | 49.1 | +4.5 | 48.4 |
Booths have been divided into five areas. There are clusters of booths in the Alice Springs area, in Katherine and in areas surrounding Darwin, although Darwin itself is in the neighbouring seat of Solomon.
There were no ordinary election-day booths outside of these three urban centres, but 24% of the total vote was cast through remote voting teams, with another 47.5% cast at pre-poll. These two voting groups overshadowed the number of votes cast at ordinary election-day booths in urban areas.
Labor won almost 70% of the two-party-preferred vote in the remote booths while losing every other category.
The Country Liberal Party’s two-party-preferred vote ranged from 50.6% in Alice Springs to 60.9% in the Darwin surrounds. The CLP also polled 54.3% in the pre-poll vote which made up almost half of the total turnout.
The Greens came third, with a primary vote ranging from 5.6% in the remote vote to 18.8% in Alice Springs, with 11.9% in the pre-poll.
Voter group | GRN prim | ALP 2PP | Total votes | % of votes |
Alice Springs | 18.8 | 49.4 | 4,869 | 11.5 |
Darwin Surrounds | 8.2 | 39.1 | 3,189 | 7.5 |
Katherine | 13.3 | 46.1 | 979 | 2.3 |
Pre-poll | 12.1 | 46.1 | 20,115 | 47.5 |
Remote | 5.6 | 69.4 | 10,207 | 24.1 |
Other votes | 11.5 | 46.2 | 3,015 | 7.1 |
Election results in Lingiari at the 2022 federal election
Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for Labor, the Country Liberal Party and the Greens.
The CLP came close in 2022 because they had an excellent candidate, the former Mayor of Alice Springs. He was respected across the political spectrum. That is also the reason they picked up an abnormally high number of Greens preferences as his interest in recycling, solar energy and waste management were well-known from his efforts with the Alice Springs Town Council. The CLP do not have a high-profile candidate this time.
Coalition have targeted this seat for multiple elections, admittedly at poor elections for them, and it seems unlikely they get it this time unless there is a big reverse or the current polls.
Don’t suppose anyone’s on the ground and has an idea of what turnout’s gonna do in the remote communities?
Turn-out might drop as a percentage of electors on the roll due to the enrollment boost from the voice at least, trend seems to be that voters are becoming less engaged and motivated to vote and don’t see why this would change this cycle. Lineball here currently