IND 9.4% vs LIB
Incumbent MP
Zali Steggall, since 2019.
Geography
Northern Sydney. Warringah covers parts of the Northern Beaches and Lower North Shore of Sydney, including Manly, Mosman, North Sydney, Neutral Bay, Cremorne, Cammeray, Balgowlah, Freshwater, Brookvale, Curl Curl, Wollstonecraft and Allambie Heights. The seat covers the entirety of the North Sydney and Mosman council areas and southern parts of the Northern Beaches council area.
Redistribution
Warringah lost Forestville, North Curl Curl and Killarney Heights to Mackellar. Warringah then gained the remainder of the North Sydney council area from the abolished seat of North Sydney, including the suburbs of Cremorne, Cammeray, North Sydney and Wollstonecraft.
History
Warringah was first created at the 1922 election, and has never elected a Labor candidate, electing a conservative candidate at all but one election prior to 2019. That exception was in 1937 when an independent was elected, who proceeded to join the United Australia Party shortly after his election and went on to serve as a minister in a number of conservative governments.
The seat was first won by Granville Ryrie in 1922. Ryrie had been Member for North Sydney since a 1911 by-election and was elected to Warringah unopposed. The ALP challenged him in 1925 but he managed over 80% of the vote.
Ryrie was appointed High Commissioner to London in 1927 and the by-election was won by Archdale Parkhill, in a race where the two Labor candidates polled barely 18% between them.
Parkhill had been the Lynton Crosby of early 20th Century Australian politics, coordinating many campaigns for the early Liberal Party and Nationalists over two decades. Parkhill served as a minister in the Lyons government from 1932 until 1937, serving as Minister for Defence during Lyons’ second term.
Parkhill was defeated at the 1937 election by conservative independent Percy Spender, who won the seat in a close race on preferences after falling 15% behind on primary votes. Spender went on to join the UAP shortly after his victory. Spender served in the wartime governments of Robert Menzies and Arthur Fadden and served as Minister for External Affairs until 1951, when he retired at the election before being appointed Ambassador to the United States. Spender went on to serve as Australia’s first representative on the International Court of Justice at The Hague.
Spender was succeeded in 1951 by Francis Bland, who held the seat for ten years with massive majorities, polling over 70% on two occasions and being elected unopposed on a third. He retired without ever taking a ministerial role.
Bland was succeeded in 1961 by John Cockle, who held the seat until his death shortly before the 1966 election.
Cockle was succeeded by prominent Edward St John in 1966. St John caused controversy in 1969 attacking Prime Minister John Gorton, which led him to resign from the Liberal Party, and he was defeated at the 1969 election by Liberal candidate Michael MacKellar.
MacKellar served as a minister in the Fraser government until 1982, when a scandal involving the importation of a colour television saw him resign from the ministry.
MacKellar resigned from Parliament in 1994, and the ensuing by-election was won by Tony Abbott. Abbott went on to serve as a minister for the entirety of the Howard government from 1996 to 2007, becoming a senior member of Cabinet in the last two terms of the government.
Abbott had always held Warringah by large margins over the ALP, and the first serious threat to his hold on the seat came in 2001, when Peter Macdonald, former independent member for the state seat of Manly, challenged Abbott. Macdonald polled 27% of the primary vote and came within 6% of defeating Abbott.
Abbott served as Shadow Minister for Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs following the Howard government’s defeat in November 2007, serving in the role under leaders Brendan Nelson and Malcolm Turnbull.
Abbott resigned from the frontbench in November 2009 in protest at Malcolm Turnbull’s support for the Emissions Trading Scheme, which triggered the collapse of Turnbull’s leadership. Abbott won a slim majority in a party room ballot against Turnbull in December 2009 and was elected Leader of the Liberal Party.
Abbott led the Coalition into the 2010 election. The Labor government lost its majority, but managed to piece together a majority with the support of crossbench MPs. Abbott led the Coalition through the next term, before winning the 2013 election. Tony Abbott served as Prime Minister until he was defeated for the Liberal leadership in September 2015.
Abbott was re-elected in 2016, but in 2019 was defeated by independent Zali Steggall. Steggall was re-elected in 2022.
Assessment
Steggall holds this seat by a sizeable margin and should be re-elected.
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing | Redist |
Zali Steggall | Independent | 41,832 | 44.8 | +1.4 | 39.8 |
Katherine Deves | Liberal | 31,129 | 33.4 | -5.7 | 34.3 |
David Mickleburgh | Labor | 7,806 | 8.4 | +1.8 | 12.0 |
Kristyn Glanville | Greens | 6,910 | 7.4 | +1.3 | 7.9 |
Andrew Robertson | United Australia | 2,202 | 2.4 | +1.7 | 2.1 |
Steven Tripp | One Nation | 1,980 | 2.1 | +2.1 | 1.8 |
Kate Paterson | Animal Justice | 1,475 | 1.6 | +0.2 | 1.1 |
Others | 1.1 | ||||
Informal | 2,829 | 2.9 | -2.1 |
2022 two-candidate-preferred result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing | Redist |
Zali Steggall | Independent | 56,892 | 61.0 | +3.7 | 59.4 |
Katherine Deves | Liberal | 36,442 | 39.0 | -3.7 | 40.6 |
2022 two-party-preferred result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing | Redist |
Katherine Deves | Liberal | 48,001 | 51.4 | -0.7 | 50.7 |
David Mickleburgh | Labor | 45,333 | 48.6 | +0.7 | 49.3 |
Warringah has been split into four areas: Manly, Mosman, North Sydney and Warringah. Polling places on the lower north shore have been divided along local government boundaries, while those booths in the Northern Beaches council area have been split between the two former council areas of Manly and Warringah.
Independents (either Steggall or North Sydney candidate Kylea Tink) won a majority of the two-candidate-preferred vote in all four areas, ranging from 58.9% in North Sydney and Mosman to 65% in Manly.
Voter group | IND 2CP | Total votes | % of votes |
North Sydney | 58.9 | 19,026 | 16.9 |
Warringah | 61.9 | 12,859 | 11.5 |
Manly | 65.0 | 12,685 | 11.3 |
Mosman | 58.9 | 8,146 | 7.3 |
Pre-poll | 58.7 | 40,897 | 36.4 |
Other votes | 56.1 | 18,650 | 16.6 |
Election results in Warringah at the 2022 federal election
Toggle between two-candidate-preferred votes (Independent vs Liberal), two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for independent candidates, the Liberal Party and Labor.
Anonycat-I agree Steggall is likely to hold on-I doubt she will do so comfortably.She has been the beneficiary of large swings to her in previous elections and the pendulum is due to swing back.
You have overlooked that her electorate now includes North Sydney, so the unpopularity of North Sydney Council will have an impact.
Rates is a non-issue outside a few liberal party councilors trying to stir up trouble. Rates are still very low and when I moved from interstate I thought my annual rates were for a quarter cf the rates in other parts of the country. Also, being a completely unrepresentative part of the country where cost of living pressures equals two weeks skiing in whistler rather than three and the locals at Balmoral tell me the $20 per parking on Sunday should be higher to keep poor people (like me) away from their beach (I am serious – albeit they are in Mosman Council cf North Sydney) I won’t cry too much about an increase in rates…..
Zali to retain easily. Agree JR has been a better candidate than last time but ZS is now a better politician than what she was for the last two elections….
Based on youtube one would think that the only people running are Trumpets for Patriots. But haven’t seen much of a ground game.
@Pollster you’ve started to get Trumpet of Patriots ads already? Last time out I got a seven minute unskippable ad on YouTube. Ridiculous.
I saw some Liberal corflutes on Sydney Road this past weekend.
As for the council rates issue, people compare before and after in their own councils. A double digit rise per year would definitely agitate people.
driving from Warringah Mall through to the bridge on the weekend was 50/50 corflutes between steggall and the libs
On socials Steggall also saying that their is a truck driving around funded by “Australians for Prosperity” that has attack on her with a typo in her name (“steggal”) that also matches some recent vandalism of her campaign material
It is interesting the rates – I do some work for a Council on the North Shore (not quite the Northern Beaches but very close by) and they went for a rate rise. I provided them my rates notices for two properties within interstate CBDs and the Council staff were shocked by the amount of rates interstate (i.e. 2 * the North Shore Council rates). So rates are too low in NSW.