ALP 14.8%
Incumbent MP
Anoulack Chanthivong, since 2015.
- Geography
- Redistribution
- History
- Candidate summary
- Assessment
- 2019 results
- Booth breakdown
- Results maps
Geography
Southwestern Sydney. Macquarie Fields covers northern suburbs of the City of Campbelltown and a small part of the City of Liverpool. Suburbs include Casula, Edmondson Park, Glenfield, Ingleburn, Macquarie Fields, Minto and St Andrews.
Redistribution
Macquarie Fields gained the remainder of Casula from Holsworthy, while losing the remainder of Leumeah to Campbelltown and the suburbs of Raby, Eschol Park, Kearns, Varroville and Denham Court to Leppington. These changes made no difference to the Labor margin.
The seat of Macquarie Fields was first established at the 1988 election. It was a successor to the seat of Ingleburn, which was the first seat created between the seats of Liverpool and Campbelltown when it was created in 1981. The 1988 election shifted the seat north, and renamed the seat to reflect the change. In 1991, the seat moved deeper into Liverpool, and was renamed Moorebank. The changes were partly reversed in 1999, when the seat was again named Macquarie Fields. It has had that name ever since. This seat, whatever its name, has always been held by the ALP. The seat was held continuously by the Knowles family from 1981 to 2005.
Ingleburn was first won in 1981 by Liverpool deputy mayor Stan Knowles. He was re-elected in 1984 and 1988, the last time in the renamed seat of Macquarie Fields. Knowles resigned in 1990, and the ensuing by-election was won by his son Craig, a former Mayor of Liverpool.
Knowles was re-elected in the renamed Moorebank in 1991 and 1995, before his seat was again named Macquarie Fields in 1999. He joined the ministry upon Labor winning government in 1995, and after the 2003 election held a large ministerial brief. His position was damaged by his tenure as Minister for Health, and while he had once been considered a possible successor to Bob Carr as Premier, by the time of Carr’s retirement in 2005 Knowles was no longer considered a contender. Knowles retired at the same time as Carr and his deputy, Andrew Refshauge.
The 2005 by-election was won by Campbelltown city councillor Steven Chaytor. He was opposed at the Macquarie Fields by-election by former nurse and whistleblower Nola Fraser, running for the Liberals. The ALP suffered a 12% swing in the by-election.
At 29, Chaytor was considered an up-and-comer in the party. This was cut short barely a year later, when he faced charges of assault against his partner from an incident in December 2006. With the impending election, Chaytor was suspended from the ALP. He was found guilty in January 2007, after which he was expelled from the ALP and a new candidate was found. The ALP now preselected Dr Andrew McDonald, a doctor with previous involvement with Campbelltown Hospital around the time of the issues which had affected Knowles as Minister for Health and had led to Nola Fraser’s political involvement.
Chaytor’s conviction was later overturned on appeal, and he served out his term on Campbelltown City Council, retiring in September 2008.
At the 2007 election, McDonald held off against Fraser, with a similar 12% swing to that in the 2005 by-election. In 2011, McDonald was re-elected, holding on against a below-average anti-Labor swing of 9.7%.
McDonald retired in 2015, and was succeeded by Labor candidate Anoulack Chanthivong. Chanthivong was re-elected in 2019.
Assessment
Macquarie Fields is a safe Labor seat.
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing | Redist |
Anoulack Chanthivong | Labor | 27,942 | 52.9 | +2.1 | 53.3 |
Zahurul Quazi | Liberal | 15,057 | 28.5 | -8.0 | 28.6 |
Mick Allen | Independent | 3,361 | 6.4 | +3.1 | 5.5 |
Stephen Eagar-Deitz | Greens | 2,247 | 4.3 | +0.5 | 4.2 |
Scott Singh | Keep Sydney Open | 2,403 | 4.6 | +4.6 | 4.0 |
Syed Ahmed | Independent | 1,779 | 3.4 | +3.4 | 3.3 |
Others | 1.0 | ||||
Informal | 2,558 | 4.6 |
2019 two-party-preferred result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing | Redist |
Anoulack Chanthivong | Labor | 29,944 | 64.8 | +6.7 | 64.8 |
Zahurul Quazi | Liberal | 16,301 | 35.2 | -6.7 | 35.2 |
Booths in Macquarie Fields have been split into three parts: central, north and south.
Labor won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in all three areas, ranging from 57% in the north to 70.7% in the centre.
Voter group | ALP 2PP % | Total votes | % of votes |
Central | 70.7 | 9,790 | 22.0 |
North | 57.0 | 9,511 | 21.4 |
South | 68.2 | 8,102 | 18.2 |
Other votes | 62.7 | 8,554 | 19.2 |
Pre-poll | 65.6 | 8,483 | 19.1 |
Election results in Macquarie Fields at the 2019 NSW state election
Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for Labor and the Liberal Party.
I thought I’d kick off this thread even though Macquarie Fields will fly under most people’s radar since it’s a safe seat.
Bardia had the only blue 2PP booth in 2019. It stands out on the above map. Bardia is a new, mortgage belt suburb with greenfield developments. Obviously it’s got a young-ish population. Only four years ago, it was more semi-rural. There was a 7.7% 2PP swing to Labor at this booth at the 2022 federal election, whereas the seat of Werriwa saw a 0.4% 2PP swing to Labor.