Geography
Swan covers suburbs in the inner south of Perth. This includes South Perth, Victoria Park and parts of Belmont and Canning LGAs. Swan goes as far east as the airport.
2013 result
Group | Party | Votes | Swan % | Statewide % |
AA | Liberal | 33,201 | 39.15 | 39.20 |
Z | Australian Labor Party | 24,431 | 28.81 | 26.59 |
S | The Greens (WA) | 9,733 | 11.48 | 9.49 |
F | Palmer United Party | 3,438 | 4.05 | 5.01 |
B | Liberal Democrats | 2,975 | 3.51 | 3.43 |
U | The Nationals | 2,357 | 2.78 | 5.07 |
C | Australian Christians | 1,298 | 1.53 | 1.64 |
I | Sex Party | 1,159 | 1.37 | 1.49 |
Others | 6,213 | 7.33 | 8.09 |
The Liberal Party topped the poll in Swan, with a very similar vote to their statewide result. The ALP and the Greens both polled higher, while most minor parties polled less than the statewide total.
Booth breakdown
Booths have been divided into three areas: north-east, south-east and west. The west follows the boundaries of South Perth council areas. The key suburbs in each area are:
- North-East – Cloverdale, Kewdale, Rivervale, Victoria Park.
- South-East – Beckenham, Bentley, Cannington, Ferndale.
- West – Como, Manning, South Perth.
The Liberal Party topped the poll in two out of three areas. In the north-east, the Liberal Party outpolled the ALP by 3.3%. In the west, the Liberal Party won a majority of the vote while the ALP vote dropped below 20%.
In the south-east, the ALP outpolled the Liberal Party by 3.1%.
The Greens came third in Swan, with a vote ranging from 11% in the south-east to 12.8% in the west.
Voter group | LIB % | ALP % | GRN % | Total votes | % of votes |
North-East | 34.80 | 31.51 | 12.35 | 24,015 | 28.32 |
South-East | 31.42 | 34.50 | 10.96 | 19,065 | 22.48 |
West | 51.39 | 18.57 | 12.83 | 17,387 | 20.50 |
Other votes | 40.75 | 29.00 | 10.05 | 24,338 | 28.70 |
The significant thing with the green vote in swan in sept was that it remained relatively stable unlike most other electorates where there was a swing against the greens. Any thoughts on this?
I’m surprised the Nationals can get 2% or so through out Perth. Who are these people?
People who grew up in regional WA (particularly the wheatbelt) who moved to Perth, bringing old habits with them? There’s no shortage of those folks. The recent leadership of Brendon Grylls would’ve helped too – since 2008, the Nats have branded themselves as not just the country cousins and automatic coalition partners of the Libs. Whether that lasts beyond the end of the current state govt, we’ll have to wait and see, but it’s been working OK for them lately.