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2010 Australian Senate election

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Summary

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FieldValue
election_name2010 Australian Senate elections
countryAustralia
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_electionResults of the 2007 Australian federal election (Senate)
previous_year2007
next_electionResults of the 2013 Australian federal election (Senate)
next_year2013
seats_for_election40 of the 76 seats in the Australian Senate
majority_seats39
election_date21 August 2010
party1LiberalNational Coalition
image1[[File:Senator Eric Abetz crop.jpg175x175px]]
leader1Eric Abetz
leaders_seat1Tasmania
leader_since13 May 2010
seats_before137
seats118
seats_after134
seat_change13
popular_vote14,871,871
percentage138.30%
swing11.47%
party2Australian Labor Party
image2[[File:Christopher Vaughan Evans.jpg175x175px]]
leader2Chris Evans
leaders_seat2Western Australia
leader_since222 October 2004
seats_before232
seats215
seats_after231
seat_change21
popular_vote24,469,734
percentage235.13%
swing25.17%
party4Australian Greens
color439b54a
image4[[File:Bob Brown profile.png175x175px]]
leader4Bob Brown
leaders_seat4Tasmania
leader_since428 November 2005
seats_before45
seats46
seats_after49
seat_change44
popular_vote41,667,315
percentage413.11%
swing44.07%
party5Democratic Labour Party (Australia, 1980)
image5JM 2010.jpg
leader5John Madigan
leaders_seat5Victoria
(won seat)
seats_before50
seats51
seats_after51
seat_change51
popular_vote5134,987
percentage51.06%
swing50.14%
map_imageAustralian Senate July 2011 Rect.svg
map_captionSenators elected in the 2010 federal election
titleLeader of the Senate
before_electionChris Evans
before_partyAustralian Labor Party
after_electionChris Evans
after_partyAustralian Labor Party

(won seat)

The following tables show state-by-state results in the Australian Senate at the 2010 federal election. Senators total 34 Coalition, 31 Labor, nine Green, one Democratic Labor Party, and one independent, Nick Xenophon. New Senators took their places from 1 July 2011. TOC

As of 2025, this is the latest senate election where the three major party senate leaders were male.

Quota

Senate Quota in each State are as follows

QuotaVoteRemarks
114.3%
228.6%
342.9%Equality
457.1%Majority
571.4%
685.7%

Senate Quota in each Territory are as follows

QuotaVoteRemarks
133.4%Equality
266.7%Majority

Australia

PartyVotes%SwingSeats wonTotal seatsChangeCoalition total4,871,87138.30–1.4718343
/ joint ticket3,740,00229.40−1.288172
1,092,6018.59−0.189161
Country Liberal (NT)39,2680.31−0.0111
4,469,73435.13–5.1715311
1,667,31513.11+4.07694
267,4932.10+0.48001
259,5832.04+2.04
230,1911.81+1.68
Shooters and Fishers214,1191.68+1.38
134,9871.06+0.14111
127,8941.01+0.07
80,6450.63–0.66
70,6720.56+0.14
48,5470.38+0.18
National (WA)42,3340.33+0.19
32,5800.26+0.18
28,5780.22+0.03
The Climate Sceptics25,7580.20+0.20
17,4410.14+0.08
17,2410.14+0.14
13,9450.11+0.07
13,2430.10+0.03
11,9810.09+0.09
9,6800.08+0.08
6,9990.06+0.06
3,6160.03–0.02
55,7860.44–0.9401
Others1,310,83310.31+5.0201
Total12,722,2334076
Invalid/blank votes495,1603.75+1.20
Registered voters/turnout14,086,86993.83
Source: Commonwealth Election 2010

New South Wales

20076Ursula StephensLabor

|} Primary votes saw the Coalition and the Labor Party win two seats each before preferences were counted, with the Greens ahead of the Coalition for the fifth seat. Preferences from the Family First Party, the Christian Democrats and the Shooters and Fishers saw the Coalition reach the quota first, leading to Fiona Nash winning the fifth seat, while Coalition and Sex Party preferences saw the Liberal Democrats threatening the Greens for the sixth and final seat, but Labor preferences saw the Greens reach the quota. The end result was three seats Coalition, two seats Labor, and one seat Green.

Victoria

20076David FeeneyLabor

|} The primary vote saw the Coalition win two seats, Labor win two seats and the Greens win one seat, leaving Labor leading for the final seat with a comfortable majority ahead of the Coalition, Family First, DLP and Australian Sex Party. It ended up being a tight race for the final senate seat in Victoria, with preferences from One Nation and the Christian Democrats saw the DLP move ahead of Family First into third place, but Australian Democrat and Liberal Democrat preferences saw the DLP getting overtaken by the Sex Party. However, the Sex Party was overtaken once again by the DLP's Family First preferences, and Sex Party preferences saw the DLP move into second place ahead of the Coalition, whose preferences allowed the DLP to overtake Labor to secure the sixth seat. The final results were two seats Coalition, two seats Labor, one seat Green and one seat Democratic Labor.

Queensland

20076Mark FurnerLabor

|} Primary votes saw the LNP and Labor both winning two seats, with the LNP and Greens having a sizable majority against Family First and the Sex Party for the final two seats. Labor and Australian Democrat preferences saw the Greens reaching the quota, while preferences from the Shooters and Fishers, One Nation, Liberal Democrats, Family First and Sex Party all saw the Australian Fishing and Lifestyle Party make a large gain on the Liberal National Party. However, the gain was not enough and the LNP ended up winning the final seat. The final result was three seats LNP, two seats Labor and one seat Green.

Western Australia

20076Scott LudlamGreens

|} The primary vote saw the Liberals winning three seats and Labor winning two, leaving the Greens with a very comfortable majority against the Nationals and the Sex Party. Socialist Alliance and Labor preferences saw the Greens easily reach the quota.

South Australia

20076Sarah Hanson-YoungGreens

|} Primary votes saw both the Liberals and Labor winning two seats each, leaving the Greens leading while Labor was narrowly ahead of the Liberals. Sex Party preferences saw the Greens reach the quota to secure the fifth seat, while Family First preferences saw the Liberals overtake Labor to secure the sixth vacancy. The final result was three seats Liberal, two seats Labor and one seat Green.

Tasmania

20076Catryna BilykLabor

|} Primary votes saw the Liberals and Labor both win two seats and the Greens win one, which left Labor ahead of the Greens and the Liberals. It is possible that Liberal preferences may have pushed the Greens ahead of Labor, which would've led to them taking the final seat, but Shooters and Fishers preferences meant that the Liberals ended up ahead of the Greens, and Labor ended up taking the seat with Green preferences. The final result was three seats Labor, two seats Liberal and one seat Green.

Territories

Australian Capital Territory

20102Gary HumphriesLiberal

|}

Labor Senator Kate Lundy was re-elected with well over a quota. Liberal Senator Gary Humphries was also re-elected, with just over (1.01x) a quota. Although the Greens received significantly more votes than in 2007, the two ACT Senators were elected on quotas, leaving no room for preference flows.

Northern Territory

20102Trish CrossinLabor

|}

Country Liberals Senator Nigel Scullion, who is also deputy leader of the National Party of Australia, was re-elected with well over a quota of votes. Labor Senator Trish Crossin was also re-elected, with just over (1.04x) a quota of votes. Although the Greens received the next highest number of votes, the two NT Senators were elected on quotas, leaving no room for preference flows.

Notes

References

References

  1. [http://vtr.aec.gov.au/SenateStateFirstPrefsByGroup-15508-NAT.htm 2010 election Senate results by vote: AEC] {{webarchive. link. (2010-09-01)
  2. (2010-07-29). "2010 election Senate results by seat". ABC.
  3. Ker, Peter. (26 August 2010). "Don't count me among Coalition, says Nat". [[Fairfax Media]].
  4. (2010-07-29). "Senate Results: New South Wales - Federal Election 2010 - ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". ABC.
  5. (2010-07-29). "Senate Results: Victoria - Federal Election 2010 - ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". ABC.
  6. (2010-07-29). "Senate Results: Queensland - Federal Election 2010 - ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". ABC.
  7. (2010-07-29). "Senate Results: Western Australia - Federal Election 2010 - ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". ABC.
  8. (2010-07-29). "Senate Results: South Australia - Federal Election 2010 - ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". ABC.
  9. (2010-07-29). "Senate Results: Tasmania - Federal Election 2010 - ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". ABC.
  10. (2010-07-29). "Senate Results: Australian Capital Territory - Federal Election 2010 - ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". ABC.
  11. (2010-07-29). "Senate Results: Northern Territory - Federal Election 2010 - ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". ABC.
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