Final NT election outcome

Bryan · Tuesday 28 June 2005 · 8:16 am

The Northern Territory election result has been declared, confirming the make-up of the new Parliament: 19 Labor, 4 County Liberals, and 2 independents.

The Country Liberal party has chosen Jodeen Carney as its leader and another woman, Fay Miller, as its deputy. Carney’s Alice Springs based seat of Araluen was the only seat to experience a swing to the Country Liberal Party at the recent election. Although that swing is explained in the following from Anthony Green.

Araluen was one of the new electorates created for the 1983 election when the Parliament was expanded. It has moved around over the years, originally covering central Alice Springs, shifting westwards for the 1987 and 1990 elections before returning to the centre in 1994. The electorate was held from 1986 until 2001 by former government Minister Eric Poole. On his retirement, two Independents contested the seat, well-known local councillor Meredith Campbell and ex-CLP candidate Tony Bohning. The CLP’s primary vote fell 27%, the swing after preferences was 17.1%, with new CLP candidate Jodeen Carney elected with a majority of only 134 votes.

The independents did not run in 2005, allowing Carney to recapture the CLP heartland.

NT Election update

Bryan · Thursday 23 June 2005 · 9:44 pm

As counting continues in the Northern Territory, it looks like Labor will win 19 seats, the Country Liberal Party (CLP) will win four, and the independents will win two.

From where I sit, the current state of the count is as follows:

Seat Indicative location 2001 Party Provisional 2005 Party Provisional 2005 TPP outcome
Nelson East of Darwin electorates Ind. Ind. 67.0%
Araluen West side of Alice Springs CLP CLP 57.1%
Blain South-east Darwin City CLP CLP 57.0%
Katherine Katherine CLP CLP 52.5%
Greatorex East side of Alice Springs CLP CLP 51.5%
Braitling North-West of Alice Springs Ind. Ind. 50.8%
Port Darwin Darwin City CLP Labor 51.4%
Goyder Darwin hinterland CLP Labor 51.6%
Drysdale North and East of Darwin City CLP Labor 51.6%
Brennan South-east Darwin City CLP Labor 52.1%
Millner + North of Darwin City Labor Labor 52.8%
Sanderson North of Darwin City Labor Labor 58.5%
MacDonnell Southern NT CLP Labor 62.0%
Johnston North of Darwin City Labor Labor 62.1%
Daly Wadeye and Katherine district (but excludes Katherine) CLP Labor 65.1%
Nightcliff North of Darwin City Labor Labor 65.6%
Karama North of Darwin City Labor Labor 67.0%
Fannie Bay North of Darwin City Labor Labor 68.3%
Casuarina North of Darwin City Labor Labor 69.0%
Wanguri North of Darwin City Labor Labor 70.8%
Stuart North-West of Alice Springs Labor Labor 71.3%
Arafura Melville Island/Jabiru Labor Labor 73.6%
Barkly Tennant Creek and east Labor Labor 73.8%
Arnhem Top NE corner of the NT, excludes Nhulunbuy Labor Labor 74.0%
Nhulunbuy Nhulunbuy Labor Labor 76.2%

Note: (+) The count for all seats except Millner is a provisional two-party preferred (TPP) count. The count for Millner is based on the primary vote alone.

NT electoral musings

Bryan · Tuesday 21 June 2005 · 12:02 am

The Poll Bludger made an observation that intrigued me. While the Internet psephologists (Peter Brent at Mumble, William Bowe at the Poll Bludger, Charles Richardson at Crikey, and me) all predicted a landslide to Labor, the newspaper and territory pundits generally did not. This got me thinking, what was it that gave it away (for me at least).

We will begin with my general rules of thumb.

First, as a general principle of Australian politics, oppositions do not win; governments lose. Governments lose when the economy turns sour, or when ministers are found to be corrupt, grossly incompetent or excessively arrogant. None of these traits were particularly evident beyond the usual run-of-the-mill glitches and mistakes. Martin had steered a moderately conservative Labor government that had not alienated itself from the mortgage belt voters, nor the business sector. The economy was strong. Unemployment was down. The budgets had been balanced. The party did not appear to be internally fractured or at war with itself. When I scoured the Territory papers, I could not detect an overwhelming mood for change. (For the record, the mechanism at work here is a conservative electorate that follows the maxim: if it ain’t broke don’t fix it).

Second — another general principle — governments which win their first term by the barest majority, and provided they have not contravened the first principle above, often go on to a win a more substantial majority in their second term. This was particularly likely to be the case in the Northern Territory, where Labor had been in opposition for so long because it had been successfully demonised by the CLP. In government, Labor was able to bust the CLP mythology. The electorate having kissed the frog discovered it was a prince. The bogey man was no longer.

The third principle, which may well be a corollary of the first, is the theory of electoral cycles. Once elected, governments tend to serve at least two and often three or more terms. A one term government is a rarity in Australian politics. It would have been a heroic achievement in the circumstances for the CLP to wrest government from Labor after only one term.

These principles were supported by the hard data.

My fourth factor was the wisdom of crowds. The betting market opened with Labor on $1.33 and the Country Liberals on $3.00, giving implied win probabilities of 69 and 31 per cent. Within a week of the election the market had Labor on $1.20 (77 per cent) and the CLP on $4.00 (22 per cent). It was on the basis of the betting data that I made my first prediction on 8 June 2005. I took the market to be factoring in more than the bare one seat majority Labor had prior to the recent election. My first guesstimate on the basis of this data was that Labor would win between 15 and 17 seats, up on the 13 it had held.

I was not convinced by the argument that Territorians were betting on the CLP while big interstate money was going on Labor. After all, money is money. And I assumed all of the punters were making informed bets from their perspective.

Fifth, the Newspoll of the 12 Darwin seats conducted some 10 days before the poll, suggested a swing to the government of 9.5 per cent. I acknowledged the following caveats with this poll.

However some caveats need to be noted at this point. First, the poll results came from a survey of 1200 people in 12 electorates in Darwin. This Darwin swing may not be extrapolated to the rest of the Territory. Second, the NT electorates are very small - around 4500 voters each. This means the ‘law of large numbers’ is less applicable, and consequently random results are more likely. Third, Nelson and Braitling are held by independents and may not be as affected by Territory-wide swings to or from Labor. Fourth, and we all know this, swings are never uniform - even within the 12 surveyed electorates.

Nonetheless at this point two things were evident. If (as I observed here) the election was to be won or lost in the northern suburbs of Darwin, short of a cataclysmic disaster, Labor would win it. And, while the swing in the country seats might not be as big as the Darwin swing, it was highly unlikely to be a swing against the government. Consequently, on the basis of the Newspoll, and mapping it against both Antony Green’s pendulum and my own, I decided to increase my prediction from 15-17 seats to 16-18 seats on 11 June 2005.

At drinks on the night before the election, a few of my friends got stuck into me for being overly optimistic. I was told, never would Labor command such a majority in the Territory. While the resulting nervousness is reflected in my post at 7am on Saturday 18 June 2005, I decided to stick with my prediction of 16-18 seats. Both the principles and the data seemed firm.

And as it turns out, I was right: a big swing to the government. But at a potential 19 seats, it looks like a bigger swing than even the Internet psephologists (self included) had anticipated.

Labor landslide in the NT wipes out Opposition Leader

Bryan · Saturday 18 June 2005 · 10:13 pm

Like most Internet pundits (for example, Mumble, the Poll Bludger and Crikey) I predicted between 16 and 18 seats for Labor in today’s NT election. Update: According to the Poll Bludger, other media pundits were generally surprised at the size of the win.

The ABC’s electoral computer is reporting that Labor has definitely won 16 seats and looks like winning 18. The Country Liberal Party is a shoe in for six seats (though it may only get five). And independents look like winning one or possibly two. Counts are also available from the Northern Territory Electoral Commission.

Labor has retained its 13 seats, and won Macdonnell, Daly, and (at the expense of the Opposition Leader, Denis Burke) Brennan.

Labor is ahead in the counting in Drysdale, and Port Darwin.

Wood looks safe as the independent for Nelson. However, while ahead, Loraine Braham may struggle to remain the independent for Braitling.

The only seat with a swing to the CLP was Araluen, on the west side of Alice Springs.

Overall, Labor got a swing of 12 per cent in its favour on the primary vote. The swing against the CLP was 10 per cent.

Update: A good reflective piece by Northern Territorian Ken Parish at Troppo Armadillo.

Update #2: It is Sunday morning and the ABC reported that 19 seats for Labor is a possibility.

NT Election betting market

Bryan · Friday 17 June 2005 · 6:31 am

The Centrebet odds this mornings were $5.00 for the Country Liberal Party and $1.14 for Labor. Which suggests the punters give Labor an 81 per cent chance of winning to the CLP’s 19 per cent chance. However, according to Centrebet …

ELECTIONS
by Gerard Daffy - June 16, 2005

The Northern Territory will be held this Saturday and although the turnover is approaching $150,000 that figure has been bolstered by a couple of big bets from interstate.

So far the biggest bets for the Labor Party to retain government have been $50,000 and $20,000 from Queensland and New South Wales respectively. We aren’t sure whether those two clients are political devotees who know are things are in the NT or just backing Labor because they already hold power.

The interesting aspect is that of the $25,000 placed on the CLP to date (at 3.25 and 4.00) nearly all has come from within the NT. So to put that in perspective we would have to say that there isn’t much between the two parties and it could go either way.

Daffy appears to be suggesting the interstate punters have more dollars than sense. (Or being NT based, this may be an attempt at political neutrality). Whatever, I still think we will see a swing to Labor at tomorrow’s election.

My NT election betting market graphs are here.

Update Saturday 18/6 at 7am EST: $6.00 for the Country Liberal Party and $1.08 for Labor. This suggests the punters now give Labor an 85 per cent chance of winning to the CLP’s 15 per cent chance.

I sometimes wonder whether these last minute plunges, which seem to happen with every election, are largely speculative. Consequently, the closing price is probably an overestimate of the probability of winning for the favourite. The NT is a difficult electorate to predict. There is little opinion polling. The electorates are very small. The popularity of local candidates is more important in the NT than in other states. There are significant population shifts between elections. And so on.

So while I have predicted a Labor win in the order of 16 to 18 seats, there is a lot of unresolved uncertainty. I think the chance of a CLP win is higher than just 15 per cent. It may be as high as 25 per cent.