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Arafura is northern part of Arnhem
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Arnhem is an almost entirely rural electorate, covering 99,269 km², and taking in the towns of [[Alyangula, Northern Territory|Alyangula]], [[Angurugu, Northern Territory|Angurugu]], [[Barunga, Northern Territory|Barunga]], [[Beswick, Northern Territory|Beswick]], [[Ngukurr, Northern Territory|Ngukurr]], [[Numbulwar, Northern Territory|Numbulwar]] and [[Milingimbi, Northern Territory|Milingimbi]]. There were 4,902 people enrolled within the electorate as of August 2012. |
Arnhem is an almost entirely rural electorate, covering 99,269 km², and taking in the towns of [[Alyangula, Northern Territory|Alyangula]], [[Angurugu, Northern Territory|Angurugu]], [[Barunga, Northern Territory|Barunga]], [[Beswick, Northern Territory|Beswick]], [[Ngukurr, Northern Territory|Ngukurr]], [[Numbulwar, Northern Territory|Numbulwar]] and [[Milingimbi, Northern Territory|Milingimbi]]. There were 4,902 people enrolled within the electorate as of August 2012. |
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Arnhem was one of the initial electorates created along with the introduction of the Legislative Assembly in 1974. Though it consisted of predominantly indigenous towns which voted strongly for the [[Australian Labor Party]] at a federal level, it was won by the [[Country Liberal Party]] amidst their landslide victory at the [[Northern Territory general election, 1974|election of that year]], in which the Labor Party won no seats. Arnhem returned to expectations at the [[Northern Territory general election, 1977|1977 election]], when it was won by Labor candidate [[Bob Collins (Australian politician)|Bob Collins]], who was elected leader of the party in 1981. |
Arnhem was one of the initial electorates created along with the introduction of the Legislative Assembly in 1974. Though it consisted of predominantly indigenous towns which voted strongly for the [[Australian Labor Party]] at a federal level, it was won by the [[Country Liberal Party]] amidst their landslide victory at the [[Northern Territory general election, 1974|election of that year]], in which the Labor Party won no seats. Arnhem returned to expectations at the [[Northern Territory general election, 1977|1977 election]], when it was won by Labor candidate [[Bob Collins (Australian politician)|Bob Collins]], who was elected leader of the party in 1981. After much of the northern portion of the seat was transferred to the new seat of [[electoral division of Arafura|Arafura]] in 1983, Collins transferred there and was succeeded in Arafura by new Labor candidate [[Wes Lanhupuy]]. Lanhupuy was comfortably re-elected three times, but died suddenly in 1995. Labor candidate [[Jack Ah Kit]] won the [[Arnhem by-election, 1995|resulting by-election]], and went on to serve as a Cabinet minister in the [[Clare Martin|Martin]] government from 2001. He retired at the [[Northern Territory general election, 2005|2005 election]], with former [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC TV]] presenter [[Malarndirri McCarthy|Barbara McCarthy]] being comfortably elected as his replacement. McCarthy was reelected unopposed in [[Northern Territory general election, 2008|2008]], only to be ousted by the CLP's [[Larisa Lee]] in [[Northern Territory general election, 2012|2012]] as the CLP swept into government. Lee herself sat under four different banners during the next parliament, and was swept aside in [[Northern Territory general election, 2016|2016]] by Labor's [[selena Uibo]]. |
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The high proportion of indigenous people in the Arnhem population has been reflected in the seat having had five consecutive indigenous MPs, and McCarthy (now a Senator) having been an outspoken advocate of indigenous rights in parliament. |
The high proportion of indigenous people in the Arnhem population has been reflected in the seat having had five consecutive indigenous MPs, and McCarthy (now a Senator) having been an outspoken advocate of indigenous rights in parliament. |
Arnhem Northern Territory—Legislative Assembly | |
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Arnhem in the Northern Territory
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Territory | Northern Territory |
Created | 1974 |
MP | Selena Uibo |
Party | Australian Labor Party |
Namesake | Arnhem Land |
Electors | 5,158 (2016) |
Area | 99,269 km2 (38,328.0 sq mi) |
Demographic | Remote |
Arnhem is an electoral division of the Legislative AssemblyinAustralia's Northern Territory. It was first created in 1974, and takes its name from Arnhem Land, the region encompassing much of the northern part of the Territory.
Arnhem is an almost entirely rural electorate, covering 99,269 km², and taking in the towns of Alyangula, Angurugu, Barunga, Beswick, Ngukurr, Numbulwar and Milingimbi. There were 4,902 people enrolled within the electorate as of August 2012.
Arnhem was one of the initial electorates created along with the introduction of the Legislative Assembly in 1974. Though it consisted of predominantly indigenous towns which voted strongly for the Australian Labor Party at a federal level, it was won by the Country Liberal Party amidst their landslide victory at the election of that year, in which the Labor Party won no seats. Arnhem returned to expectations at the 1977 election, when it was won by Labor candidate Bob Collins, who was elected leader of the party in 1981. After much of the northern portion of the seat was transferred to the new seat of Arafura in 1983, Collins transferred there and was succeeded in Arafura by new Labor candidate Wes Lanhupuy. Lanhupuy was comfortably re-elected three times, but died suddenly in 1995. Labor candidate Jack Ah Kit won the resulting by-election, and went on to serve as a Cabinet minister in the Martin government from 2001. He retired at the 2005 election, with former ABC TV presenter Barbara McCarthy being comfortably elected as his replacement. McCarthy was reelected unopposed in 2008, only to be ousted by the CLP's Larisa Leein2012 as the CLP swept into government. Lee herself sat under four different banners during the next parliament, and was swept aside in 2016 by Labor's selena Uibo.
The high proportion of indigenous people in the Arnhem population has been reflected in the seat having had five consecutive indigenous MPs, and McCarthy (now a Senator) having been an outspoken advocate of indigenous rights in parliament.
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
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Labor | Selena Uibo | 1,562 | 54.2 | +9.6 | |
Country Liberal | Ian Gumbala | 798 | 27.7 | −26.0 | |
Independent | Lance Lawrence | 210 | 7.3 | +7.3 | |
1 Territory | James Gaykamangu | 197 | 6.8 | +6.8 | |
Independent | Larisa Lee | 116 | 4.0 | +4.0 | |
Total formal votes | 2,883 | 97.4 | +1.0 | ||
Informal votes | 78 | 2.6 | −1.0 | ||
Turnout | 2,961 | 57.4 | −0.1 | ||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Labor | Selena Uibo | 1,776 | 64.5 | +18.8 | |
Country Liberal | Ian Gumbala | 976 | 35.5 | −18.8 | |
Labor gain from Country Liberal | Swing | +18.8 |
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Labor (14) |
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Country Liberal (7) |
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Independent (4) |
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