2001 Aston by-election

The 2001 Aston by-election was held in the Australian electorate of Aston in Victoria on 14 July 2001. The by-election was triggered by the death of the sitting member, the Liberal Party of Australia's Peter Nugent, on 24 April 2001. The writ for the by-election was issued on 1 June 2001.

Background

The by-election was an important one for the Liberal Party. The federal Liberal government had introduced a controversial Goods and Services Tax just over a year before, and unpopular sentiment surrounding the government and its GST were believed to have led to the defeat of the Coalition in Western Australia and Queensland state elections in landslide defeats.[1] The Liberals had also lost the seat of Ryan in a recent by-election, and the ALP led by Kim Beazley was ahead in opinion polls.

Results

Aston by-election, 2001
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Liberal Chris Pearce 31,640 40.73 −7.76
Labor Kieran Boland 28,716 36.96 −1.55
Democrats Pierre Harcourt 6,271 8.07 +0.54
Independent Garry Scates 3,401 4.38 +4.38
Greens Mick Kir 1,877 2.42 +2.42
One Nation June Scott 1,369 1.76 −1.13
Independent Peter O'Loughlin 1,160 1.49 +1.49
HEMP Graeme Dunstan 711 0.92 +0.92
Liberals for Forests Luke James Chamberlain 680 0.88 +0.88
No GST Mark Sloan 618 0.80 +0.80
CEC Doug Mitchell 334 0.43 +0.43
Josephine Cox 328 0.42 +0.42
Independent Steve Raskovy 227 0.29 +0.29
Hope Tim Petherbridge 232 0.30 +0.30
Mark Ward 126 0.16 +0.16
Total formal votes 77,690 94.16 −3.01
Informal votes 4,819 5.84 +3.01
Turnout 82,509 92.54 −4.10
Two-party-preferred result
Liberal Chris Pearce 39,299 50.58 −3.66
Labor Kieran Boland 38,391 49.42 +3.66
Liberal hold Swing−3.66

Aftermath

Chris Pearce won the by-election, retaining Aston for the Liberal Party, but with a swing of 3.66 against them. Prime Minister John Howard appeared on the first episode of the ABC program Insiders the next day, where he suggested that Labor's electoral momentum had been held in check, and the government was back in the game:

I believe that the Government is well and truly back in the game. If there were an unstoppable momentum for Labor to win the federal election, they'd have rolled us over in Aston.

John Howard, Insiders, ABC TV, 15 July 2001[1]
gollark: It's unnecessary code duplication and more room for fragility.
gollark: It does all the network checking itself.
gollark: Yes, because they needed to add a bunch of code to *it* to handle that.
gollark: > journalctl is not greatWell, I can conveniently check "hmm yes what has this service outputted in the last few minutes", follow logs, and specify stuff like "dnscrypt-proxy should only start when the network goes up".
gollark: I don't think UK curricula cover them until A level.

See also

References

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