Divisions of the Australian House of Representatives
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Australian House of Representatives is elected from 150 single-member districts called Divisions. They are also commonly known as electorates or seats. The British term "constituencies" is rarely used.
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[edit] Maps of Divisions
These maps show the Division boundaries as they existed at the 9 October 2004 House of Representatives election. The maps show each Division as being held by a particular party.
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[edit] List of Commonwealth Electoral Divisions, 2004
[edit] New South Wales
[edit] Victoria
[edit] Queensland
[edit] Western Australia
- Brand
- Canning
- Cowan
- Curtin
- Forrest
- Fremantle
- Hasluck
- Kalgoorlie
- Moore
- O'Connor
- Pearce
- Perth
- Stirling
- Swan
- Tangney
[edit] South Australia
[edit] Tasmania
[edit] Australian Capital Territory
- Canberra
- Fraser (also covers Jervis Bay Territory)
[edit] Northern Territory
- Lingiari (also covers Christmas Island and Cocos (Keeling) Islands)
- Solomon
[edit] Abolished Divisions
These Australian electoral divisions no longer exist.
[edit] See also
- For a list of members of the current House of Representatives and the electorates they represent, see List of members of the Australian House of Representatives.
- For a description of how the House of Representatives is elected, see Australian electoral system.
[edit] External links
- For an electoral history of each Division since Federation in 1901, see Adam Carr's Electoral Archive: Index of House of Representatives Divisions 1901-2001
Federal electoral system: Electoral divisions | State electoral systems
State and Territory governments: ACT ('04 election) – NSW ('07 election) – NT ('05 election) – Qld ('06 election) – SA ('06 election) – Tas. ('06 election) – Vic. ('06 election) – WA ('05 election)