2024 Northern Territory general election - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2024 Northern Territory general election

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All 25 seats in the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly
13 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout68.5% (Decrease 6.5 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Lia Finocchiaro (cropped).jpg
EvaLawler2023cropped.jpg
Greens_placeholder-01.png
Leader Lia Finocchiaro Eva Lawler No leader
Party Country Liberal Territory Labor Party Greens
Leader's seat Spillett Drysdale
(lost seat)
N/A
Last election 8 seats, 31.34% 14 seats, 39.43% 0 seats, 4.46%
Seats before 7[a] 14[b] 0
Seats won 17 4 1
Seat change Increase 9 Decrease 10 Increase 1
Popular vote 49,738 29,292 8,272
Percentage 48.9% 28.8% 8.13%
Swing Increase 17.6 Decrease 10.6 Increase 3.67
TPP 57.4% 42.6%
TPP swing Increase 10.4 Decrease 10.4


Chief Minister before election

Eva Lawler
Territory Labor Party

Elected Chief Minister

Lia Finocchiaro
Country Liberal

The 2024 Northern Territory general election was held on 24 August 2024 to elect all 25 members of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly. It was conducted by the Northern Territory Electoral Commission.

The incumbent Labor government, led by Chief Minister Eva Lawler, tried to win a third term in government. However, they were defeated by the Country Liberal Party, led by Lia Finocchiaro, in a landslide. It was the second-worst defeat of a sitting government in Northern Territory history, and Labor got its lowest ever vote share at a Northern Territory election.

The CLP vote increased by a lot in the three main cities of Darwin, Palmerston and Alice Springs, as well as in the nearby rural areas and in major towns like Katherine, Nhulunbuy and Tennant Creek, while Labor did better in a lot of remote Aboriginal communities. Labor lost all of its urban seat, including Lawler's own seat of Drysdale in Palmerston to the CLP's Clinton Howe and her predecessor Natasha Fyles' seat of Nightcliff in Darwin (which used to be the safest Labor seat in the Northern Territory) to the Greens' Kat McNamara.

Both leaders were women and both represented seats in Palmerston (Finocchiaro was once the member for Lawler's seat of Drysdale before changing to her current seat of Spillett).

In remote Aboriginal communities, there was a big decrease in turnout. Some say this was because of the heavy defeat of the 2023 Australian Indigenous Voice referendum, while others said it was because they were tired of voting for so many things so often and because people did not want to vote, even though everyone over 18 in Australia has to vote or else they have to pay a fine for not voting.[2]

  1. The Country Liberal Party lost the electorate of Daly to Labor at a by-election in 2021.
  2. On 18 February 2021, Mark Turner, the member for Blain, was expelled from the Labor Party caucus but remained a rank-and-file member of the party, although he sits on the crossbench, bringing Labor's seat total to thirteen. However, Labor won the seat of Daly from the Country Liberal Party at the 2021 Daly by-election on 11 September 2021, bringing their seat total back to fourteen. Turner was later expelled from the party completely.[1]

References

[change | change source]
  1. "NT politician Mark Turner expelled from Labor Party". ABC News. 8 June 2023.
  2. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-27/nt-election-remote-voter-turnout-linked-to-voice-referendum/104269394