Electoral district of Armadale

Armadale is a Legislative Assembly electorate in the state of Western Australia. The district is named for the southeastern Perth suburb of Armadale, which falls within its borders.

Armadale
Western AustraliaLegislative Assembly
Location of Armadale (dark green) in the Perth metropolitan area
StateWestern Australia
Dates current1983–present
MPTony Buti
PartyLabor
NamesakeArmadale
Electors32,207 (2021)
Area47 km2 (18.1 sq mi)
DemographicMetropolitan
Coordinates32°08′S 116°00′E / 32.14°S 116.00°E / -32.14; 116.00

History

Armadale was created at the 1982 redistribution out of parts of the seats of Dale and Gosnells.[1] It was first contested in the 1983 election at which Labor member Bob Pearce, who had previously represented Gosnells, was successful.[2] The seat has been regarded as very safe for the Labor Party since its creation, and at the 2001 election, the Liberal Party did not even field a candidate for the seat. It was held from 1996 until 2010 by Alannah MacTiernan, the Minister for Planning and Infrastructure in the Gallop and Carpenter governments.

On 25 June 2010, MacTiernan resigned from the Western Australian Legislative Assembly to run for the federal seat of Canning. A by-election occurred on 2 October 2010 and Labor candidate Tony Buti was elected.Buti was re-elected at the state elections in 2013 and 2017. In the latter election, he increased his majority to 25.2 percent, making Armadale the safest seat in the legislature.

Geography

Armadale is bounded by the Tonkin Highway to the northwest, the Canning River to the northeast, and the limits of the Armadale suburban area to the south and southeast. Its boundaries include the suburbs of Armadale, Brookdale, Champion Lakes, Hilbert, Mount Nasura, Mount Richon, Seville Grove and Camillo, as well as Kelmscott west of the Canning River.[3]

The 2007 redistribution, which took effect at the 2008 election, resulted in the seat losing eastern Kelmscott as well as Wungong and Forrestdale.[4]

Members for Armadale

MemberPartyTerm
 Bob PearceLabor1983–1993
 Kay HallahanLabor1993–1996
 Alannah MacTiernanLabor1996–2010
 Tony ButiLabor2010–present

Election results

2021 Western Australian state election: Armadale[5]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LaborTony Buti18,43474.4+7.7
LiberalMahesh Arumugam1,8597.5−9.3
ChristiansArthur Kleyn1,4245.7−0.6
GreensJessica Openshaw1,1354.6−1.9
One NationJayden Carr6822.8+2.8
Western AustraliaBlake Clarke6492.6+2.6
No Mandatory VaccinationLisa Moody4171.7+1.7
WAxitEby Mathew1710.7+0.7
Total formal votes24,77195.3+0.8
Informal votes1,2294.7−0.8
Turnout26,00080.7−0.6
Two-party-preferred result
LaborTony Buti21,15985.5+10.3
LiberalMahesh Arumugam3,59714.5−10.3
Labor holdSwing+10.3

See also

References