Berejiklian government re-elected as first openly gay lower house MP likely to lose seat

Berejiklian government re-elected as first openly gay lower house MP likely to lose seat
Image: Gladys Berejiklian. Image via Facebook.

The Coalition government has been returned for another four-year term under Premier Gladys Berejiklian at the New South Wales state election over the weekend.

A slow count on Saturday led to uncertainty over whether the Premier would be able to form a majority government after a slight overall swing to NSW Labor and a backlash against the Nationals in some rural electorates.

In one of the few seats changing hands, the NSW Legislative Assembly’s first openly gay member Bruce Notley-Smith looks set to cede the seat of Coogee to Labor’s Marjorie O’Neill.

Notley-Smith was first elected in 2011 after time on the Randwick City Council, becoming the first Liberal to win the seat off Labor since 1974.

He was re-elected with a 2.9 per cent margin in 2015, but appears to have been unable hold off the challenge O’Neill in one of only two electorates Labor managed to pick up off the government.

Notley-Smith has currently returned 48.7 per cent of the vote, with O’Neill sitting on 51.3 per cent with 75.7 per cent of the vote counted.

, giving the Coalition the necessary 47 seats to avoid relying on crossbench support to form a majority.

Sydney’s Independent MP Alex Greenwich was re-elected with a small swing in his favour, while Greens MPs Jenny Leong and Jamie Parker retaining the seats of Newtown and Balmain.

The Greens also retained Ballina and put up a strong challenge in Lismore, but ultimately dropped behind Labor in first preference votes with preference flows allowing for Labor’s Janelle Saffin to pick up the seat off the Nationals.

Two of the Nationals’ traditional seats fell to the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers Party following a backlash in the Murray River area over the government’s handling of the crisis facing the crucial river system.

Former federal Labor leader and current NSW One Nation leader Mark Latham appears set to take a position in NSW’s Legislative Council, prompting concern on social media over his history of racism, homophobia and transphobia.

In the lead-up to the election, and force Indigenous Australians to undergo spurious DNA tests to determine their ancestry.

While the complicated count in the upper house is still progressing, Green had tipped back when Latham announced his candidacy that his name recognition was likely to see him returned to elected office and, therefore, the parliamentary privilege that comes with the position.

The current count has the Coalition winning seven of the 21 seats up for grabs, with Labor picking up six, the Greens two, one for One Nation and one for the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers, with four in doubt and 61.6 per cent of the vote counted without preferences.

UPDATE: Bruce Notley-Smith has conceded the seat of Coogee to Labor’s Marjorie O’Neill, thanking his supporters in a statement.

“It has been an incredible privilege to serve as the Member for Coogee and I鈥檓 proud to have delivered on the commitments I made to my constituents,” Notley-Smith said.

“I want to warmly congratulate Marjorie O鈥橬eill on her victory and wish her all the very best for the coming term.

“As the NSW Legislative Assembly鈥檚 first openly gay man, one of my proudest achievements was my private member鈥檚 bill to amend the Crimes Act to extinguish historical homosexual offences for acts which today are no longer a crime.

“It was the only private member鈥檚 bill to pass in the 55th parliament, both houses unanimously supporting it unamended.

“Together with my leading the apology to the first Mardi Gras participants, on behalf of the NSW Parliament, I hope that in some small way, I have contributed to correcting wrongs of the past.

“Thank you to all my fabulous volunteers and supporters, my dear family and friends, and most of all, my partner and greatest supporter of all, Paul McCormack.”

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One response to “Berejiklian government re-elected as first openly gay lower house MP likely to lose seat”

  1. Everything about Latham is ordinary but he is articulate enough to fool other ordinaries in the phobia zones who don’t know any better. His leadership of the Labor Party was a train wreck and when he lost the election he contested against John Howard he didn’t even have the balls to come out on the night and concede defeat – instead he went into hiding. Now years later in absence of being picked up for a cushy gig in the private sector he has drifted across various parties finally attaching himself to One Nation. How long that little marriage will last is anyone’s guess. His dream of having his snout in the trough of the public purse again and being relevant has only partially come true. Other entrants into the Upper House may yet rob him of the chance to grandstand and have much effect against slamming gay and trans people…at least that is the hope.