翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Division of Flynn
・ Division of Forde
・ Division of Forrest
・ Division of Fowler
・ Division of Franklin
・ Division of Franklin (state)
・ Division of Fraser
・ Division of Fremantle
・ Division of Gellibrand
・ Division of Gilmore
・ Division of Gippsland
・ Division of Goldstein
・ Division of Gorton
・ Division of Grampians
・ Division of Grayndler
Division of Greenway
・ Division of Grey
・ Division of Griffith
・ Division of Groom
・ Division of Gwydir
・ Division of Hasluck
・ Division of Hawker
・ Division of Health Sciences (UQROO)
・ Division of Henty
・ Division of Herbert
・ Division of Higgins
・ Division of Higinbotham
・ Division of Hindmarsh
・ Division of Hinkler
・ Division of Hoddle


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Division of Greenway : ウィキペディア英語版
Division of Greenway

The Division of Greenway is an Australian electoral division in the state of New South Wales. The division was created in 1984 and is named for Francis Greenway, an ex-convict who became a prominent architect in colonial Sydney.
The division is located in the west and north-west suburbs of Sydney, traditionally been north and east portions of the Blacktown district. It currently also includes small portions of Holroyd and Parramatta Council areas. Suburbs and towns include Acacia Gardens, Girraween, Glenwood, Kellyville Ridge, Kings Langley, Kings Park, Lalor Park, Parklea, Seven Hills, Stanhope Gardens, The Ponds, Toongabbie and parts of Blacktown, Pendle Hill, Prospect, Quakers Hill, Riverstone, Rouse Hill, Schofields and Vineyard.
The current Member for Greenway, since the 2010 federal election, is Michelle Rowland, a member of the Australian Labor Party.
==History==
For most of its history, Greenway was a safe seat for Labor. However, demographic changes in the areas north of Blacktown, specifically Kellyville Ridge, Stanhope Gardens and Glenwood, resulted in a shift away from Labor at the 2001 election. At the 2004 election this trend continued and the seat was won by the Liberal Party following the retirement of the sitting member, Frank Mossfield and an extensive Liberal campaign. Louise Markus, a Pentecostal social worker and member of Hillsong Church, defeated Ed Husic, a former political advisor and a non-practicing Muslim, to take the seat by a small margin of 0.6%. A large informal vote of 11.83%, the highest in the 2004 election, contributed to the closeness of this result, the vast majority indicating a first preference for Louise Markus.
A redistribution of the seat ahead of the 2007 federal election resulted in the Hawkesbury area towns moving to Greenway from the Division of Macquarie, and the loss of traditional Labor-voting areas such as Blacktown, Dean Park, Lalor Park and Seven Hills as well as the Liberal-leaning areas of Kings Langley and Seven Hills North. This boosted the notional Liberal majority to 11.7%, making it on paper a safe Liberal seat. However, at the 2007 federal election, Markus suffered a 6.9% swing towards Labor that turned Greenway into a marginal Liberal seat.
The seat was redistributed again in 2009, causing a large change in its demographics. Under redistribution, most of the Hawkesbury region, including Richmond and Windsor, were shifted back to Greenway. In return, it regained the Labor voting suburbs of Blacktown, Toongabbie, Seven Hills and Pendle Hill. Following the redistribution, the seat was notionally Labor held on a margin of 5%.〔http://blogs.abc.net.au/antonygreen/2009/08/federal-redistribution-nsw-draft-electoral-boundaries.html#more〕
The division is a demographically diverse population that includes the working class suburbs of Blacktown, Lalor Park and Toongabbie which are Labor leaning, as well as the high income, Liberal leaning suburbs of Kellyville Ridge, Stanhope Gardens, Glenwood, The Ponds and Kings Langley.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Division of Greenway」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.