Australian Federal election: Anthony Albanese or Peter Dutton, who is going to win and by how much?

Andrew BrownAAP
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Camera IconVoters at the Bondi Surf Bathers Life Saving Club polling booth. Credit: AAP

Need a bit of a refresh on how Federal election day works? Well, here is what you need to know.

How do you win?

  • A political party needs 76 seats in the House of Representatives to form a majority government
  • A net loss of just three seats will leave Labor needing to negotiate with the crossbench to form a minority government
  • The coalition requires a net gain of 19 seats to govern in its own right, or a uniform swing of about 5.3 per cent
  • If neither party makes it to the requisite 76 seats, whichever has the most would enter into negotiations with the crossbench first
  • Published polls suggest Labor is most likely to win government but could fall short of a majority, while the coalition claims its internal data paints a vastly different picture
  • A minority parliament would be the first since 2010 and only the third since 1943
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Where do things stand?

  • Labor - 78 seats (including seat redistributions)
  • Coalition - 57 seats (including vacant seats after retirement, former MPs who defected to the crossbench and seat redistributions)
  • Independents - nine seats
  • Greens - four seats
  • Katter’s Australian Party - one seat
  • Centre Alliance - one seat

What’s changed since the last election?

  • The Victorian seat of Higgins and the NSW seat of North Sydney have been abolished after a redistribution
  • Western Australia has gained an electorate with the seat of Bullwinkel in Perth’s outskirts
  • Nationals MP Andrew Gee left the party to become an independent, while coalition MPs Russell Broadbent and Ian Goodenough also defected to the crossbench
  • The former Liberal safe seat of Aston fell to Labor at a 2023 by-election

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