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Division of Bullwinkel

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Bullwinkel
Australian House of Representatives Division
Map
Interactive map of electorate boundaries from the 2025 federal election
Created2024
MPTrish Cook
PartyLabor
NamesakeVivian Bullwinkel
Area9,508 km2 (3,671.1 sq mi)
DemographicOuter metropolitan

The Division of Bullwinkel is an Australian electoral division in the state of Western Australia contested for the first time at the 2025 federal election.[1] It was created in 2024 as part of a successful redistribution, a statutory process to maintain broad population equality amongst lower house seats over time and as populations shift, and thus maintain broadly one vote one value. The process was managed, and ultimately new boundaries for WA divisions were determined, by Australia's independent statutory elections authority, the Australian Electoral Commission.

The division will return one Member of Parliament (MP), to sit in the lower house of the Commonwealth Parliament, the House of Representatives.

The seat at its creation was a 'marginal seat', being notionally held by the Labor Party by only 3.3%.[2]

A hybrid urban-rural seat, Bullwinkel takes in certain outer eastern suburbs of Perth, then sweeps out to the northeast and southeast, to cover rural areas to the east of the state capital's metropolitan area. It incorporates areas that were formerly parts of the divisions of Hasluck, Durack, Swan, O'Connor and Canning, prior to the redrawing of their boundaries. Those boundary changes, and new boundaries for the new seat, took effect from the first election of the whole House of Representatives held after the 2024 effective date of the redistribution: namely, the 2025 Australian election.[3]

Naming

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The seat is named for Lieutenant Colonel Vivian Statham, AO, MBE, ARRC, ED, an Australian Army nurse during the Second World War who was the sole surviving nurse of the Bangka Island massacre.[4][5] After making it back to Australia following the war, Bullwinkel had a long and successful career in nursing across Australia, and lived for the last 23 years of her life in Perth.

A number of objections were received to adoption of the name, as Bullwinkel had moved to Western Australia only later in her life, and had no particular association with the specific area covered by the new division. Other names were suggested, including that of a local nurse killed in the Bangka Massacre named Alma Beard. The AEC maintained the name Bullwinkel on the grounds, amongst others, that the naming of federal electorates recognised the "extent of a person's contribution to the country as a whole" and across the whole of their life.[6]


Members

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Image Member Party Term Notes
  Trish Cook
Labor 3 May 2025
present
Incumbent

Election results

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2025 Australian federal election: Bullwinkel[7]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Trish Cook 32,232 32.13 −4.33
Liberal Matt Moran 24,498 24.42 −9.93
National Mia Davies 15,983 15.93 +14.56
Greens Abbey Bishop 11,159 11.12 −0.18
One Nation Trevor Mayes 8,459 8.43 +4.10
Legalise Cannabis Penelope Young 4,861 4.85 +4.85
Christians Les Holten 3,133 3.12 +2.09
Total formal votes 100,325 96.48 +2.01
Informal votes 3,656 3.52 −2.01
Turnout 103,981 85.63 −0.59
Two-party-preferred result
Labor Trish Cook 50,660 50.50 −2.85
Liberal Matt Moran 49,665 49.50 +2.85
Labor hold Swing −2.85
Results are not final. Last updated on 12 May 2025 at 8:30 PM AWST.


References

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  1. ^ Wright, Shane. "Labor-held Melbourne seat of Higgins to be scrapped in boundary redraw". Sydney Morning Herald.
  2. ^ Evans, Jake. "Michelle Ananda-Rajah's seat of Higgins set to be abolished at next federal election". ABC News.
  3. ^ "Proposed redistribution of Western Australia into electoral divisions" (PDF). Australian Electoral Commission. 31 May 2024. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 May 2024. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
  4. ^ Brown, Kellie D. (2020). The sound of hope: Music as solace, resistance and salvation during the holocaust and world war II. McFarland. p. 236.
  5. ^ Gary Nunn (18 April 2019), "Bangka Island: The WW2 massacre and a 'truth too awful to speak'", BBC News, archived from the original on 15 March 2022, retrieved 18 April 2019
  6. ^ "Announcement of final electoral divisions". Western Australian redistribution, 2023. Australian Electoral Commission. 5 September 2024. Retrieved 5 September 2024.
  7. ^ Bullwinkel, WA, 2025 Tally Room, Australian Electoral Commission.