History
Early years
The Australian Greens - Victoria was formed in 1992, as a response to the formation of the Australian Greens which united pre-existing Green parties in Tasmania, New South Wales, Queensland and the ACT. The first election the Greens contested in Victoria was the 1993 federal election. The party contested the seat of La Trobe.
We first made people sit up and take notice in 1994 with two outstanding by-election results: 21% in Coburg and 28% in Kooyong. They were among the best results ever achieved by a small party in Australian history.
With greatly increased membership after these successes the Party tackled the 1996 federal election. Our lead Senate candidate was Peter Singer, but we achieved only 2.9% of the vote statewide, largely because of a strong Democrats campaign led by Cheryl Kernot. Within a month of the federal election, the Greens took on both many local elections and a general state election.
The Greens had high hopes for our lead Senate candidate at the 1998 federal election. Charmaine Clarke would have been the first Aboriginal woman elected to any parliament in Australia, as well as the first out lesbian elected to Canberra. However, our vote slipped back to 2.5% in an election dominated by One Nation and tax.
Greens in local government
In March 1999, David Risstrom was elected to the Melbourne City Council. His achievements on issues such as planning, transport and greenhouse emissions demonstrated just how much even one Green can do once elected.
At the state election that year the Greens achieved our highest average vote for any statewide election, winning almost 5% in all contested Lower House seats. With no ALP candidate in the Upper House seat of Templestowe, Robyn Evans won 38% of the vote, and after preferences achieved 44%, the highest vote ever achieved by a Green anywhere in Australia.
In the 2001 Federal election, the Greens got a vote of 5.9% statewide in the House of Representatives, and 6% in the Senate. Another Green – Gurm Sekhon – was elected to local government, on Yarra City Council. This was the first time in Australia a Green had been elected to a single-member electorate. In 2002 he was joined by Greens Crs Greg Barber, Deborah Di Natale and Jenny Farrar. Shortly after the Greens were elected to Yarra City Council a number of previously existing problems became public, throwing the council into financial crisis. The Green councillors were crucial to steering Yarra through, expanding services while getting liabilities under control.
2002 also saw the election of Greens Stephen Hart in Colac-Otway Shire, and Fraser Brindley in Moreland City.
Mayors and marginals
The 2002 State election was something of a watershed for the Victorian Greens, with a vote of 9.73% statewide. Two Greens narrowly missed out on election to the lower house – Gemma Pinnell in Richmond and Richard Di Natale in Melbourne.
In 2003 Greg Barber became Australia's first Green Mayor, around the same time Janet Rice and Colleen Hartland became Maribyrnong City Councillors. In office, Greens Councillors worked to improve their local governments' environmental performance, services and community consultation/participation.
In the 2004 Federal election, the ALP, Democrats and Liberals for Forests preferenced conservative Christian Family First Senate candidate Steve Fielding ahead of Greens candidate David Risstrom. The Greens got 243,580 primary votes, and Family First got only 53,032 primary votes. However, Steve Fielding was elected to the Senate on preferences, predominantly those from the ALP. He went on to provide the Howard government with the crucial vote it needed to introduce regressive Voluntary Student Unionism legislation. This legislation was opposed by Greens, Democrats and the ALP.
2004 local government elections returned three Greens to Yarra City Council (Kathleen Maltzahn, Gurm Sekhon and Jenny Farrar), plus Andrea Sharam and Jo Connellan in Moreland. Fraser Brindley shifted to Melbourne City Council, replacing David Risstrom who had stepped down. However, Stephen Hart was narrowly defeated.
In 2005 the Greens made further local government progress, particularly in areas where our vote had previously been weak. Among those elected were Samantha Dunn in Yarra Ranges, Helen Harris in Whitehorse, Miles Dymott in Brimbank, Ben Opie in Moonee Valley and Philip Schier in Mt Alexander. Colleen Hartland was defeated, but Janet Rice was returned, subsequently becoming Mayor of Maribyrnong City Council. Janet also became Chair of the Metropolitan Transport Forum, and provided a strong and credible voice in support of investment in sustainable transport.
2006 saw three more Green Mayors elected: Julie Rivendell in Bendigo, Ben Opie in Moonee Valley and Jenny Farrar in Yarra.
Our first Victorian Green MPs
The outcome of the 2002
state election opened up new possibilities for the Victorian Greens.
The Bracks government had implemented upper house reform, giving
us our first real chance to elect Greens to the Victorian Parliament. After a long and hard-fought campaign, three Greens - Greg Barber (Northern Metropolitan), Sue Pennicuik (Southern Metropolitan) and Colleen Hartland (Western Metropolitan) - were elected to the state upper house at the 25th November 2006 State Election.
Our upper house vote was 10.57% statewide, a credit to all our candidates because proportional representation had attracted much more competition - at least seven parties in every seat. Any candidate needed only 16.67% of the vote after preferences to become a Member of the Legislative Council. Our main aim had been to win two seats, and when the upper house results were first counted, we did indeed have only two Green MLCs (Greg Barber and Sue Pennicuik). They shared the balance of power with two Nationals and two DLP MPs. The DLP received a very low primary vote, but ALP preferences.
However, three seats were very close and were thus recounted. The recount took Colleen Hartland from 76 votes behind to 129 votes ahead (out of a total of 374, 411 votes) to win the final seat in Western Metropolitan from the ALP. The ALP also took one seat from the DLP at the recount, leaving the final composition of the upper house as 19 ALP, 15 Liberal, 3 Green, 2 National and 1 DLP MLCs.
In the lower house, no Greens were elected, but our vote across the state increased to 10.04%. Richard Di Natale once again came close to winning Melbourne, losing by a margin of 1274 votes. A swing of 5.37 to Cyndi Dawes in Brunswick gave her the highest vote recorded by a Green in an Australian parliamentary election contested by both ALP and Liberal - 29.71%.
The experience of Green parties overseas and in other states is that
once they win seats in parliament they usually experience rapid
growth in both membership and votes. The Victorian Greens believe
there is no reason why the situation should not be the same here. In early 2007, an additional Green was elected to the City of Moonee Valley: Cr Rose Iser. In September 2007, state byelection candidates Janet Rice and John Middleton increased our vote to 22% (35% after preferences) in Williamstown and 28% (43% after preferences) in Albert Park. Our State Green MPs have been working hard to ensure that community campaigns have a voice in Parliament, and that the government is held accountable. Click here for an update on their activities.
In 2007, Greens across Victoria campaigned hard for our first Senate seat, but our lead candidate Richard Di Natale narrowly missed out (by the equivalent of about 9000 votes out of the approx 3,300,000 cast) because of the way preferences flowed. However, our statewide vote increased (to 10.08% in the Senate and 8.17% in the House of Representatives), and Victoria now has the first Australian Labor-Green marginal seat in the Federal Division of Melbourne, where our candidate Adam Bandt won 22.8% of primary votes and 45.29 after preferences were distributed, thus taking ALP frontbencher Lindsay Tanner to preferences in a formerly safe Labor seat.
We are now preparing for the statewide local government elections to be held at the end of November 2008.