Lyndhurst, Keysborough among state electoral boundary changes

PDF download: See the new boundaries here, via The Age

LYNDHURST and Keysborough are among the abolished, moved or renamed seats as part of a dramatic  overhaul of Victoria’s electoral boundaries.

 New seats of Sunbury and Werribee have been created.

Two seats have been completely scrapped, one in Doncaster and Rodney in the state’s northern border, and replaced by new seats in the growth corridors in the west and north-west.

The Community Services Minister is the biggest loser. Ms Wooldridge holds the seat of Doncaster, which will subsumed by the surrounding seats of Warrandyte and Bulleen.

Under the proposed changes, more than 1.1 million people – or 30 per cent of Victorian voters – would be transferred to different seats.

The electoral commission on Thursday morning released maps of proposed boundaries of the state’s 88 lower house seats and eight upper house regions.

The electoral commission said in most cases, seats had effectively been renamed.

The state’s electoral boundaries were last changed in 2005 and there have been 20 redivisions since 1851.

The major parties are now analysing the proposed boundaries and what it means for their MPs and next year’s state election.

– with The Age

Abolished, moved and renamed seats:

Ballarat East

Ballarat West

Benalla

Clayton

Derrimut

Doncaster (abolished)

Keilor

Kilsyth

Lyndhurst

Mitcham

Murray Valley

Rodney (abolished)

New or renamed seats:

Ballarat

Buninyong

Clarinda

Croydon

Eildon

Keysborough

Ovens Valley

Ringwood

St Albans

Sunbury (new)

Sydenham

Werribee (new)