Electoral division of Rosevears

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Rosevears
TasmaniaLegislative Council
Electoral division of Rosevears

Map showing the electoral division of Rosevears, as of the 2017 periodic review. [1]

Contents

State Tasmania
MP Jo Palmer
Party Liberal
Namesake Rosevears, Tasmania
Electors 27,503 (July 2020)
Area802 km2 (309.7 sq mi)
DemographicRural
Coordinates 41°16′23″S146°52′16″E / 41.273°S 146.871°E / -41.273; 146.871
Locator map of Rosevears TLC electorate 2017.svg

The electoral division of Rosevears is one of the 15 electorates or 'seats' in the Tasmanian upper house. The division is located on the west side of the Tamar River. It is named after the town of Rosevears which is located on the river banks near Exeter.

The electoral boundaries include the towns of Exeter, Rowella, Sidmouth, Legana, Bridgenorth, Gravelly Beach, Greens Beach, Beaconsfield, Glengarry, Beauty point and Clarence point. The division also includes the Launceston suburbs of West Launceston, Riverside, Summerhill, Trevallyn and Glen Dhu.

The current sitting member for Rosevears is Liberal member Jo Palmer who has held the seat since 2020. The next election in Rosevears is due in 2026. The number of enrolled electors in the division was 27,503 in July 2020.

History

The division was created in 1999 after a reduction in the size of parliament. Rosevears includes most localities from the former Division of Cornwall. Localities in the West Tamar region that were once a part of the Division of Roland were also added into Rosevears. The division also acquired suburbs from the abolished Division of Launceston.

When the electorate was created; Ray Bailey who was the member for Cornwall was automatically made member for Rosevears. In the first election, held in 2002, he retired and Kerry Finch was elected instead. This election had a low voter turnout, despite voting being compulsory, which was attributed to confusion as to which electorate people were located in.

Members

MemberPartyPeriod
  Ray Bailey Independent 1999–2002
  Kerry Finch Independent 2002–2020
  Jo Palmer Liberal 2020–present

See also

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References

  1. Legislative Council Divisions (2016-17 redistribution) from theLIST ©State of Tasmania (Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia Licence).