'Dramatic turnaround': Wentworth chaos as postal votes close gap between Phelps and Sharma

Scott Morrison says there's still a chance the government can hold on to its majority as the vote count in Wentworth narrows.

Dr Kerryn Phelps has increased her margin in Wentworth but there are a number of votes still to be counted.

Dr Kerryn Phelps has increased her margin in Wentworth but there are a number of votes still to be counted. Source: Getty Images/SBS News

Independent Kerry Phelps is still tracking to claim a historic by-election win despite postal votes giving the coalition hope it could hang on to Wentworth.

Dr Phelps claimed victory on Saturday night when she achieved an unprecedented swing of more than 20 per cent against the Liberal Party in the eastern Sydney seat.

But that changed on Sunday as the margin between the two narrowed to 1186 votes while postal ballots were still being counted.

 Prime Minister Scott Morrison holds out hope candidate Dave Sharma could still snatch a win in the traditional Liberal Party stronghold


Mr Morrison told reporters on Sunday the result was not final and would depend on the postal vote count.

But he said it was clear the electorate was furious about Malcolm Turnbull, who had been the member for Wentworth since 2004, being ousted as prime minister in August.

 "Liberal voters expressed their anger at the parliamentary Liberal Party ... and we copped that fairly on the chin," Mr Morrison said.

"The events of two months ago angered and outraged many Liberals and particularly those in the seat of Wentworth."

ABC election analyst Antony Green, who called the win for Dr Phelps on Saturday night, said the count for four pre-poll booths and postal votes was done late on the night.

He said voting booths skewed to Dr Phelps on Saturday, showing there had a been a late surge for her.

0f873e7c-9f50-482d-a5aa-50f12f853c05
Liberal Candidate for Wentworth Dave Sharma could still pull a win out of the hat.
AAP

 

If Dr Phelps is confirmed the winner, there will be a cross bench of six members in the House of Representatives, with Labor holding 69 seats and the coalition one short of a majority with 75.

She said running in the by-election was the "farthest thing from my mind" until Mr Turnbull was dumped as prime minister.

"Everywhere I went in the streets in the eastern suburbs, somebody would come up to me and say, 'Would you please have a run at Wentworth?'," Dr Phelps told ABC TV on Sunday.

Despite heading towards a minority government, Mr Morrison has talked up the coalition's relationship with the crossbenchers.

 

READ MORE
1x1




 

"What I will continue to do is be working closely with the crossbenchers, as I have been doing, because ... we have been at 75 (seats), not 76, since the former prime minister resigned," Mr Morrison said.

Reaction to the by-election result from crossbench members has been mixed, with Bob Katter and Rebekha Sharkie joining Dr Phelps in saying they would prefer to see the government run its full term.

Independent Andrew Wilkie said he would not guarantee confidence, while fellow crossbencher Cathy McGowan is yet to comment.

But Greens MP Adam Bandt said an election had to be called and the "the sooner we turf out this rotten government, the better".


Share

3 min read

Published

Updated

Presented by Yang J. Joo

Source: SBS News, AAP



Share this with family and friends


Follow SBS Korean

Download our apps
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
Independent news and stories connecting you to life in Australia and Korean-speaking Australians.
Ease into the English language and Australian culture. We make learning English convenient, fun and practical.
Get the latest with our exclusive in-language podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on SBS
Korean News

Korean News

Watch it onDemand