Electoral Division of Brennan

Electoral Division Of Brennan

Brennan is an electoral division of the Legislative Assembly in Australia's Northern Territory. It was first created in 1990, and derives its name from Harold "Tiger" Brennan, a former member of the Legislative Council and Mayor of Darwin. Brennan includes both rural and urban areas, covering an area of 8 km² and encompassing the Palmerston suburbs of Bakewell and Farrar, as well as parts of Gray and Gunn. There were 5,061 people enrolled in the electorate as of August 2012.

For most of its history, Brennan was considered a very safe seat for the Country Liberal Party, as until 2005, the Australian Labor Party had never won a seat anywhere in Palmerston in the history of the Assembly. The seat was the safest of all those held by the CLP after the 2001 election, and Opposition Leader Denis Burke was not expected to have any issue with re-election in the foreseeable future. However, in a shock result that had not been predicted by any prominent commentator, much less either candidate, Brennan fell to the ALP candidate, James Burke, at the 2005 election. CLP candidate Peter Chandler regained the seat at the 2008 election.

Read more about Electoral Division Of Brennan:  Members For Brennan, Election Results

Famous quotes containing the words electoral and/or division:

    Power is action; the electoral principle is discussion. No political action is possible when discussion is permanently established.
    Honoré De Balzac (1799–1850)

    Affection, indulgence, and humor alike are powerless against the instinct of children to rebel. It is essential to their minds and their wills as exercise is to their bodies. If they have no reasons, they will invent them, like nations bound on war. It is hard to imagine families limp enough always to be at peace. Wherever there is character there will be conflict. The best that children and parents can hope for is that the wounds of their conflict may not be too deep or too lasting.
    —New York State Division of Youth Newsletter (20th century)