Division of Warringah

Wikipedia

Warringah
Australian House of Representatives Division
Interactive map of electorate boundaries from the 2025 federal election
Created1922
MPZali Steggall
PartyIndependent
NamesakeWarringah
Electors126,914 (2025)
Area51 km2 (19.7 sq mi)
DemographicInner metropolitan
Electorates around Warringah:
Bradfield Mackellar Tasman Sea
Bennelong Warringah Tasman Sea
Sydney Wentworth Wentworth
Footnotes

    The Division of Warringah (/wərɪŋɡə/ wə-RING-gə) is an Australian electoral division in the state of New South Wales. It is on the north shore of Port Jackson and the Tasman Sea coast, stretching from Wollstonecraft to Curl Curl, comprising North Sydney and Manly.

    Since 2019 its MP has been Zali Steggall, an Independent. From 1994 to 2019, the seat was held by Tony Abbott, who served as Prime Minister of Australia from 2013 to 2015.

    Geography

    Centred on Mosman and the Northern Beaches region of Sydney, it covers most of the land between Middle Harbour and the Tasman Sea. It extends from Port Jackson in the south to the suburb of Curl Curl in the north.

    Warringah includes the suburbs of Allambie, Allambie Heights, Balgowlah, Balgowlah Heights, Balmoral, Beauty Point, Brookvale, Cammeray, Clifton Gardens, Clontarf, Cremorne, Cremorne Point, Crows Nest, Curl Curl, Fairlight, Freshwater, Kirribilli, Kurraba Point, Lavender Bay Manly, Manly Vale, McMahons Point, Milsons Point, Mosman, Neutral Bay, North Balgowlah, North Head, North Manly, North Sydney, Queenscliff, Seaforth, Wingala, Waverton and Wollstonecraft, as well as parts of Beacon Hill, Frenchs Forest and Narraweena.[1]

    Since 1984, federal electoral division boundaries in Australia have been determined at redistributions by a redistribution committee appointed by the Australian Electoral Commission. Redistributions occur for the boundaries of divisions in a particular state, and they occur every seven years, or sooner if a state's representation entitlement changes or when divisions of a state are malapportioned.[2]

    History

    The division is named after the Warringah area of Sydney, which itself is named by an Aboriginal Australian word which translates into English as "rain", "waves" or "sea". The Division was proclaimed at the redistribution of 13 September 1922, and was first contested at the 1922 federal election.[1] Most of its territory had been part of North Sydney from 1901 to 1922. The word "Warrin ga" was recorded as the local name for Middle Harbour in 1832.[3]

    The electorate originally extended from Mosman to Pittwater.[4] In 1949, it lost most of its territory in the north to the new Division of Mackellar. In 2025, it acquired an area around North Sydney from the abolished division of North Sydney.[5]

    Before 2019, the area covered by Warringah had been held by a conservative party without interruption since Federation. The Liberal Party of Australia and their predecessors held the seat without interruption from its creation until the 2019 federal election when Zali Steggall won the seat as an Independent.[6] Even by northern Sydney standards, Warringah has been especially unfriendly territory for Labor. For example, even in its 1943 landslide, Labor was only able to garner 39 percent of the two-party vote in Warringah.

    The seat's most notable member was Tony Abbott, who won the seat at a 1994 by-election and served as Prime Minister of Australia from 2013 to 2015. He retained Warringah until being defeated by Steggall in 2019.[7] That election also saw Warringah become a notional marginal seat in a "traditional" two-party contest against Labor for the first time; Abbott would have held the seat on 52.1 percent against Labor, down from 61 percent in 2016. At the 2025 landslide, Labor won the two-party vote in Warringah.

    Members

    Image Member Party Term Notes
      Sir Granville Ryrie
    (1865–1937)
    Nationalist 16 December 1922
    13 April 1927
    Previously held the Division of North Sydney. Resigned to become the High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
      Sir Archdale Parkhill
    (1878–1947)
    21 May 1927
    7 May 1931
    Served as minister under Lyons. Lost seat
      United Australia 7 May 1931 –
    23 October 1937
      Percy Spender
    (1897–1985)
    Independent United Australia 23 October 1937
    20 October 1938
    Served as minister under Menzies and Fadden. Retired
      United Australia 20 October 1938 –
    23 February 1944
      Independent 23 February 1944 –
    13 September 1945
      Liberal 13 September 1945 –
    28 April 1951
      Francis Bland
    (1882–1967)
    28 April 1951
    2 November 1961
    Retired
      John Cockle
    (1908–1966)
    9 December 1961
    3 August 1966
    Died in office
      Edward St John
    (1916–1994)
    26 November 1966
    28 March 1969
    Lost seat
      Independent 28 March 1969 –
    25 October 1969
      Michael MacKellar
    (1938–2015)
    Liberal 25 October 1969
    18 February 1994
    Served as minister under Fraser. Resigned to retire from politics
      Tony Abbott
    (1957–)
    26 March 1994
    18 May 2019
    Served as minister under Howard. Served as Opposition Leader from 2009 to 2013. Served as Prime Minister from 2013 to 2015. Lost seat
     
    Zali Steggall
    (1974–)
    Independent 18 May 2019
    present
    Incumbent

    Election results

    2025 Australian federal election: Warringah[8]
    Party Candidate Votes % ±%
    Independent Zali Steggall 45,590 39.68 +7.16
    Liberal Jaimee Rogers 36,446 31.72 −2.55
    Labor Celine Varghese-Fell 16,738 14.57 +2.60
    Greens Bonnie Harvey 10,051 8.75 +0.87
    One Nation Gavin Wright 1,978 1.72 −0.06
    Libertarian Sean McLeod 1,504 1.31 +0.98
    Trumpet of Patriots Anthony Rose 1,417 1.23 +1.23
    Independent David Spratt 1,171 1.02 +1.02
    Total formal votes 114,895 95.42 −1.15
    Informal votes 5,520 4.58 +1.15
    Turnout 120,415 92.09 +1.81
    Notional two-party-preferred count
    Labor Celine Varghese-Fell 62,634 54.51 +5.25
    Liberal Jaimee Rogers 52,261 45.49 −5.25
    Two-candidate-preferred result
    Independent Zali Steggall 70,318 61.20 +0.67
    Liberal Jaimee Rogers 44,577 38.80 −0.67
    Independent hold Swing+0.67

    References

    1. 1 2 "Profile of the electoral division of Warringah (NSW)". Australian Electoral Commission. Archived from the original on 28 March 2025. Retrieved 7 June 2025.
    2. Muller, Damon (14 November 2017). "The process of federal redistributions: a quick guide". Parliament of Australia. Archived from the original on 23 May 2022. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
    3. Larmer, James. "'Larmer's Vocabulary of Native Names. 1853' by James Larmer, 1832-1853 | Indigenous Languages". indigenous.sl.nsw.gov.au. p. 31. Archived from the original on 13 August 2020. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
    4. "Commonwealth electoral division of Warringah 1934". Commonwealth Electoral Office Sydney. 1934. Retrieved 7 June 2025 via Northern Beaches Council Library.
    5. "Map of proposed distribution for various Sydney divisions" (PDF). Australian Electoral Commission. August 2024. Retrieved 7 June 2025.
    6. Green, Antony. "Warringah (Key Seat)". Australia votes. ABC News. Archived from the original on 18 May 2019. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
    7. Spencer, Lilian (2019). "Uncommon victories: Lessons from Warringah and Indi". Commons Social Change Library. Archived from the original on 1 June 2022. Retrieved 1 June 2022.
    8. Warringah, NSW, 2025 Tally Room, Australian Electoral Commission.

    33°47′35″S 151°15′14″E / 33.793°S 151.254°E / -33.793; 151.254