2029 Western Australian state election
10 March 2029[a]
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All 59 seats in the Western Australian Legislative Assembly and all 37 members in the Western Australian Legislative Council 30 Assembly seats are needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The 2029 Western Australian state election is to be held on 10 March 2029[1][a], where all 59 seats in the Legislative Assembly and 37 members in the Legislative Council will be contested.
Background
The 2025 Western Australian state election saw Labor win one of the largest majorities of any state or territory government, despite losing some seats from the previous election.[2]
The Liberal Party barely regained opposition status from the National Party, with seven seats compared to the latter's six.
After the election, the leader of the Liberal Party leading to the 2025 state election, Libby Mettam resigned, citing that she did not have the support of her party room to continue as leader.[3] This triggered a leadership election, where Basil Zempilas, who was elected in the 2025 election, and the former Lord Mayor of Perth was elected leader unopposed, with Mettam being elected as the Deputy Leader unopposed.[4]
Electoral system
Candidates are elected to single-member seats in the Legislative Assembly via full-preferential instant-runoff voting. In the Legislative Council, six candidates are elected in each of the six electoral regions through the single transferable vote system with group voting tickets.[5]
Key dates
Elections are scheduled for the second Saturday of March every four years, in line with legislative changes made in 2011.[6]
While the Legislative Assembly has fixed four-year terms, the Governor of Western Australia may still dissolve the Assembly and call an election early on the advice of the Premier.[7]
Electoral pendulums
Pre-election pendulum
This is the pre-election pendulum, based off the results of the 2025 state election.[8]
| Non-government seats | |||
| Marginal | |||
| Kalamunda | Adam Hort | LIB | 0.1 |
| Churchlands | Basil Zempilas | LIB | 1.1 |
| Murray-Wellington | David Bolt | LIB | 1.7 |
| Nedlands | Jonathan Huston | LIB | 2.7 |
| Cottesloe | Sandra Brewer | LIB | 5.6 v IND |
| Fairly safe | |||
| Carine | Liam Staltari | LIB | 7.6 |
| Safe | |||
| Vasse | Libby Mettam | LIB | 13.4 |
| Crossbench seats | |||
| Warren-Blackwood | Bevan Eatts | NAT | 1.8 |
| Albany | Scott Leary | NAT | 6.3 |
| Mid-West | Shane Love | NAT | 13.7 v LIB |
| Geraldton | Kirrilee Warr | NAT | 14.1 |
| Central Wheatbelt | Lachlan Hunter | NAT | 23.3 |
| Roe | Peter Rundle | NAT | 25.1 v LIB |
Opinion polling
Voting intention
| Date | Firm | Sample | Primary vote | TPP vote | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALP | LIB | NAT | GRN | ONP | OTH | ALP | LIB | |||
| 12-23 February 2026 | DemosAU[9] | 969 | 36% | 21% | 4% | 13% | 17% | 9% | 57% | 43% |
| 10 - 26 November 2025 | DemosAU[10] | 1012 | 41% | 30% | 6% | 13% | N/a | 10% | 56% | 44% |
| 8 March 2025 election | N/A | 41.4% | 28.0% | 5.2% | 11.1% | 4.0% | 10.3% | 57.1% | 42.9% | |
Preferred Premier
| Date | Firm | Sample | Preferred Premier | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cook | Zempilas | Don't know | |||
| 12-23 Feb 2026 | DemosAU[9] | 969 | 43% | 30% | 19% |
| 10-26 November 2025 | DemosAU[10] | 1012 | 47% | 34% | 19% |
Notes
References
- ^ "State Elections Information". State Elections Information. Western Australian Electoral Commisssion. Retrieved 25 February 2026.
- ^ Beaumont, Adrian (9 March 2025). "Labor wins third successive landslide in WA election". The Conversation. Retrieved 23 February 2026.
- ^ Shine, Rhiannon (21 March 2025). "Libby Mettam calls time on two-year stint as WA Liberals leader, as party seeks to kickstart rebuild". ABC News. Archived from the original on 21 March 2025. Retrieved 21 March 2025.
- ^ Bourke, Keane (25 March 2025). "Basil Zempilas becomes leader of WA Liberals, with Libby Mettam as deputy". ABC News. Retrieved 23 February 2026.
- ^ Voting Systems in WA Western Australian Electoral Commission
- ^ "State Elections". Western Australia Electoral Commission. Archived from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ^ Electoral and Constitution Amendment Act 2011 (WA) s 5
- ^ "2025 WA State Election Results and Statistics" (PDF). 2025 WA State Election - Results and Statistics. Western Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved 25 February 2026.
- ^ a b "DemosAU WA Poll" (PDF). DemosAU WA Poll Feb 2026. Demos AU. Retrieved 24 February 2026.
- ^ a b "Western Australia Poll" (PDF). Wa Poll Nov 2025. Demos AU. Retrieved 24 February 2026.