Electoral district of Florey

Florey
South AustraliaHouse of Assembly
Interactive map of electoral district boundaries from the 2022 state election[a]
StateSouth Australia
Created1970
MPMichael Brown
PartyLabor
NamesakeHoward Florey
Electors26,734 (2018)
Area21.25 km2 (8.2 sq mi)
DemographicMetropolitan
Coordinates34°49′43″S 138°40′46″E / 34.82861°S 138.67944°E / -34.82861; 138.67944
Electorates around Florey:
Port Adelaide Playford Wright
Port Adelaide Florey Newland
Enfield Torrens Morialta
Footnotes
  1. ^ The electorate will have no change in boundaries at the 2026 state election.[1]

Florey is a single-member electoral district for the South Australian House of Assembly. It is named after scientist Howard Florey, who was responsible for the development of penicillin. It is a 21.25 km2 (8.20 sq mi) suburban electorate in Adelaide's north-east, taking in the suburbs of Ingle Farm, Modbury North, Para Vista, Pooraka, Valley View, and Walkley Heights, as well as parts of Modbury and Northfield.

Florey was created at the electoral redistribution of 1969 as a notionally safe Labor electorate, and was first contested at the 1970 election. Mostly it was safely held by the Labor party until the 1989 election when it became the minority Labor government's most marginal electorate. Florey was one of the first electorates to fall to the Liberals at the 1993 election landslide. It was regained by Labor's Frances Bedford at the 1997 election.

2018 election

Incumbent Frances Bedford resigned from Labor and became an independent on 28 March 2017 after Labor's Jack Snelling won Florey pre-selection for the 2018 election. As an independent, Bedford continued to provide confidence and supply support to the incumbent Labor government and did not make an immediate decision as to whether she would re-contest Florey as an independent.[2] The 2016 electoral redistribution reassigned two-thirds of Playford voters to Florey. A ReachTEL poll conducted on 2 March 2017 of 606 voters in post-redistribution Florey indicated a 33.4 percent primary vote for Bedford running as an independent which would likely see Labor's Snelling defeated after preferences.[3] Snelling announced on 17 September 2017 that he had decided not to contest the 2018 election.[4] The 2018 election was subsequently won by Bedford which was the first time an independent candidate had won an election in the district since its inception.

Members for Florey

Member Party Term
  Charles Wells Labor 1970–1979
  Harold O'Neill Labor 1979–1982
  Bob Gregory Labor 1982–1993
  Sam Bass Liberal 1993–1997
  Frances Bedford Labor 1997–2017
  Independent 2017–2022
  Michael Brown Labor 2022–present

Election results

2026 South Australian state election: Florey[5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Michael Brown 8,033 48.5 −0.4
One Nation Riley Size 3,614 21.8 +21.8
Greens Alexandra McGee 1,774 10.7 +0.4
Liberal Denise George 1,539 9.3 −19.1
Independent Frances Bedford 834 5.0 +5.0
Family First Mark Hawke 527 3.2 −3.2
Australian Family Dieter Fischer 134 0.8 +0.8
Fair Go Robert Jameson 60 0.4 +0.4
United Voice Trent Wilton 46 0.3 +0.3
Total formal votes 16,561 94.8 −1.1
Informal votes 904 5.2 +1.1
Turnout 17,465
Two-candidate-preferred result
Labor Michael Brown 10,805 65.2 +2.4
One Nation Riley Size 5,757 34.8 +34.8
Labor hold  

Results are not final. Last updated on 23 March at 6:52pm ACDT. Two-candidate-preferred is an estimate by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

Notes

  1. ^ "2024 EDBC Final Report Appendices". South Australian Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission. Retrieved 27 December 2025.
  2. ^ "Bedford bombshell "won't make much difference", Jay insists". InDaily. 29 March 2017. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  3. ^ Labor polling shows boundary redraw appeal loss means Jack Snelling could lose to veteran party MP Frances Bedford, 10 March 2017, The Advertiser.
  4. ^ "SA Health Minister Jack Snelling resigns from Cabinet and will not contest March election". ABC News. 17 September 2017. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  5. ^ "Florey - SA Election 2026". ABC News.

References