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Sydney: Is Diversity Making Bennelong Marginal?

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  • Sydney: Is Diversity Making Bennelong Marginal?

    IS DIVERSITY MAKING BENNELONG MARGINAL?

    ABC Local, Australia
    Aug 20 2013

    By Danuta Kozaki

    Posted 10 hours 47 minutes ago

    The Federal seat of Bennelong on Sydney's lower north shore is
    classified as a marginal Liberal seat, currently held by a 3.1 per
    cent margin by former tennis great John Alexander, who claimed the
    seat back for the Liberal party in 2010.

    Dr Richard Stanton, a senior lecturer of political communication at
    Sydney University says the Chinese vote - which makes up 18 per cent
    of the Bennelong electorate - was widely seen as a driving force
    behind Labor's Maxine McKew's win in 2007.

    Dr Stanton says Labor has parachuted in Chinese-Australian businessman,
    Jason Yat-Sen Li, after its original candidate, Ryde Councillor Jeff
    Salvestro-Martin, was disendorsed in mid-July due to allegations
    before the Independent Commission Against Corruption.

    Mr Salvestro-Martin says he was the victim of vexatious claims and
    should have been allowed to continue in the race for Bennelong.

    Dr Stanton says the introduction of a Chinese background candidate
    has made the race interesting, as the Chinese community in Bennelong
    is widely seen as very pragmatic.

    "The real issue is do they go with the Labor party because of the
    ethnic candidate, or do they look to the Liberal party because they
    may be in government," he said.

    Mr Li says his Chinese background is important, but he is running
    for the whole electorate.

    "Look I think it's helpful in some ways and its not helpful in other
    ways," he said.

    "It's helpful in the sense that people of Chinese background are very
    supportive of having the first Chinese-Australian as a member of the
    House of Representatives in this seat.

    "It's also been unhelpful in the sense that some people regard me as
    a Chinese candidate, which is completely untrue given I was born and
    raised in Sydney."

    Incumbent John Alexander says he has been working closely with both
    the Chinese and Korean communities to involve them in sport, through
    the setting up of a local table tennis program.

    "The motivation for the table tennis in schools program came about
    because we could see that there were students, Chinese and Korean
    students, who weren't participating with other students in what you
    might call traditional Australian sports."

    Dr Stanton says Mr Alexander has been clever in counteracting Mr Li's
    appeal with his own strategies for the Asian vote.

    "I think a number of tactics on the ground have worked for John
    Alexander and will continue to work," he said.

    "One of them of course is having his electoral banners in Eastwood
    and other places in Chinese and Korean, as well as in English."

    Melissa Monteiro from the Community Migrant Resource Centre office
    in Eastwood says Bennelong is much more diverse than just the Chinese
    and Korean communities, with a well-established Armenian population,
    along with people from the Indian sub-continent, Iran and Afghanistan.

    Vache Kahramanian from the Armenian National Committee of Australia
    says the local Armenian community is very important in Bennelong.

    "The Armenian community in Bennelong is the largest Armenian community
    in Australia, and therefore Bennelong is a very important seat to
    the Armenian community," he said.

    "The Armenian community represent about five per cent of the voting
    population in that electorate.

    "If we look back at the last election when the current member,
    John Alexander, challenged the sitting member Maxine McKew, the
    Armenian vote had a considerable influence in deciding the outcome
    of that seat."

    Mr Kahramanian says many of those families have experience in fleeing
    violence, and that could have an impact on their voting patterns.

    "Many of those families are direct descendants of the Armenian
    Genocide," he said.

    "Their grandparents or great-grandparents would either have been
    killed or would have somehow survived and managed to flee and come
    to Australia."

    Dr Stanton says history shows the longer a community is established
    in Australia, the more conservative they can become.

    "It depends whether the Armenian population again is a conservative
    population or what you might call progressive," he said.

    "That conservatism comes into play second or third generation.

    "So that may be the case with the Chinese and the Korean populations
    or voters in Bennelong, but it also may be the case with the Armenians
    that they may feel warmer to a Liberal conservative candidate than
    they would to a Labor candidate."

    Dr Mark Rolfe, politics lecturer from the School of Social Sciences
    at the University of New South Wales says the Liberal Party of New
    South Wales has spent the last few years nurturing the so-called
    ethnic vote in Bennelong.

    "I think it points to a larger strategy by the NSW branch of the
    Liberal party about multiculturalism and the attempt to build bridges
    with various sections of the community," he said.

    "In particular, say, the Muslim community in western Sydney.

    "But back to Bennelong, the Liberal party learnt that they need to
    get involved at the grassroots of Bennelong, so in early 2010 they
    formed the Liberal Party Chinese Council, in order to build bridges
    with the Chinese community."

    Dr Rolfe says there has also been a reaction against the Labor party
    on a New South Wales basis after all the corruption allegations.

    "So I know that there was a big reaction against the NSW Labor
    government in 2011, but I think the Liberals have been working at
    both a federal and state level to consolidate the multicultural vote
    in Bennelong," he said.

    Local Korean newspaper owner Jason Koh, who is also part of the
    Korean Chamber of Commerce in Eastwood, Epping and Ryde says the
    Korean community is just as interested as the broader community in
    the economy, parking and law and order.

    Mr Koh says it is a shame Labor's candidate, Jason Li, has had such
    a short time to get established.

    "Bennelong Chinese vote roughly 18 per cent, Korean vote around an
    estimated four per cent, so around 23 to 25 per cent which is quite
    a big number," he said.

    "So if he is supported by a majority of Asian voters, he may have a
    chance in general.

    "We think it will be a very difficult fight for him, maybe three
    years later may be different."

    Mr Alexander says Bennelong is unique.

    "It is a very diverse community and I often think it's interesting
    that Bennelong was the first Aboriginal man to engage with the white
    settlers," he said.

    "It's so appropriate that this electorate would be named after him
    when there's such a mix of people from all around the world."

    Mr Li agrees, and says his vision for the area is to be like Silicon
    Valley in America.

    "I completely agree that Bennelong is a an extremely important seat,"
    he said.

    "It's not just because of its ethnic mix, it's because of the really
    unique set of infrastructure that exists here such as Macquarie
    University, Macquarie Park, the CSIRO and the range of professionals
    and the make up of the population."

    Dr Stanton says Bennelong's cultural diversity, with about a third of
    its residents born in a non-English speaking country and the impact
    of that ever-changing demographic, could make the seat a bell-weather
    seat, changing with what voters believe to be the winning side.

    "In the past, every election campaign has been won and lost in
    Eden-Monaro," he said.

    "That's a distinctly different seat with a high country population
    and a coastal population, which has changed radically over the last
    few years.

    "So Bennelong could in fact become a bellwether seat."

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-08-21/is-diversity-making-bennelong-marginal3f/4900026

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