The Division of Deakin is an Australian Electoral Division in Victoria. It is located in the eastern suburbs of Melbourne, and covers the majority of City of Maroondah, and parts of City of Whitehorse and City of Manningham.

Geography

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.

When the division was created in 1937, it replaced areas previously in the Division of Indi, and to smaller extents, the Division of Corio, Division of Flinders and the abolished Division of Echuca. It included areas north of Melbourne such as Whittlesea, Broadford and Seymour, areas in the north east of Melbourne such as the Yarra Valley, Yea, Alexandra and Mansfield, and areas east of Melbourne such as Box Hill, Ringwood and Lilydale. In 1949, the division was significantly shrunk to only include the Yarra Valley and eastern Melbourne, losing Broadford and Seymour to the new Division of Lalor and losing Yea, Alexandra and Mansfield back to the Division of Indi. The division also lost the Ringwood area in eastern Melbourne to the new Division of La Trobe. In 1955, it lost the areas around Whittlesea to the Division of Lalor.

In 1968, it lost more than 90% of its area in Yarra Valley and north-east Melbourne to the Division of La Trobe and the new divisions of Casey and Diamond Valley. This left Deakin to only consist of only areas around Blackburn and Box Hill. Since then, the division has been based only in the eastern suburbs of Melbourne. However, it also gradually shifted east, expanding towards Mitcham and Heathmont (in 1977), Ringwood (in 1989) and then Croydon (in 2010).

History

100px|thumb|left|[[Alfred Deakin, the division's namesake]]

The division was created in 1937, and was named in honour of Alfred Deakin, who served as Prime Minister of Australia on three non-consecutive occasions from 1903 to 1910. Deakin had represented the Victorian federal seat of Ballarat from 1901 to 1913.

Initially a rural seat north and north-east of Melbourne, the division has been located solely in the eastern suburbs of Melbourne since 1969.

In 2025, the Labor Party of Australia challenger Matt Gregg managed to defeat incumbent Liberal Party MP Michael Sukkar by a margin of about 53 percent to 47 percent. This trend of urban, white-collar seats swinging towards Labor can also be reflected in seats such as Division of Aston or Division of Menzies.

Members

{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center"

|-

! colspan=2 | Image

! Member

! Party

! Term

! Notes

|-

|-

| | 

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | William Hutchinson<br />

| United Australia

| nowrap | 23 October 1937 –<br/>21 February 1945

| rowspan=2 | Previously held the Division of Indi. Retired

|-

| |&nbsp;

| rowspan="3"| Liberal

| nowrap | 21 February 1945 –<br/>31 October 1949

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Frank Davis<br />

| nowrap | 10 December 1949 –<br/>31 October 1966

| Retired

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Alan Jarman<br />

| nowrap | 26 November 1966 –<br/>5 March 1983

| Lost seat

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| John Saunderson<br />

| Labor

| nowrap | 5 March 1983 –<br/>1 December 1984

| Transferred to the Division of Aston

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Julian Beale<br />

| rowspan="3" | Liberal

| nowrap | 1 December 1984 –<br/>24 March 1990

| Transferred to the Division of Bruce

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Ken Aldred<br />

| nowrap | 24 March 1990 –<br/>29 January 1996

| Previously held the Division of Bruce. Lost preselection and retired

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Phil Barresi<br />

| nowrap | 2 March 1996 –<br/>24 November 2007

| Lost seat

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Mike Symon<br />

| Labor

| nowrap | 24 November 2007 –<br/>7 September 2013

| Lost seat

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Michael Sukkar<br />

| Liberal

| nowrap | 7 September 2013 –<br/>3 May 2025

| Served as minister under Morrison. Lost seat

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Matt Gregg<br /><!---->

| Labor

| nowrap | 3 May 2025 –<br/>present

| Incumbent

|}

Election results

References

  • Division of Deakin - Australian Electoral Commission