Electoral district of Bicton

Bicton
Western AustraliaLegislative Assembly
Interactive map of district boundaries
StateWestern Australia
Dates current2017–present
MPLisa O'Malley
PartyLabor
NamesakeBicton
Electors31,882 (2025)
Area20 km2 (7.7 sq mi)
DemographicMetropolitan
Coordinates31°57′S 115°58′E / 31.95°S 115.96°E / -31.95; 115.96
Electorates around Bicton:
Cottesloe Nedlands Nedlands
Cottesloe Bicton Bateman
Fremantle Fremantle Bibra Lake

Bicton is an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly of Western Australia. It is located in Perth's southern suburbs, and named after the riverside suburb of Bicton.

Bicton was created by the Western Australian Electoral Commission in a 2015 redistribution, and elected its first member at the 2017 state election. It incorporates areas that previously fell into the seats of Alfred Cove, Bateman, Fremantle and Willagee.

Geography

At the 2017 state election, Bicton includes the suburbs of Attadale, Bicton, and Melville in their entireties, most of East Fremantle and Palmyra, and smaller portions of Alfred Cove, Fremantle, and Myaree. It is bounded by Stirling Highway to the west, High Street and Leach Highway to the south, North Lake Road to the east and the Swan River to the north.[1]

Members for Bicton

Bicton was created as a notionally safe Liberal seat with a majority of 10 percent over Labor, and was reckoned as the successor to the safe Liberal seat of Alfred Cove. However, in 2017, a massive Labor wave swept through Perth, and Labor's Lisa O'Malley won the seat on a swing of 13 percent. She defeated Matt Taylor, who had been the Liberal member for Bateman.

At the 2021 state election, O'Malley saw her margin swell to 15.6 percent, turning Bicton into a safe Labor seat in one stroke.

Member Party Term
  Lisa O'Malley Labor 2017–present

Election results

2025 Western Australian state election: Bicton[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Lisa O'Malley 12,438 45.1 −11.2
Liberal Chris Dowson 9,562 34.7 +4.6
Greens Adam Bennett 3,982 14.5 +5.3
One Nation Tim Smith 868 3.2 +1.8
National Bill Koul 704 2.6 +2.6
Total formal votes 27,554 96.8 −0.6
Informal votes 924 3.2 +0.6
Turnout 28,478 89.3 +2.3
Two-party-preferred result
Labor Lisa O'Malley 16,346 59.3 −6.8
Liberal Chris Dowson 11,200 40.7 +6.8
Labor hold Swing −6.8

References

  1. ^ 2015 Final Boundaries by Region and District, Western Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  2. ^ 2025 State General Election – Bicton District Results, WAEC. Retrieved 2 April 2025.
  • ABC election profiles: 2017
  • WAEC district maps: 2015