Labor faces off against the Greens in Melbourne's marginal inner north
The electorate covering a chunk of Melbourne's northern suburbs has long taken in Fawkner, Brunswick, Pascoe Vale and Coburg: areas fairly close to the city, with big migrant communities that — until about 10 years ago — have mostly been working class areas.
But recently its boundaries got a face lift from the Australian Electoral Commission and that's spelling trouble for the government.
Wills moved down and moneyed up
A recent redistribution has brought parts of affluent Fitzroy and Princes Hill into the electorate and jettisoned less well-off places like sections of Glenroy and Oak Park.
But this area was changing long before any boundaries were re-drawn.
Over the last two decades, as increasing house prices have driven people further and further north, the area has gentrified at pace.
In 2002, Coburg — which sits around the middle of the electorate — was described in The Age as "just another unloved working-class suburb" at the "unfashionable end of the tram line."
More people have voted early this year than ever before.
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ABC News: Darryl Torpy
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Now, the Pentridge prison, once the main jail for metro Melbourne, has become home to a Palace cinema, trendy restaurants and an "urban retreat".
And some of Labor's long-term supporters have been pushed out of the electorate because of increased housing costs.
This is an area the Greens have had their eyes on for over a decade, ever since the party managed to secure Adam Bandt's seat of Melbourne next door.
But in all those years, they've never been able to cross the road.
Trying to get to the other side
Bisecting Coburg, and Wills itself, is Bell Street. Above it, to the north, Labor outpolled the Greens at every polling booth in 2022.
Below it, to the wealthier south, the Greens beat Labor at nine booths compared to the major party's six.
Samantha Ratnam is spending the final days before the election speaking with voters at early-polling stations.
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ABC News: Nicholas White
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It's a line the Greens have been trying to crack for years, even coming close to winning the seat in 2016 before Liberal preferences helped the seat's current MP Peter Khalil get it in the bag.
Now the seat redistribution has changed the game, replacing areas Labor won with ones dominated by the Greens.
Is the Bell St wall about to fall?
Samantha Ratnam is a seasoned Victorian political operator, but now she's hoping to make the jump from state to federal politics.
A former leader of the Victorian Greens in state parliament, she says she's been making sure she's spending plenty of time in the north of the seat.
"We're hearing from a lot of people in the north who feel especially neglected in what they considered were very safe Labor seats at one time."
Pinned to her lapel is a small ceramic watermelon pin — symbolising her support for Palestine.
Samantha Ratnam is no stranger to Victorian politics but is hoping to make the jump to being a federal MP.
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ABC News: Nicholas White
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"People have been raising what's been happening to the Palestinian people and what they see as a gross injustice and the moral issue of our time," she says.
For many in Wills, it is one of the things that could decide their vote on May 3.
The area's local council, Merri-Bek, flew the Palestinian flag outside town hall until earlier this year when a ceasefire — since broken by Israel — began.
That flag can be seen in many places at the packed pre-poll booth, on t-shirts, umbrellas and signs.
The government's response to Israel's bombardment of Gaza is a key issue in Wills this election.
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ABC News: Nicholas White
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"They've been saying to us that they feel like Australia could have played a much stronger role on the international stage" she says of her discussions while campaigning. "They feel really betrayed and let down."
Ms Ratnam says Australia's response to the war has led to people changing their vote to the Greens for the first time.
Some in Wills are angry and frustrated with how the federal government has responded to Israel's actions.
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ABC News: Darryl Torpy
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"I've been hearing it daily, and we've been door-knocking now for months on end, and more and more people are telling me that it is a moral issue for them and they feel really let down by Labor."
But while the response to the war is squarely part of the Greens' policy platform this election, the party's leader Adam Bandt says it won't be on their list of non-negotiables if there's a hung parliament.
"Our only non-negotiable is that we won't support Peter Dutton," he says.
"Whatever parliament it is, the Greens are going to keep pushing for our government to start taking action and put some pressure on this extremist Netanyahu government."
Party heavyweights make an appearance
When we speak with Mr Bandt, he's joined Samantha Ratnam at pre-polling in Brunswick, along with NSW Senator Mehreen Faruqi, showing just how seriously the party are taking this contest.
But they're not the only ones bringing their party heavyweights along to help them fight for this seat.
Local Labor member Peter Khalil has been joined by Finance Minister Katy Gallagher and Housing Minister Clare O'Neil as he fights to hold on to the electorate he's represented for nearly 10 years.
"We don't take anything for granted," he says.
Peter Khalil has held the seat of Wills for nearly a decade.
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ABC News: Darryl Torpy
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Aside from being the member for Wills, Mr Khalil is also the government's special envoy for social cohesion.
The role involves him reporting regularly to the prime minister about issues regarding community division.
At the Brunswick Masonic Centre pre-polling booth, he mostly gets a warm reception.
"Everyone is voting early this year, so I'm kind of concerned about the sausage sizzle on Saturday and the fundraising for local primary schools.
Candidates like Labor MP Peter Khalil have been at pre-polling booths speaking with locals before they vote.
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ABC News: Darryl Torpy
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"So hopefully people, even if they vote [early], can go down and buy a cake or a sausage for the local primary as well."
He's also facing political pressure from the group Muslim Votes Matter, whose website's how to vote card for Wills puts Samantha Ratnam first, with Khalil placed sixth above the Liberals and One Nation.
Peter Khalil says the government is doing everything it can to work towards peace.
"Australia can't move the dial on its own, but we have worked within the international community to vote for a ceasefire multiple times, we've increased humanitarian aid to over 100 million [dollars].
Muslim Votes Matter is urging voters in Wills to preference the Greens first.
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Darryl Torpy/ABC News
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"We've actually doubled the funding to UNRWA, we're also one of only three countries that have provided visas to thousands of Palestinian refugees.
"I've actually helped settle a number of Palestinian families into my electorate as well, and we've backed international humanitarian law.
"People can make all sorts of accusations, but the most important thing is representing your community, standing by integrity and principle and doing what I can do, and I have done for the community over this very difficult period [where] the loss of life has been horrific."
Mr Khalil has been the subject of multiple protests regarding Labor's response to the war, including one this week.
Photo shows
An electorate office sign doused in red paint.
Peter Khalil's electorate office has been doused with an unknown substance, in what the government's special envoy for social cohesion has called an "escalation" of previous incidents.
But things escalated last year when his office was sprayed outside with red paint and vandalised indoors with a substance the MP described as smelling like an "abattoir."
He says while constituents are raising the issue with him, it is not their primary concern this election.
"People raise this issue or issues around the Middle East conflict with me, but people also raise cost of living, they also raise issues around housing, they also raise issues [around] other social policy issues, support for refugees and asylum seekers, they raise issues around local school funding."
He disagrees with the Greens' belief that constituents feel betrayed by Labor.
Volunteers have been braving the rain to campaign for their candidates.
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ABC News: Nicholas White
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"[I've delivered a] Medicare urgent care clinic for the community that took a lot of work, that's something that we can deliver as part of being a government, and it makes a difference to people's lives.
"I've worked really hard for the community … it's a wonderful community here in Melbourne, and every day is a privilege to work for them and serve the community."

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The Advertiser
35 minutes ago
- The Advertiser
PM slams 'repulsive' Latham as Labor portrait remains
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"It's finding the balance, you can't erase history, we can't pretend he wasn't our leader, he was and so there he sits in the leaders' timeline," she told reporters in Canberra."But it's a recognition ... his behaviour and attitudes don't reflect the modern Australian Labor Party." Senator Gallagher said the wording allowed people to feel something had been done. "It will exist there forever on our leaders wall," she said. "It's a pretty strong statement." Mr Latham lost his bid for the nation's top job at the 2004 federal election to former Liberal prime minister John Howard. The campaign was marked by his aggressive handshake with Mr Howard outside the ABC's radio studios on election-eve. The infamous episode was largely blamed for his election defeat and delivered the Howard government a fourth term. In 2024, the Federal Court ordered Mr Latham to pay independent NSW politician Alex Greenwich $140,000 in damages over a homophobic social media post. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491 Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has slammed Mark Latham for his "repulsive" views, but a picture of the former Labor leader will remain hanging in the federal caucus room despite domestic violence accusations. Mr Latham is accused by his former partner Nathalie Matthews of a "sustained pattern" of abuse and degradation. The NSW state MP and one-time prime ministerial hopeful strongly denies the untested claims made in a civil court apprehended violence order application by Ms Matthews, saying he has "broken no laws". The Labor caucus on Monday agreed that Mr Latham's official portrait in the federal party room would remain, but with a caption providing context. Weighing in for the first time since the allegations emerged, the prime minister said he never wanted Mr Latham to be his party's leader. "Mark Latham has views which I find repulsive across a range of areas," Mr Albanese told ABC's 7.30. "He's someone who I regret being ever being elected leader of the Labor Party." Mr Albanese said his feelings were not in "retrospect" as he had been doing the numbers for Kim Beazley during the 2003 leadership challenge which Mr Latham narrowly won. "History has proven that judgment to be correct. Mark Latham since ... has gone further and further and further away from any values that represent mainstream Australia," he said. The words underneath the portrait will read: "In 2017 Mark Latham was expelled from the Australian Labor Party and banned for life. His actions do not accord with Labor values and fail to meet the standards we expect and demand." Mr Latham sits as an independent in the NSW upper house and faces calls to resign over sexually explicit messages allegedly sent to his former partner while sitting in the chamber of parliament. The decision to add context to Mr Latham's portrait was the right one, Finance Minister Katy Gallagher said. "It's finding the balance, you can't erase history, we can't pretend he wasn't our leader, he was and so there he sits in the leaders' timeline," she told reporters in Canberra."But it's a recognition ... his behaviour and attitudes don't reflect the modern Australian Labor Party." Senator Gallagher said the wording allowed people to feel something had been done. "It will exist there forever on our leaders wall," she said. "It's a pretty strong statement." Mr Latham lost his bid for the nation's top job at the 2004 federal election to former Liberal prime minister John Howard. The campaign was marked by his aggressive handshake with Mr Howard outside the ABC's radio studios on election-eve. The infamous episode was largely blamed for his election defeat and delivered the Howard government a fourth term. In 2024, the Federal Court ordered Mr Latham to pay independent NSW politician Alex Greenwich $140,000 in damages over a homophobic social media post. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491 Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has slammed Mark Latham for his "repulsive" views, but a picture of the former Labor leader will remain hanging in the federal caucus room despite domestic violence accusations. Mr Latham is accused by his former partner Nathalie Matthews of a "sustained pattern" of abuse and degradation. The NSW state MP and one-time prime ministerial hopeful strongly denies the untested claims made in a civil court apprehended violence order application by Ms Matthews, saying he has "broken no laws". The Labor caucus on Monday agreed that Mr Latham's official portrait in the federal party room would remain, but with a caption providing context. Weighing in for the first time since the allegations emerged, the prime minister said he never wanted Mr Latham to be his party's leader. "Mark Latham has views which I find repulsive across a range of areas," Mr Albanese told ABC's 7.30. "He's someone who I regret being ever being elected leader of the Labor Party." Mr Albanese said his feelings were not in "retrospect" as he had been doing the numbers for Kim Beazley during the 2003 leadership challenge which Mr Latham narrowly won. "History has proven that judgment to be correct. Mark Latham since ... has gone further and further and further away from any values that represent mainstream Australia," he said. The words underneath the portrait will read: "In 2017 Mark Latham was expelled from the Australian Labor Party and banned for life. His actions do not accord with Labor values and fail to meet the standards we expect and demand." Mr Latham sits as an independent in the NSW upper house and faces calls to resign over sexually explicit messages allegedly sent to his former partner while sitting in the chamber of parliament. The decision to add context to Mr Latham's portrait was the right one, Finance Minister Katy Gallagher said. "It's finding the balance, you can't erase history, we can't pretend he wasn't our leader, he was and so there he sits in the leaders' timeline," she told reporters in Canberra."But it's a recognition ... his behaviour and attitudes don't reflect the modern Australian Labor Party." Senator Gallagher said the wording allowed people to feel something had been done. "It will exist there forever on our leaders wall," she said. "It's a pretty strong statement." Mr Latham lost his bid for the nation's top job at the 2004 federal election to former Liberal prime minister John Howard. The campaign was marked by his aggressive handshake with Mr Howard outside the ABC's radio studios on election-eve. The infamous episode was largely blamed for his election defeat and delivered the Howard government a fourth term. In 2024, the Federal Court ordered Mr Latham to pay independent NSW politician Alex Greenwich $140,000 in damages over a homophobic social media post. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491 Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has slammed Mark Latham for his "repulsive" views, but a picture of the former Labor leader will remain hanging in the federal caucus room despite domestic violence accusations. Mr Latham is accused by his former partner Nathalie Matthews of a "sustained pattern" of abuse and degradation. The NSW state MP and one-time prime ministerial hopeful strongly denies the untested claims made in a civil court apprehended violence order application by Ms Matthews, saying he has "broken no laws". 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His actions do not accord with Labor values and fail to meet the standards we expect and demand." Mr Latham sits as an independent in the NSW upper house and faces calls to resign over sexually explicit messages allegedly sent to his former partner while sitting in the chamber of parliament. The decision to add context to Mr Latham's portrait was the right one, Finance Minister Katy Gallagher said. "It's finding the balance, you can't erase history, we can't pretend he wasn't our leader, he was and so there he sits in the leaders' timeline," she told reporters in Canberra."But it's a recognition ... his behaviour and attitudes don't reflect the modern Australian Labor Party." Senator Gallagher said the wording allowed people to feel something had been done. "It will exist there forever on our leaders wall," she said. "It's a pretty strong statement." Mr Latham lost his bid for the nation's top job at the 2004 federal election to former Liberal prime minister John Howard. The campaign was marked by his aggressive handshake with Mr Howard outside the ABC's radio studios on election-eve. The infamous episode was largely blamed for his election defeat and delivered the Howard government a fourth term. In 2024, the Federal Court ordered Mr Latham to pay independent NSW politician Alex Greenwich $140,000 in damages over a homophobic social media post. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491

Courier-Mail
an hour ago
- Courier-Mail
Tasmania election: Winter mulls Greens deal as hung parliament looms
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Perth Now
3 hours ago
- Perth Now
Tassie in state of flux after snap election
Tasmanians are no closer to knowing who will lead the state after Saturday's snap election led to a hung parliament, with neither major party able to form a majority government. The results two days on show Tasmania Labor is still on track for its worst ever electoral performance with the party currently sitting on under 26 per cent of the primary vote with the Liberals on 40 per cent and the Greens capturing 14 per cent of voters first choices. Labor's 2025 state election result is the party's worst electoral performance since 1903. Despite the result, Labor is likely to end up with the same number of MPs as it did in the 2024 election when it achieved 29 per cent of the primary, while the Liberals had 14 seats – short of the 18 to form majority. While Premier Jeremy Rockliff is claiming a mandate for the Liberal Party to continue in power, Labor leader Dean Winter may still work with the Greens and crossbenchers to form a minority government. Labor Leader Dean Winter with his wife Allison at Hobart Grand Chancellor tally room on election night. Caroline Tan Credit: News Corp Australia As the election night results rolled into the Tasmanian tally room, it looked increasingly like Mr Winter's election gamble had backfired. What makes this election outcome different is unlike in the immediate aftermath of the 2024 result, the Labor leader has not refused to attempt to form government with the Greens and independent crossbench. Despite ruling out any formal deal with the Greens, Mr Winter says he has already reached out to a number of independents. The Greens have urged Labor to seek an arrangement with them to form government. It is understood the Labor leader has yet to contact Greens leader Rosalie Woodruff. However for Labor to govern in any capacity, the Greens support in some form will be required. Mr Rockliff who all but declared victory on Saturday night is adamant that he is the one with a mandate to govern. 'I do have a mandate, given we've got the largest number of seats,' the Premier told reporters on Monday. 'For Dean Winter to govern, he'll need to do a deal with the Greens for which he does not have a mandate from the Tasmanian people.' Liberal Leader Jeremy Rockliff says he has the mandate to form a minority government. Caroline Tan Credit: News Corp Australia The problem for the Liberals however is that with a likely 14 or possibly 15 seats, they are also well short of the 18 votes needed to command a workable majority on the floor of the 35-seat House of Assembly. Additionally, with the former Jacqui Lambie members all losing their seats, the House will be without conservative leaning independents, with three of the four independents elected opposed to the Macquarie Point stadium. The only crossbench member to support the project is former Labor leader David O Byrne, who said he could work with either side to form government. There could be an additional new member to the crossbench with Shooters, Fishers and Farmers candidate Carlo di Falco a chance to win in Lyons, however a final result is not expected for another week. The Shooters, Fishers and Farmers are opposed to the stadium, meaning one of Mr Rockliff's key commitments would only be delivered with Labor votes, regardless of who forms government. Tasmania Labor's path to power looks less certain but they can count on Greens support in whatever form that comes (Mr Winter says the support would only be accepted without any conditions attached) Labor leader Dean Winter's chances of forming government are more difficult. Caroline Tan Credit: News Corp Australia With a likely 10 seats from Labor and five from the Greens, Mr Winter would then only have to negotiate with three independents, something Mr Winter was unwilling to do just one month ago. Saturday's election was held follow the passage of Labor leader's successful no confidence motion in Premier Rockliff's leadership with Mr Winter citing the botched roll out of new Spirit of Tasmania vessels, the state's growing budget deficit and the controversial Macquarie Point Stadium project as examples of Mr Rockliff's failed leadership. Despite being in a position to put together a minority government as a result of the no confidence motion's passage, Mr Winter chose to decline the opportunity, leaving the state's Governor with no choice but to grant Mr Rockliff's wish to hold the state's second election in just 16 months. Instead of a clear result. Tasmanian voters have returned very similar numbers as the last parliament. This time Mr Winter may be less likely to pass the opportunity of government up, with the Labor leader calling a third election 'not an option.'