The Greens candidate for Wills, former Victorian state leader Samantha Ratnam, has called Labor’s Peter Khalil to concede defeat on Thursday afternoon.
With 81 per cent of the vote in the seat counted by the Australian Electoral Commission, Khalil had established an unassailable lead of more than 4000 votes.
The former Greens state parliamentary leader posted not long ago to social media saying she had conceded the tight-run campaign.
“Unfortunately, we couldn’t get over the line this time, but we got very, very close,” she said.
Leaning on a stack of books – Nelson Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom, Christine Milne’s An Activist Life and Bob Brown’s Optimism – she thanked her campaign team and told people who had helped her fight for the seat not to give up.
“It’s sometimes hard to hold on to hope, but I’m holding on to hope,” she said, “because we don’t have the luxury of giving up” and she vowed to continue fighting for refugees, the environment, and for Palestine.
She said she intended to go back to being a social worker and spending more time with her daughter.
And she said she wanted to be “on the front lines of stopping the demolition and privatisation of public housing here in Victoria, which the Allan Labor government plans to do, and I’ll be on the front lines of stopping new coal and gas projects in the midst of a climate crisis”.
“So hold on to hope everyone. We’ve achieved something historic that’s not going anywhere. It’s not the end, it’s just the beginning of this next chapter. And there’s one thing that I promise you is that I’ll be back,” she said.
Khalil issued a statement an hour later, thanking the people of Wills and noting the redistribution last year, that introduced North Carlton and North Fitzroy into the electorate, had made retaining the seat tough. The Labor MP while holding on to the seat had a seven per cent swing against him.
“My team and I worked hard to not only introduce myself to new parts of the electorate, but to share Labor’s message with the existing suburbs,” he said.
He said his campaign committed to open a new Medicare Urgent Care Clinic in Coburg, to make the Linear Parklands in North Fitzroy, North Carlton and Princes Hill a more accessible space, and to upgrade sporting facilities at Fawkner Netball Courts and Gillon Oval in Brunswick.
Khalil thanked his staff, and said they had worked under “immense pressure”.
“Even in the final days of the election campaign, when our office was closed due to dangerous protest activity, my staff set up with camping chairs at an early voting centre and continued to take constituent enquiries,” he said.
He wished Ratnam well and said it “took courage to leave state parliament as leader of the Greens to run for federal parliament”.
Ratnam conceded shortly after Greens leader Adam Bandt did the same in his seat of Melbourne.
In Wills, Ratnam’s team had hoped that counting of absentee and other special votes would be enough to haul in Khalil’s lead but eventually the margin – which stood at 4193 at the latest update – was too great.