Federal election 2025: Labor’s Swan MP Zaneta Mascarenhas holds seat with healthy swing

    Oliver Lane
    The West Australian
    Labor MP for Swan Zaneta Mascarenhas greeted voters outside Manning Primary School on polling day.
    Labor MP for Swan Zaneta Mascarenhas greeted voters outside Manning Primary School on polling day. Credit: Oliver Lane

    Labor’s Swan MP Zaneta Mascarenhas has been re-elected in a landslide, holding a 16 point margin with 33 per cent of the vote counted.

    At 9.45pm on Saturday Ms Mascarenhas had received an estimated 66.3 per cent of the two candidate preferred vote, ahead of Liberal candidate Mic Fels with 33.7 per cent with 38 per cent of the vote counted.

    Ms Mascarenhas recorded a swing of nearly 6 per cent, an impressive feat given she earned a swing of 12 per cent just three years ago.

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    Swan was one of a suite of WA seats which fell into Labor hands in the 2022 election, thanks in part to an unpopular Morrison government and a very popular State government.

    Heading into the 2022 the seat had been held by the Liberals and their MP Steve Irons since 2007 but was vulnerable with a margin of just 2.7 per cent and Mr Irons retiring.

    Ms Mascarenhas not only won the seat but put it into “safe” territory. Thanks to a redistribution in 2024, she saw her margin increase notionally to 9.4 per cent.

    The seat lost its outer suburban suburbs east of the Perth Airport as well as its part of the City of Gosnells in the south but gained the suburbs of Wilson, Ferndale and Lynwood south of the Canning River.

    Liberal candidate for Swan Mic Fels greeted voters at St Augustine's Primary School in Rivervale.
    Liberal candidate for Swan Mic Fels greeted voters at St Augustine's Primary School in Rivervale. Credit: Oliver Lane

    The former engineer is now looking to win her second term in government and was seen as the favourite as the campaign wore on and the Coalition’s bid continued to stutter.

    Looking to cause an upset against the incumbent was grain farming businessman Mic Fels.

    Until he was pre-selected to contest the seat of Swan, Mr Fels split his time evenly between his home in the area and his farm in Esperance.

    Ms Mascarenhas spent election night with her supporters at a Victoria Park bowls club to watch the results come in.

    Just a five minutes away at the East Victoria Park RSL Liberal supporters gathered with Mr Fels to watch the count.

    Ms Mascarenhas spoke to The West at Manning Primary School earlier in the day and said she would never say she was confident but was feeling positive.

    “What I felt is lots of community support, people saying thank you so much for your work, random people wanting to do selfies which is very weird,” she said.

    “It’s felt really, really positive, which I feel really humbled.”

    Mr Fels just after midday said he was not feeling nervous.

    “Coming from the industry that I come from, agriculture and manufacturing, I’m used to the pressure of a high intensity operation,” he said.

    “For me, I don’t really suffer nerves at a time like this, I’m just focusing on the work, tomorrow might be a different story, but today it’s just all about the work.”

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