Labor will move to guarantee the Northern Territory two federal seats through a private senator's bill to be introduced when Parliament next meets in June.
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Without legislative intervention, the Territory is likely to lose one of its two seats as a result of electoral boundary redistributions during this term of parliament, halving its representation in the House of Representatives.
The Territory is currently represented by the Labor's Warren Snowdon and Luke Gosling.
It also has Senate representatives with Liberals' Sam McMahon and Labor's Malarmdirri McCarthy.
In a joint statement today for the Labor representatives, they said the Territory's size, the remoteness of many of its communities and its unique demography all contribute to its need for more than one lower house seat.
A single electorate for the Territory would not recognise the different characteristics and communities of interest from Darwin and Palmerston to the remote outback, nor the NT's strategic and economic importance to the whole of Australia, they said.
Losing a seat would mean a single MP serving an electorate of over 1.4 million square kilometres, including the remote Indian Ocean Territories of Christmas Island and the Cocos Islands, and representing a population of nearly 250,000 Territorians.
This would make the NT electorate by far Australia's largest by population, with approximately 30,000 more people and spread over an area more than 35,000 times larger than the electorate of Melbourne.
It would leave a single MP serving communities as geographically and demographically diverse as the Cocos Islands, Darwin, Tennant Creek and Arnhem Land.
"As the Territory works to recover from the impacts of COVID-19, there could not be a worse time for it to lose a voice in the Federal Parliament.
"Legislating for two seats in the Northern Territory will ensure that all Territorians, including the 27 per cent of the NT's population who are Indigenous, will continue to have the representation in Canberra that they deserve."
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