Key facts in the 2019 federal election

Labor and the coalition will vie for their share of 151 lower house seats and 40 Senate spots at the 2019 federal election.

Australians voting at a polling station a recent election.

More than 16 million Australians will vote in Saturday's federal election. (AAP)

ELECTION 2019 KEY POINTS

* Will be a half Senate and full House election, unlike the last election in 2016 when it was a double dissolution.

* Polls show Labor is the favourite, averaging just under 52 per cent of the two-party result.

* To be held under new House of Representatives seat boundaries

* 151 seats instead of current 150, due to population growth

* Victoria (Fraser) and ACT (Bean) gain a seat. SA loses a seat (Port Adelaide; Sitting member Labor's Mark Butler to run in Hindmarsh instead)

* Liberal-Nationals government starts with 74 seats, Labor 69, 7 others - four independent (Andrew Wilkie, Cathy McGowan, Kerryn Phelps, Julia Banks), one Centre Alliance (Rebekha Sharkie), one Green (Adam Bandt), one Katter's Australian Party (Bob Katter). McGowan is retiring.

* Under redrawn boundaries, Labor expected to start favourite in new seats in ACT and Victoria, giving it a two-seat head start.

* 1514 candidates including 458 candidates contesting 40 Senate vacancies and 1056 candidates for the House of Representatives.

* Of the Senate candidates, 280 are males and 178 females, and of the House candidates, there are 714 males, 341 females and one not identified.

* 16.4 million Australians enrolled to vote.

* It is the first major electoral test for Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

* The 2016 election ended in a one-seat majority for the coalition under Malcolm Turnbull.

* Bill Shorten is longest serving opposition leader since Kim Beazley. His seat of Maribyrnong has been made more marginal due to boundary changes.

* Current Senate numbers (76 total): 31 coalition; 26 Labor; 9 Greens; 2 Pauline Hanson's One Nation; 2 Centre Alliance; 1 Liberal Democrats; 1 Derryn Hinch's Justice Party; 1 Australian Conservatives; 1 Katter's Australian Party; 1 United Australia Party; 1 Independent.

* Senators up for re-election (40 total): LNP (15), ALP (13), Greens (6), One Nation (1), Others (5).

* Minor parties will find it harder to win or retain seats as there is a higher vote quota in the half-Senate election than during the double-dissolution election.


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Source: AAP


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Key facts in the 2019 federal election | SBS News