The incumbent
centre-left Labor Party, led by Chief Minister
Jon Stanhope, attempted to win re-election for a third term after coming to power in 2001. They were challenged by the opposition
centre-right Liberal Party, led by
Zed Seselja, who assumed the Liberal leadership in December 2007. A third party, the
ACT Greens, held one seat in the Assembly through retiring MLA
Deb Foskey. The election saw all 17 members of the Assembly face re-election, with members being elected by the
Hare-Clark system of
proportional representation. The Assembly is divided into three electorates: five-member
Brindabella (including
Tuggeranong and parts of the
Woden Valley) and
Ginninderra (including
Belconnen and suburbs) and seven-member
Molonglo (including
North Canberra,
South Canberra,
Gungahlin,
Weston Creek, and the remainder of the
Woden Valley). Election dates are set in statute to occur once every four years; the government has no ability to set the election date. Following the
2004 election outcome, Labor held 9 seats, becoming the first
majority government in the territory's history. The opposition Liberal Party held 7 seats, with the Greens holding a further one. The Liberal numbers in the Assembly dropped to six in December 2007 when former Shadow Treasurer
Richard Mulcahy was expelled from the party and began sitting as an independent. The opposition thus would have needed to win a further three seats, on top of regaining Mulcahy's seat, to hold government in its own right. The Liberal campaign suffered early problems in February 2008 when a number of prominent Liberal Party and business figures, including popular former Chief Minister
Kate Carnell and high-profile businessman and former party finance director Jim Murphy, relaunched the 250 Club, previously a Liberal fundraising group, as the independent Canberra Business Club. The new organisation pledged to support
minor party and independent pro-business candidates in the election, citing their disillusion with both major parties and the need for a third political force in the Assembly. At the same time, their best prospect for winning Mulcahy's seat of Molonglo, the Liberal candidate for Fraser in the previous Federal election, Troy Williams, withdrew.
Polling Conducted by Patterson Market Research, and published in
The Canberra Times, polling released on 4 October suggested the Green vote had doubled to tripled since the last election, at the expense of Labor, with the Liberal vote relatively unchanged. Commentators predicted the Greens would hold the
balance of power and decide who forms government. The Greens stated they were willing to court both major parties.
Scanning of ballot papers In the 2001 and 2004 elections, after the first manual count of paper ballots the preferences were data entered for distribution. For the 2008 election, paper ballots were scanned and
character recognition software used to identify preferences. Any preferences that could not be identified by the software were entered manually. ==Candidates==