, the namesake of the division The division was proclaimed at
Federation, and was one of the
original 65 divisions to be contested at the
first federal election in 1901. It was named after the fifth
Premier of New South Wales,
Sir John Robertson, and was originally centred in rural central NSW, encompassing the area around
Dubbo,
Mudgee and
Wellington. It moved eastwards to the Central Coast to take in
Gosford in 1913. The division no longer includes any of its original territory, but has retained the name of Robertson, in part because the
Australian Electoral Commission is required to preserve the names of original electorates where possible. Two of its members have served as Senators prior or subsequent to their tenures in Robertson. Former senator, Belinda Neal, was elected in Robertson in 2007, and Deborah O'Neill became a senator shortly after losing Robertson in 2013. In recent years, Robertson has been a
bellwether electorate in federal elections, and has taken on a character similar to
mortgage belt seats on
Sydney's outer fringe. It has been held by a member of the party of government since the
1983 federal election. After
Mike Kelly became the first opposition MP elected to represent
Eden-Monaro (in 2016) since 1975, Robertson currently holds the record for the longest-running bellwether seat in Australia. The current Member for Robertson, since the
2022 federal election, is
Gordon Reid, a member of the
Australian Labor Party.
The new bellwether Ahead of the
2016 election,
ABC psephologist Antony Green listed Robertson in his election guide as one of eleven which he classed as
bellwether electorates. Prior to the 2016 election, the seat of
Eden-Monaro had been long-regarded as Australia's premier bellwether electorate. From the
1972 election until the
2013 election – over 40 years – Eden-Monaro had been won by the party that also won government. However, Eden-Monaro lost that title after the Labor opposition won it at the 2016 election, and the nation's new longest-running bellwether is Robertson – continually won by the party that won government since the
1983 election. This trend in Robertson continued in the
2022 and
2025 elections, with Labor winning the seat and Government. ==Members==