Find your electorate — see exactly what Growing Australia delivers
$169.1 billion for sovereign industry. What does your electorate get?
Cheaper fuel. Lower food prices. Australian-made steel, batteries and broadband. 100,000+ direct jobs in 26 Growth Precincts — and national programs that reach every postcode. Enter your postcode in the search box on this page, or browse all 150 federal electorates below.
The five sovereign industry pillars
- Powering Australia — $50.9B: 90-day fuel reserve, solar hydrogen, synthetic fuel made here. End fuel import dependence, stabilise prices at the bowser.
- Making It Here — $38.0B: Green steel, batteries, semiconductors, drones across 26 Growth Precincts where the government builds the platform and private operators create the jobs.
- Cyber Australia — $29.2B: Cyber shield for every Australian, regional broadband, sovereign satellites, and a classified compute centre that doesn't rely on anyone else.
- Feeding Australia — $30.2B: Strategic grain reserves, town water security, Murray-Darling restoration, pharmaceutical sovereignty, cold chains that stop food rotting before it reaches the shelf.
- Our Neighbourhood — $20.8B: Undersea cables to the Pacific, labour partnerships, a digital academy. Australia's nearest neighbours are the youngest populations on earth — partnership, not charity.
By the numbers
- $169.1B total plan investment over 10 years
- 100,000+ direct jobs across 26 Growth Precincts
- 5 sovereign industry programs across 26 Growth Precincts and national infrastructure
- ~$127–280B concept-stage confidence band — $169.1B central estimate
- 2.0% of federal spending — about $16.9 billion a year
Browse all 150 federal electorates
- Adelaide — Steve Georganas (Australian Labor Party)
- Aston — Mary Doyle (Australian Labor Party)
- Ballarat — Catherine King (Australian Labor Party)
- Banks — Zhi Soon (Australian Labor Party)
- Barker — Tony Pasin (Liberal Party)
- Barton — Ash Ambihaipahar (Australian Labor Party)
- Bass — Jess Teesdale (Australian Labor Party)
- Bean — David Smith (Australian Labor Party)
- Bendigo — Lisa Chesters (Australian Labor Party)
- Bennelong — Jerome Laxale (Australian Labor Party)
- Berowra — Julian Leeser (Liberal Party)
- Blair — Shayne Neumann (Australian Labor Party)
- Blaxland — Jason Clare (Australian Labor Party)
- Bonner — Kara Cook (Australian Labor Party)
- Boothby — Louise Miller-Frost (Australian Labor Party)
- Bowman — Henry Pike (Liberal National Party)
- Braddon — Anne Urquhart (Australian Labor Party)
- Bradfield — Nicolette Boele (Independent)
- Brand — Madeleine King (Australian Labor Party)
- Brisbane — Madonna Jarrett (Australian Labor Party)
- Bruce — Julian Hill (Australian Labor Party)
- Bullwinkel — Trish Cook (Australian Labor Party)
- Burt — Matt Keogh (Australian Labor Party)
- Calare — Andrew Gee (Independent)
- Calwell — Basem Abdo (Australian Labor Party)
- Canberra — Alicia Payne (Australian Labor Party)
- Canning — Andrew Hastie (Liberal Party)
- Capricornia — Michelle Landry (Liberal National Party)
- Casey — Aaron Violi (Liberal Party)
- Chifley — Ed Husic (Australian Labor Party)
- Chisholm — Carina Garland (Australian Labor Party)
- Clark — Andrew Wilkie (Independent)
- Cook — Simon Kennedy (Liberal Party)
- Cooper — Ged Kearney (Australian Labor Party)
- Corangamite — Libby Coker (Australian Labor Party)
- Corio — Richard Marles (Australian Labor Party)
- Cowan — Anne Aly (Australian Labor Party)
- Cowper — Pat Conaghan (The Nationals)
- Cunningham — Alison Byrnes (Australian Labor Party)
- Curtin — Kate Chaney (Independent)
- Dawson — Andrew Willcox (Liberal National Party)
- Deakin — Matt Gregg (Australian Labor Party)
- Dickson — Ali France (Australian Labor Party)
- Dobell — Emma McBride (Australian Labor Party)
- Dunkley — Jodie Belyea (Australian Labor Party)
- Durack — Melissa Price (Liberal Party)
- Eden-Monaro — Kristy McBain (Australian Labor Party)
- Fadden — Cameron Caldwell (Liberal National Party)
- Fairfax — Ted O'Brien (Liberal National Party)
- Farrer — Sussan Ley (Liberal Party)
- Fenner — Andrew Leigh (Australian Labor Party)
- Fisher — Andrew Wallace (Liberal National Party)
- Flinders — Zoe McKenzie (Liberal Party)
- Flynn — Colin Boyce (Liberal National Party)
- Forde — Rowan Holzberger (Australian Labor Party)
- Forrest — Ben Small (Liberal Party)
- Fowler — Dai Le (Independent)
- Franklin — Julie Collins (Australian Labor Party)
- Fraser — Daniel Mulino (Australian Labor Party)
- Fremantle — Josh Wilson (Australian Labor Party)
- Gellibrand — Tim Watts (Australian Labor Party)
- Gilmore — Fiona Phillips (Australian Labor Party)
- Gippsland — Darren Chester (The Nationals)
- Goldstein — Tim Wilson (Liberal Party)
- Gorton — Alice Jordan-Baird (Australian Labor Party)
- Grayndler — Anthony Albanese (Australian Labor Party)
- Greenway — Michelle Rowland (Australian Labor Party)
- Grey — Tom Venning (Liberal Party)
- Griffith — Renee Coffey (Australian Labor Party)
- Groom — Garth Hamilton (Liberal National Party)
- Hasluck — Tania Lawrence (Australian Labor Party)
- Hawke — Sam Rae (Australian Labor Party)
- Herbert — Phillip Thompson (Liberal National Party)
- Hindmarsh — Mark Butler (Australian Labor Party)
- Hinkler — David Batt (Liberal National Party)
- Holt — Cassandra Fernando (Australian Labor Party)
- Hotham — Clare O'Neil (Australian Labor Party)
- Hughes — David Moncrieff (Liberal Party)
- Hume — Angus Taylor (Liberal Party)
- Hunter — Dan Repacholi (Australian Labor Party)
- Indi — Helen Haines (Independent)
- Isaacs — Mark Dreyfus (Australian Labor Party)
- Jagajaga — Kate Thwaites (Australian Labor Party)
- Kennedy — Bob Katter (Katter's Australian Party)
- Kingsford Smith — Matt Thistlethwaite (Australian Labor Party)
- Kingston — Amanda Rishworth (Australian Labor Party)
- Kooyong — Monique Ryan (Independent)
- La Trobe — Jason Wood (Liberal Party)
- Lalor — Joanne Ryan (Australian Labor Party)
- Leichhardt — Matt Smith (Liberal National Party)
- Lilley — Anika Wells (Australian Labor Party)
- Lindsay — Melissa McIntosh (Liberal Party)
- Lingiari — Marion Scrymgour (Australian Labor Party)
- Longman — Terry Young (Liberal National Party)
- Lyne — Alison Penfold (The Nationals)
- Lyons — Rebecca White (Australian Labor Party)
- Macarthur — Mike Freelander (Australian Labor Party)
- Mackellar — Sophie Scamps (Independent)
- Macnamara — Josh Burns (Australian Labor Party)
- Macquarie — Susan Templeman (Australian Labor Party)
- Makin — Tony Zappia (Australian Labor Party)
- Mallee — Anne Webster (The Nationals)
- Maranoa — David Littleproud (Liberal National Party)
- Maribyrnong — Jo Briskey (Australian Labor Party)
- Mayo — Rebekha Sharkie (Independent)
- McEwen — Rob Mitchell (Australian Labor Party)
- McMahon — Chris Bowen (Australian Labor Party)
- McPherson — Leon Rebello (Liberal National Party)
- Melbourne — Sarah Witty (Australian Labor Party)
- Menzies — Gabriel Ng (Australian Labor Party)
- Mitchell — Alex Hawke (Liberal Party)
- Monash — Mary Aldred (Liberal Party)
- Moncrieff — Angie Bell (Liberal National Party)
- Moore — Tom French (Australian Labor Party)
- Moreton — Julie-Ann Campbell (Australian Labor Party)
- New England — Barnaby Joyce (The Nationals)
- Newcastle — Sharon Claydon (Australian Labor Party)
- Nicholls — Sam Birrell (The Nationals)
- O'Connor — Rick Wilson (Liberal Party)
- Oxley — Milton Dick (Australian Labor Party)
- Page — Kevin Hogan (The Nationals)
- Parkes — Jamie Chaffey (The Nationals)
- Parramatta — Andrew Charlton (Australian Labor Party)
- Paterson — Meryl Swanson (Australian Labor Party)
- Pearce — Tracey Roberts (Australian Labor Party)
- Perth — Patrick Gorman (Australian Labor Party)
- Petrie — Emma Comer (Australian Labor Party)
- Rankin — Jim Chalmers (Australian Labor Party)
- Reid — Sally Sitou (Australian Labor Party)
- Richmond — Justine Elliot (Australian Labor Party)
- Riverina — Michael McCormack (The Nationals)
- Robertson — Gordon Reid (Australian Labor Party)
- Ryan — Elizabeth Watson-Brown (Australian Greens)
- Scullin — Andrew Giles (Australian Labor Party)
- Shortland — Pat Conroy (Australian Labor Party)
- Solomon — Luke Gosling (Australian Labor Party)
- Spence — Matt Burnell (Australian Labor Party)
- Sturt — Claire Clutterham (Australian Labor Party)
- Swan — Zaneta Mascarenhas (Australian Labor Party)
- Sydney — Tanya Plibersek (Australian Labor Party)
- Tangney — Sam Lim (Australian Labor Party)
- Wannon — Dan Tehan (Liberal Party)
- Warringah — Zali Steggall (Independent)
- Watson — Tony Burke (Australian Labor Party)
- Wentworth — Allegra Spender (Independent)
- Werriwa — Anne Stanley (Australian Labor Party)
- Whitlam — Carol Berry (Australian Labor Party)
- Wide Bay — Llew O'Brien (Liberal National Party)
- Wills — Peter Khalil (Australian Labor Party)
- Wright — Scott Buchholz (Liberal National Party)
The plan in detail
You are seeing this fallback because your browser has JavaScript disabled. The full interactive site requires JavaScript.