Dawesville/ 2025 West Australian state election

Here is the Traffic Light Voting Guide for your electorate. You can download, print, and fill it out at home.

Spend some time carefully numbering the white boxes before you head off to vote. When you arrive at the voting booth spread out your Traffic Light Voting Guide and transfer your numbered choices onto the official ballot papers. Alternatively you can use your phone to bring up our website and follow our advice for climate action.

Legislative Assembly Traffic Light Voting Guide

Legislative Council mockup Traffic Light Voting Guide

Scroll down further to check out any Green Light Candidate profiles who have nominated in your electorate.

The team at Vote Climate One encourages all candidates to support the 3Rs and the Climate Rescue Accord to underpin any decisions in the West Australian House of Assembly and Legislative Council relating to action on the climate emergency.

If you have any information which may inform our candidate assessments please use our contact form at the bottom of this page or phone Rob on 0427 580803

Dawesville Green Light Candidates

Sharlene Mavor (LCWA)

Sharlene is a Medical Scientist and co-founder of Medical Cannabis Research Australia, a leading education charity supporting patients and scientific research. She is involved in clinical studies on CBD for methamphetamine addiction and medicinal cannabis for chronic pain. Sharlene has hosted national cannabis education events and promotes sustainable hemp construction, building WA’s first luxury hempcrete accommodation. Sharlene is also a founder of Omega Assets, producing hemp-infused beers and spirits at Valley Social in the Swan Valley.e campaigner.

Sharlene is an Outstanding Green Light Candidate

Susanne Godden (Greens)

 I’ve lived in Falcon since 2016, where I’m a keen conservationist and active community member.

The major parties are failing Dawesville. Years of inaction have delayed much needed upgrades to the Peel Health Campus, and sky-high cost of living is affecting us all. With the WA Labor Government returning a $4.5bn surplus, we should not be fighting for basic human necessities like food, shelter and healthcare. 

This election we have a real opportunity to get more Greens into parliament to push the government further and faster on issues that matter to us, like urgent action on the cost of living, housing and climate crises. 

A better future for WA is possible – but we have to make it happen together.

If you want change, you have to vote for it.