06.43 BSTSize of Labor majority remains unclear, with 16 seats still in doubtJosh ButlerLabor has won the election, but the size of its majority in the House of Representatives remains unclear.There are a number of seats still to be decided and the counts are progressing slowly.The ABC’s election results show 16 seats are still in doubt.The Australian Electoral Commission hasn’t officially declared any seats yet, but says Labor is leading in 86, the Coalition leading in 40, independents in 11, Bob Katter in his seat and Rebekha Sharkie in hers; another two seats are too close to attribute, and in nine seats, the two-candidate-preferred count is still being calculated.The AEC also says 22 seats are “close”.Goldstein independent MP Zoe Daniel is ahead by a sliver according to the latest counting. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The GuardianIf you’re a political tragic (like us) and you’ve been watching the results tick over, you might have seen some of the numbers jump around wildly. In some of the seats, that’s because the AEC has “realigned” the two-party vote, after an unexpected challenger became one of the two most popular candidates, meaning the AEC is having to redo its calculations about how to allocate preferences.Some of the closest seats include Longman, Goldstein and Bullwinkel, where the vote is currently 50.05 to 49.95, or separated by about 100 votes.Liberal Tim Wilson is currently 95 votes behind the independent Zoe Daniel in Goldstein; Labor’s Trish Cook leads the Liberals by 85 votes in the new WA seat of Bullwinkel; and LNP’s Terry Young is ahead of Labor in Longman by 102 votes.It might be some time before we get those results, as well as in the seats of Bradfield, Kooyong and Wills.ShareUpdated at 06.56 BST