City
Epaper

Australia's conservative opposition splits following historic election defeat

By IANS | Updated: May 20, 2025 13:33 IST

Canberra, May 20 Australia's conservative Coalition has split after the National Party announced it would not re-enter a ...

Open in App

Canberra, May 20 Australia's conservative Coalition has split after the National Party announced it would not re-enter a partnership with the Liberal Party following a historic defeat at the federal election.

David Littleproud, leader of the Nationals, on Tuesday said that the party has made the decision not to enter into a new Coalition agreement for the 48th parliament after a breakdown in negotiations with new Liberal leader Sussan Ley.

It comes after the May 3 election for the 48th parliament, at which the governing centre-left Labor Party was re-elected in a historic landslide.

"The National Party will sit alone on a principle basis," Littleproud told reporters in Canberra.

"On the basis of looking forward, not having to look back, and to try and actually regain important policy pieces that change the lives of the people we represent."

It marks the first time since 1987 that the Coalition has split. Since re-forming after the 1987 election, the Coalition governed Australia between 1996 and 2007 and again from 2013 to 2022, with the urban-focused Liberal Party serving as the senior partner and the rural-focused National Party as the junior.

The terms of the agreement have been renegotiated after each general election, but have always been kept secret.

Littleproud said on Tuesday that he and Ley, who was elected as Liberal leader by party members on May 13, could not reach an agreement on policy positions including nuclear power and divestiture powers for major supermarket chains.

However, he said that he would work with Ley "every day" to rebuild the relationship with a goal of re-entering a coalition agreement before the next general election.

The Australian Electoral Commission said that, as of Tuesday, Liberal and National candidates were leading the vote count in 42 of the 150 seats that will comprise the lower house of the 48th parliament, where the government is formed, down from the 58 seats the Coalition won at the 2022 election, Xinhua news agency reported.

Labor candidates were leading the count in 94 seats, the AEC said, which would equal the most seats won by any party at an election in Australian history.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalEAM Jaishankar arrives in Denmark, lauds its support against terrorism; Advances green strategic partnership

Other SportsKIBG 2025: Pencak Silat gold medallists Kirtana, Prasanna, Thomas express delight after special win

CricketRR skipper Samson predicts "bright" future for young bowlers, hails Suryavanshi's "awareness"; Vows to return with better mindset

Cricket"His innings was very nice, he was taking chances": MS Dhoni lauds Dewald Brevis after CSK-RR clash in IPL 2025

International"Urgent we get that assistance distributed": UN as supply trucks enter Gaza after weeks of blockade

International Realted Stories

InternationalHamdan bin Mohammed chairs Defence Council meeting

International'Make it in the Emirates' highlights Emirati talent, national industrial growth

InternationalHamdan bin Mohammed witnesses signing of agreement to implement affordable housing projects in Dubai

InternationalDubai Fashion Week Spring/Summer 2026 to launch this September

InternationalFrench Senate delegation meets FS Misri; discusses defence, global challenges, and bilateral roadmap