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- Duration: 1:55
- Published: 24 Mar 2011
- Uploaded: 26 Apr 2011
- Author: WorldNewsAustralia
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Coordinates | 6°7′55″N1°13′22″N |
---|---|
Country | Australia |
Name english | The Coalition |
Logo | |
Leader | Tony Abbott MP |
Leader1 title | Deputy Leader |
Leader1 name | Warren Truss MP |
Foundation | 1922 |
Headquarters | Cnr Blackall & Macquarie St, Barton ACT 2600 (Liberal) John McEwen House, 7 National Circuit, Barton ACT 2600 (Nationals) |
Ideology | Conservative liberalism,Liberal conservatism,New RightAgrarianism |
Position | Centre-right |
Colours | Blue and Green |
Colorcode | |
Seats1 title | House of Representatives |
Seats1 | |
Seats2 title | Senate |
Seats2 |
The Coalition in Australian politics refers to a group of centre-right parties that has existed in the form of a coalition agreement (on and off) since 1922. The Coalition partners are the Liberal Party of Australia (or its predecessors before 1945) and the National Party of Australia (known as the Australian Country Party from 1921 to 1975 and the National Country Party of Australia from 1975 to 1982). The Country Liberal Party in the Northern Territory and the Liberal National Party in Queensland are their equivalents in those states, while the National Party of Western Australia and The Nationals South Australia are not in any form of coalition and are separate parties. There is no National Party in the ACT or Tasmania. The Coalition's main rival for government is the centre-left Australian Labor Party.
The Liberal leader usually becomes the Prime Minister or Premier if the parties win government, while the Nationals leader usually becomes the Deputy Prime Minister or Deputy Premier if the parties win government. Queensland was the only state where this system worked in reverse, as Queensland was the only state where the National Party was the stronger coalition partner. However, the Queensland coalition parties merged in 2008, meaning that former party affiliations had no real effect.
The status of the Coalition varies across the Commonwealth and states. Below is the status of each state on a state-by-state basis.
At the federal level, there was until recently a Coalition between the Liberals, Nationals and Country Liberal Party, with the Queensland Liberal National Party participating through their affiliation with the Liberals. This was briefly broken in 1987, but was renewed after the 1987 federal election. In September 2008, Barnaby Joyce became leader of the Nationals in the Senate, with the party moving to the crossbenches. Joyce stated that his party in the upper house would no longer necessarily vote with their Liberal counterparts.
Name english | Coalition Lower House Seats |
---|---|
Name native | (and endorsed parties) |
Colorcode | |
Seats1 title | NSW Parliament |
Seats1 | |
Seats2 title | NT Parliament |
Seats2 | |
Seats3 title | QLD Parliament |
Seats3 | |
Seats4 title | VIC Parliament |
Seats4 | |
Seats5 title | WA Parliament |
Seats5 |
Victoria: A Coalition between the Liberal and National parties exists in Victoria. The Liberal Party is led by Ted Baillieu and the National Party by Peter Ryan. When Ryan became leader of the Nationals shortly after the 1999 election, he briefly terminated the Coalition agreement and went into the 2002 and 2006 elections separately from the Liberals. However, the Coalition agreement was renewed in 2008 and the Victorian Liberal and National parties went into the 2010 election as a Coalition. The Coalition ended up winning the 2010 election with a one-seat margin.
Western Australia: The National Party of Western Australia was in Coalition with the state Liberal government from 1993 to 2001 (see Hendy Cowan), but the Coalition was subsequently broken. In 2008, the Liberals, Nationals, and an independent MP formed the Government after the 2008 election, but this is not characterised as a "traditional coalition", with limited cabinet collective responsibility for National cabinet members. The Leader of the Liberals in Western Australia is Premier Colin Barnett and the Nationals Leader is Brendon Grylls. Tony Crook was elected as the WA Nationals candidate for the seat of O'Connor at the 2010 federal election. He is a crossbencher in the hung parliament. Crook and the WA Nationals remain independent and not in a coalition.
South Australia: The two parties merged to form the Liberal and Country League in 1932. This in turn joined the Liberal party in 1973, and a separate Country Party (later Nationals SA) emerged, which has only ever had two representatives: Peter Blacker from 1973 to 1993, and Karlene Maywald from 1997 to 2010. From 2004 to 2010, Maywald was a Minister in the Rann Labor Government, before losing her seat at the 2010 South Australian state election, thereby informally creating a coalition between the ALP and the National Party at South Australia's state level of government. The National Party, at the time, rejected the notion that it was in a coalition with Labor at the state level. State National Party President John Venus told journalists that: "We (The Nationals) are not in coalition with the Labor Party, we aren't in coalition with the Liberals, we are definitely not in coalition with anyone. We stand alone in South Australia as an independent party." Flinders University political scientist Haydon Manning disagreed, saying that it is "churlish to describe the government as anything but a coalition". The party did not run candidates at the 2010 federal election.
Northern Territory: The two parties merged in 1975, forming the Country Liberal Party. CLP Senator Nigel Scullion is the current deputy leader of the National Party, and was the leader of the Nationals in the Senate until Barnaby Joyce took that position in September 2008. The Country Liberal Party maintains full voting rights with the federal National Party, and has observer status with the federal Liberal Party. Federal CLP members are directed by the CLP whether to sit with the federal Liberals or Nationals.
Indeed, the whole point of introducing preferential voting was to allow safe spoiler-free three-cornered contests. It was a government of the forerunner to the modern Liberal party that introduced the necessary legislation, after Labor won the 1918 Swan by-election after the conservative vote was split in two. Two months later, a by-election held under preferential voting caused the initially-leading ALP candidate to lose after some lower-placed candidates' preferences had been distributed.
As a result of variations on the preferential voting system used in every state and territory, the Coalition has been able to thrive, wherever both its member parties have both been active. The preferential voting system has allowed the Liberal and National parties to compete and cooperate at the same time. By contrast, a variation of the preferential system known as Optional Preferential Voting has proven a significant handicap to coalition co-operation in Queensland and New South Wales, because significant numbers of voters don't express all useful preferences.
Category:Political parties in Australia Category:Liberal Party of Australia Category:National Party of Australia Category:Coalition of parties
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