About our Coalition (Australia) news
Latest news on Australia's Coalition, covering the Liberal Party, National Party, federal elections, political leadership, and government policy developments.
Australia's Coalition represents a centre-right political alliance between the Liberal Party and the National Party. Formally established as a permanent partnership in 1946, the Coalition has historically served as a major force in Australian politics, alternating between government and opposition across multiple decades. The Nationals traditionally represent regional and rural interests, whilst the Liberals form the larger urban-focused partner, with the alliance commanding significant parliamentary influence during both governance and opposition phases.
The Coalition experienced a historic electoral defeat at the 3 May 2025 federal election, losing to Anthony Albanese's centre-left Labor Party. The Liberals were reduced to their lowest seat share since the party's formation in 1946, retaining only 28 of 150 House seats, whilst Nationals held 15 seats. Peter Dutton, who led the Coalition into the election, lost his own Brisbane seat of Dickson and subsequently resigned as Liberal leader. Following the electoral loss, Sussan Ley was elected the first female leader of the Liberal Party, becoming Opposition Leader and heading the shadow ministry.
The Coalition faced significant internal strain following the election loss. On 20 May 2025, the National Party formally withdrew from the coalition agreement, citing fundamental policy differences over nuclear energy expansion, supermarket market power, regional development investment, and telecommunications infrastructure. After a week of negotiations, a renewed coalition agreement was reached on 28 May 2025, with the Liberals accepting key Nationals demands including a lifting of Australia's national moratorium on nuclear energy. By September and October 2025, the Coalition recorded polling at record lows across multiple measures.
Energy policy remains central to Coalition-Labor divisions, reflecting broader ideological differences over Australia's future. The Coalition advocates for nuclear power as baseload generation alongside renewables, targeting 38 per cent nuclear capacity by 2050. This contrasts sharply with Labor's renewable-focused transition strategy, creating sustained parliamentary and public debate about managing Australia's aging coal-fired generation fleet and electricity affordability.
The Coalition's post-war political history reflects changing Australian society. Following thirteen years of Coalition government ending in 2022, the alliance has faced particular challenges in major cities, where independent candidates and the Greens have captured previously safe Coalition seats, particularly on climate and gender equality issues. The party's membership has declined significantly, with mass resignations reported in some states, suggesting structural challenges beyond recent electoral setbacks.
Australia's opposition Coalition remains a complex political formation managing tensions between urban and regional constituencies. Whether under continued leadership of Sussan Ley or future leaders, Coalition strategy will centre on rebuilding urban support whilst maintaining rural National Party partnership. Our NewsNow feed on the Coalition provides comprehensive, up-to-date coverage of developments in this major political bloc, tracking policy announcements, leadership changes, polling trends, and parliamentary activity shaping Australian politics.