Template:Short description Template:RedirectTemplate:Redirect Template:Use Australian English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox political party Template:Conservatism in Australia The National Party of Australia, commonly known as the Nationals or simply the Nats, is a centre-right and agrarian political party in Australia. Traditionally representing graziers, farmers, and rural voters generally, it began as the Australian Country Party in 1920 at a federal level. In 1975, it adopted the name National Country Party, before taking its current name in 1982.

Ensuring support for farmers, either through government grants and subsidies or through community appeals, is a major focus of National Party policy. The process for obtaining these funds has come into question in recent years, such as during the Sports Rorts Affair. According to Ian McAllister, the Nationals are the only remaining party from the "wave of agrarian socialist parties set up around the Western world in the 1920s".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Federally, the Nationals are the junior party in a centre-right grouping known in Australian politics as the Coalition, accompanied by the Liberal Party, which is predominantly an urban-based party. When in government the National Party leader has usually served as Deputy Prime Minister. The coalition has occasionally been dissolved on various occasions following electoral defeats, though the splits have not been permanent.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The coalition arrangement varies in each state and territory.

Due to the closeness and integration of the two parties, as well as the declining vote of the Nationals in recent years, it has been proposed several times that the Liberals and the Nationals formally merge. In Queensland, for instance, the Country Party (later National Party) was the senior coalition party between 1925 and 2008, after which it merged with the junior Liberal Party to form the Liberal National Party of Queensland.

The current leader of the National Party is David Littleproud, who represents the Queensland electorate of Maranoa. He replaced Barnaby Joyce following a leadership spill in May 2022, after the Coalition's defeat in the 2022 federal election. The party's deputy leader since May 2025 is Kevin Hogan, who represents the electorate of Page in New South Wales.

HistoryEdit

File:WMcWilliams.JPG
William McWilliams, Country Party leader 1920–1921

The Country Party was formally founded in 1913 in Western Australia, and nationally in 1920, from a number of state-based parties such as the Victorian Farmers' Union (VFU) and the Farmers' and Settlers' Association of New South Wales.<ref name="Aitkin, 1972; Graham, 1959">Aitkin, (1972); Graham, (1959)</ref> Australia's first Country Party was founded in 1912 by Harry J. Stephens, editor of The Farmer & Settler, but, under fierce opposition from rival newspapers,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> failed to gain momentum.

The VFU won a seat in the House of Representatives at the Corangamite by-election held in December 1918, with the help of the newly introduced preferential voting system.<ref name=flinders>Template:Cite news</ref> At the 1919 federal election the state-based Country Parties won federal seats in New South Wales, Victoria and Western Australia. They also began to win seats in state parliaments. In 1920 the Country Party was established as a national party led by William McWilliams from Tasmania. In his first speech as leader, McWilliams laid out the principles of the new party, stating "we crave no alliance, we spurn no support but we intend drastic action to secure closer attention to the needs of primary producers"<ref name=autogenerated1>Neilson, W. (1986) 'McWilliams, William James (1856–1929)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 10, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne.</ref> McWilliams was deposed as party leader in favour of Earle Page in April 1921, following instances where McWilliams voted against the party line. McWilliams later left the Country Party to sit as an Independent.<ref name=autogenerated1 />

According to historian B. D. Graham (1959), the graziers who operated the sheep stations were politically conservative. They disliked the Labor Party, which represented their workers, and feared that Labor governments would pass unfavorable legislation and listen to foreigners and communists. The graziers were satisfied with the marketing organisation of their industry, opposed any change in land tenure and labour relations, and advocated lower tariffs, low freight rates, and low taxes. On the other hand, Graham reports, the small farmers, not the graziers, founded the Country party. The farmers advocated government intervention in the market through price support schemes and marketing pools. The graziers often politically and financially supported the Country party, which in turn made the Country party more conservative.<ref>B.D. Graham, "Graziers in Politics, 1917 To 1929", Historical Studies: Australia and New Zealand, 1959, Vol. 8 Issue 32, pp 383–391</ref>

The Country Party's first election as a united party, in 1922, saw it in an unexpected position of power. It won enough seats to deny the Nationalists an overall majority. It soon became apparent that the price for Country support would be a full-fledged coalition with the Nationalists. However, Page let it be known that his party would not serve under Hughes, and forced his resignation. Page then entered negotiations with the Nationalists' new leader, Stanley Bruce, for a coalition government. Page wanted five seats for his Country Party in a Cabinet of 11, including the Treasurer portfolio and the second rank in the ministry for himself. These terms were unusually stiff for a prospective junior coalition partner in a Westminster system, and especially so for such a new party. Nonetheless, with no other politically realistic coalition partner available, Bruce readily agreed, and the "Bruce-Page Ministry" was formed. This began the tradition of the Country Party leader ranking second in Coalition cabinets.<ref name="Aitkin, 1972; Graham, 1959"/> The party has never had a coalition government with Labor as of 2025.

Page remained dominant in the party until 1939, and briefly served as caretaker prime minister between the death of Joseph Lyons and the election of Robert Menzies as his successor. However, Page gave up the leadership rather than serve under Menzies. The coalition was re-formed under Archie Cameron in 1940, and continued until October 1941 despite the election of Arthur Fadden as leader after the 1940 election. Fadden was well regarded within conservative circles and proved to be a loyal deputy to Menzies in the difficult circumstances of 1941. When Menzies was forced to resign as prime minister, the UAP was so bereft of leadership that Fadden briefly succeeded him (despite the Country Party being the junior partner in the governing coalition). However, the two independents who had been propping up the government rejected Fadden's budget and brought the government down.<ref name="Davey 2006">Davey (2006)</ref> Fadden stood down in favour of Labor leader John Curtin.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The Fadden-led Coalition made almost no headway against Curtin, and was severely defeated in the 1943 election. After that loss, Fadden became deputy Leader of the Opposition under Menzies, a role that continued after Menzies folded the UAP into the Liberal Party of Australia in 1944.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=":0" /> Fadden remained a loyal partner of Menzies, though he was still keen to assert the independence of his party. Indeed, in the lead up to the 1949 federal election, Fadden played a key role in the defeat of the Chifley Labor government, frequently making inflammatory claims about the "socialist" nature of the Labor Party, which Menzies could then "clarify" or repudiate as he saw fit, thus appearing more "moderate". In 1949, Fadden became Treasurer in the second Menzies government and remained so until his retirement in 1958. His successful partnership with Menzies was one of the elements that sustained the coalition, which remained in office until 1972 (Menzies himself retired in 1966).<ref name="Davey 2006"/>

File:John McEwen Swearing In.jpg
John McEwen being sworn in as Prime Minister on 19 December 1967.

Fadden's successor, Trade Minister John McEwen, took the then unusual step of declining to serve as Treasurer, believing he could better ensure that the interests of Australian primary producers were safeguarded. Accordingly, McEwen personally supervised the signing of the first post-war trade treaty with Japan, new trade agreements with New Zealand and Britain, and Australia's first trade agreement with the USSR (1965). In addition to this, he insisted on developing an all-encompassing system of tariff protection that would encourage the development of those secondary industries that would "value add" Australia's primary produce. His success in this endeavour is sometimes dubbed "McEwenism". This was the period of the Country Party's greatest power, as was demonstrated in 1962 when McEwen was able to insist that Menzies sack a Liberal Minister who claimed that Britain's entry into the European Economic Community was unlikely to severely impact the Australian economy as a whole.<ref>Davey (2005)</ref>

File:Gorton Reshuffle February 1971 (1).jpg
Prime Minister John Gorton and new Deputy Prime Minister Doug Anthony at the swearing-in of new Country Party ministers to the Second Gorton Ministry on 5 February 1971 following the retirement of McEwen.

Menzies retired in 1966 and was succeeded by Harold Holt.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> McEwen thus became the longest-tenured member of the government, with the informal right to veto government policy. The most significant instance in which McEwen exercised this right came when Holt disappeared in December 1967.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> John Gorton became the new Liberal Prime Minister in January 1968. McEwen was sworn in as interim prime minister pending the election of the new Liberal leader. Logically, the Liberals' deputy leader, William McMahon, should have succeeded Holt. However, McMahon was a staunch free-trader, and there were also rumours that he was homosexual. As a result, McEwen told the Liberals that he and his party would not serve under McMahon. McMahon stood down in favour of John Gorton. It was only after McEwen announced his retirement that MacMahon was able to successfully challenge Gorton for the Liberal leadership. McEwen's reputation for political toughness led to him being nicknamed "Black Jack" by his allies and enemies alike.<ref>J. M. Barbalet, "Tri-Partism in Australia: The Role of the Australian Country Party", Politics (00323268), 1975, Vol. 10 Issue 1, pp. 1–11</ref>

At the state level, from 1957 to 1989, the Country Party under Frank Nicklin and Joh Bjelke-Petersen dominated governments in Queensland—for the last six of those years ruling in its own right, without the Liberals. This was due to the bjelkemander, a malapportionment in electorates which gave rural voters twice the voting power compared to voters within the city.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> It also took part in governments in New South Wales, Victoria, and Western Australia.<ref>Joseph Bindloss, Queensland (2002) p. 24</ref>

However, successive electoral redistributions after 1964 indicated that the Country Party was losing ground electorally to the Liberals as the rural population declined, and the nature of some parliamentary seats on the urban/rural fringe changed. A proposed merger with the Democratic Labor Party (DLP) under the banner of "National Alliance" was rejected when it failed to find favour with voters at the 1974 state election.

Also in 1974, the Northern Territory members of the party joined with its Liberal party members to form the independent Country Liberal Party. This party continues to represent both parent parties in that territory. A separate party, the Joh-inspired NT Nationals, competed in the 1987 election with former Chief Minister Ian Tuxworth winning his seat of Barkly by a small margin. However, this splinter group was not endorsed by the national executive and soon disappeared from the political scene.<ref>Jeremy Moon and Campbell Sharman, Australian politics and government (2003) p. 228</ref>

National Country Party and National PartyEdit

The National Party was confronted by the impact of demographic shifts from the 1970s: between 1971 and 1996, the population of Sydney and surrounds grew by 34%, with even larger growth in coastal New South Wales, while more remote rural areas grew by a mere 13%, further diminishing the National Party's base.<ref name=green /> At the federal convention held on 2 May 1975 in Canberra, the Country Party changed its name to the National Country Party of Australia as part of a strategy to expand into urban areas.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> This had some success in Queensland under Joh Bjelke-Petersen, but nowhere else. The party briefly walked out of the coalition agreement in Western Australia in May 1975, returning within the month. However, the party split in two over the decision and other factors in late 1978, with a new National Party forming and becoming independent, holding three seats in the Western Australian lower house, while the National Country Party remained in coalition and also held three seats. They reconciled after the Burke Labor government came to power in 1983.

The 1980s were dominated by the feud between Bjelke-Petersen and the federal party leadership under Ian Sinclair. Bjelke-Petersen briefly triumphed in 1987, forcing the Nationals to tear up the Coalition agreement and support his bid to become prime minister. The "Joh for Canberra" campaign backfired spectacularly when a large number of three-cornered contests allowed Labor to win a third term under Bob Hawke; however, in 1987 the National Party won a bump in votes and recorded its highest vote in more than four decades, but it also recorded a new low in the proportion of seats won.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The collapse of Joh for Canberra also proved to be the Queensland Nationals' last hurrah; Bjelke-Petersen was forced into retirement a few months after the federal election, and his party was heavily defeated in 1989. The federal National Party were badly defeated at the 1990 election, losing five seats including that of leader Charles Blunt, who had ousted Sinclair months earlier.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Blunt's successor as leader, Tim Fischer, recovered two seats at the 1993 election, but lost an additional 1.2% of the vote from its 1990 result. In 1996, as the Coalition won a significant victory over the Keating Labor government, the National Party recovered another two seats, and Fischer became deputy prime minister under John Howard.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The Nationals experienced difficulties in the late 1990s from two fronts – firstly from the Liberal Party, who were winning seats on the basis that the Nationals were not seen to be a sufficiently separate party, and from the One Nation Party riding a swell of rural discontent with many of the policies such as multiculturalism and gun control embraced by all of the major parties. The rise of Labor in formerly safe National-held areas in rural Queensland, particularly on the coast, has been the biggest threat to the Queensland Nationals.

At the 1998 Federal election, the National Party recorded only 5.3% of the vote in the House of Representatives, its lowest ever, and won only 16 seats, at 10.8% its second lowest proportion of seats.<ref name="green">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The National Party under Fischer and his successor, John Anderson, rarely engaged in public disagreements with the Liberal Party, which weakened the party's ability to present a separate image to rural and regional Australia. In 2001 the National Party recorded its second-worst result at 5.6% winning 13 seats, and its third lowest at 5.9% at the 2004 election, winning only 12 seats.<ref name="green" />

Australian psephologist Antony Green argues that two important trends have driven the National Party's decline at a federal level: "the importance of the rural sector to the health of the nation's economy" and "the growing chasm between the values and attitudes of rural and urban Australia". Green has suggested that the result has been that "Both have resulted in rural and regional voters demanding more of the National Party, at exactly the time when its political influence has declined. While the National Party has never been the sole representative of rural Australia, it is the only party that has attempted to paint itself as representing rural voters above all else",<ref name="green" />

In June 2005, party leader John Anderson announced that he would resign from the ministry and as Leader of the Nationals due to a benign prostate condition, he was succeeded by Mark Vaile. At the following 2007 election, the Nationals vote declined further, with the party winning a mere 5.4% of the vote and securing only 10 seats.<ref name="parliament">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Vaile announced his resignation as party leader which surprised his colleagues, as he had been expected to be re-elected unopposed following the election.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He had planned the party leadership to go to Peter McGauran but the latter declined to stand. Warren Truss and Nigel Scullion were then elected unopposed as leader and deputy leader.

In 2010, under the leadership of Truss, the party received its lowest vote to date, at only 3.4%, however they secured a slight increase in seats from 10 to 12. At the following election in 2010 the national Party's fortunes improved slightly with a vote of 4.2% and an increase in seats from 12 to 15.<ref name="parliament" />

At the 2016 double dissolution election, under the leadership of Barnaby Joyce the party secured 4.6% of the vote and 16 seats. In 2018, reports emerged that the National Party leader and deputy prime minister, Barnaby Joyce was expecting a child with his former communications staffer Vikki Campion. Joyce resigned after revelations that he had been engaged in an extramarital affair. Later in the same year it was revealed that the NSW National party and its youth wing, the Young Nationals had been infiltrated by neo-Nazis with more than 30 members being investigated for alleged links to neo-Nazism. Leader McCormack denounced the infiltration, and several suspected neo-Nazis were expelled from the party and its youth wing.<ref name="parliament" /><ref>*Template:Cite news

At the 2019 Australian federal election, despite severe drought, perceived inaction over the plight of the Murray–Darling Basin, a poor performance in the New South Wales state election and sex scandals surrounding the member for Mallee, Andrew Broad and former party leader Barnaby Joyce, the National Party saw only a small decline in vote, down 0.10% to attain 4.51% of the primary vote.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Following the 2025 federal election, the Nationals decided not to sign a new Coalition agreement with the Liberals. This resulted in the two parties operating separately for the first time since the 1980s, and thus reducing the Nationals to third party status in the Australian Parliament, sitting on the crossbench.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The split lasted only eight days, following agreement on several policy areas that the Nationals had advocated, and a new shadow ministry was revealed.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

State and territory partiesEdit

The official state and territorial party organisations (or equivalents) of the National Party are:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Party Leader Last election Status Federal representatives
Lower House Upper House MPs Senators
Year Votes (%) Seats votes (%) Seats
style="width:2px;background:Template:Party color;"| Liberal National Party of QueenslandTemplate:Efn David Crisafulli 2024 41.5 Template:Composition bar align=center colspan=2 Template:N/ATemplate:Efn Majority Template:Composition bar Template:Composition bar
style="width:2px;background:Template:Party color;"| Country Liberal Party (Northern Territory)Template:Efn Lia Finocchiaro 2024 48.9 Template:Composition bar align=center colspan=2 Template:N/ATemplate:Efn Majority Template:Composition bar Template:Composition bar
style="width:2px;background:Template:Party color;"| National Party of New South Wales Dugald Saunders 2023 8.6 Template:Composition bar 29.8Template:Efn Template:Composition bar Liberal–National coalition opposition Template:Composition bar Template:Composition bar
style="width:2px;background:Template:Party color;"| National Party of Victoria Danny O'Brien 2022 4.7 Template:Composition bar 29.4Template:Efn Template:Composition bar Liberal–National coalition opposition Template:Composition bar Template:Composition bar
style="width:2px;background:Template:Party color;"| National Party of Western Australia Shane Love 2021 4.1 Template:Composition bar 2.8 Template:Composition bar Liberal–National coalition opposition Template:Composition bar Template:Composition bar
style="width:2px;background:Template:Party color;"| National Party of South Australia 2022 0.4 Template:Composition bar 0.7 Template:Composition bar Template:No Template:Composition bar Template:Composition bar
style="width:2px;background:Template:Party color;"| National Party of Tasmania 2024 None Template:Composition bar align=right Template:N/ATemplate:Efn Template:Composition bar Template:No Template:Composition bar Template:Composition bar

Political roleEdit

File:Embassy of Argentina in Canberra.jpg
John McEwen House, The National Party's headquarters in Canberra

The Nationals see their main role as giving a voice to Australians who live outside the country's metropolitan areas.

Traditionally, the leader of the National Party serves as Deputy Prime Minister when there is a coalition agreement with the Liberal Party, and the two form Government. This tradition dates back to the creation of the office in 1968.

The National Party's support base and membership are closely associated with the agricultural community. Historically anti-union, the party has vacillated between state support for primary industries ("agrarian socialism") and free agricultural trade and has opposed tariff protection for Australia's manufacturing and service industries. It is usually in favor of industrial development, opposing green politics.

"Countrymindedness" was a slogan that summed up the ideology of the Country Party from 1920 through the early 1970s.<ref>Rae Wear, "Countrymindedness Revisited", (Australian Political Science Association, 1990) online edition Template:Webarchive</ref> It was an ideology that was physiocratic, populist, and decentralist; it fostered rural solidarity and justified demands for government subsidies. "Countrymindedness" grew out of the failure of the country areas to participate in the rapid economic and population expansions that occurred after 1890. The growth of the ideology into urban areas came as most country people migrated to jobs in the cities. Its decline was due mainly to the reduction of real and psychological differences between country and city brought about by the postwar expansion of the Australian urban population and to the increased affluence and technological changes that accompanied it.<ref>Don Aitkin, "'Countrymindedness': The Spread of an Idea", ACH: The Journal of the History of Culture in Australia, April 1985, Vol. 4, pp. 34–41</ref><ref>C.J. Duncan, "The demise of 'countrymindedness': New players or changing values in Australian rural politics?" Political Geography, Sep 1992, Vol. 11 Issue 5, pp. 430–448</ref>

The Nationals vote is in decline and its traditional supporters are turning instead to prominent independents such as Bob Katter, Tony Windsor and Peter Andren in Federal Parliament and similar independents in the Parliaments of New South Wales, Queensland and Victoria, many of whom are former members of the National Party. In fact since the 2004 Federal election, National Party candidates have received fewer first preference votes than the Australian Greens.

Demographic changes are not helping, with fewer people living and employed on the land or in small towns, the continued growth of the larger provincial centres, and, in some cases, the arrival of left-leaning "city refugees" in rural areas. The Liberals have also gained support as the differences between the coalition partners on a federal level have become invisible. This was highlighted in January 2006, when Nationals Senator Julian McGauran defected to the Liberals, saying that there was "no longer any real distinguishing policy or philosophical difference".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In Queensland, Nationals leader Lawrence Springborg advocated merger of the National and Liberal parties at a state level in order to present a more effective opposition to the Labor Party. Previously this plan had been dismissed by the Queensland branch of the Liberal party, but the idea received in-principle support from the Liberals. Federal leader Mark Vaile stated the Nationals will not merge with the Liberal Party at a federal level. The plan was opposed by key Queensland Senators Ron Boswell and Barnaby Joyce, and was scuttled in 2006. After suffering defeat in the 2006 Queensland poll, Lawrence Springborg was replaced by Jeff Seeney, who indicated he was not interested in merging with the Liberal Party until the issue is seriously raised at a Federal level.

In September 2008, Joyce replaced CLP Senator and Nationals deputy leader Nigel Scullion as leader of the Nationals in the Senate, and stated that his party in the upper house would no longer necessarily vote with their Liberal counterparts in the upper house, which opened up another possible avenue for the Rudd Labor government to get legislation through.<ref name="news.smh.com.au">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="theaustralian.news.com.au">Template:Cite news</ref> Joyce was elected leader in a party-room ballot on 11 February 2016, following the retirement of former leader and Deputy Prime Minister Warren Truss.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Joyce was one of five politicians disqualified from parliament in October 2017 for holding dual citizenship, along with former deputy leader, Fiona Nash.

The 1987 Australian federal election was the last time the National party received over 10% of the vote and the 2007 Australian federal election was the last time the National party received over 5% of the vote for the House of Representatives.

Queensland Liberal/National mergerEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Merger plans came to a head in May 2008, when the Queensland state Liberal Party gave an announcement not to wait for a federal blueprint but instead to merge immediately. The new party, the Liberal National Party, was founded in July 2008.

Electoral performanceEdit

House of RepresentativesEdit

Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Position Status
1919 None 176,884 8.7 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 11 Template:Increase 3rd Template:No2
1922 Earle Page 197,513 12.5 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 3 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1925 313,363 10.7 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 1 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1928 271,686 10.4 Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1929 295,640 10.2 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 3 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
1931 388,544 12.2 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 6 Template:Increase 2nd Template:No2
1934 447,968 12.6 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 2 Template:Decrease 3rd Template:Yes2
1937 560,279 15.5 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 2 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1940 Archie Cameron 531,397 13.7 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 3 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1943 Arthur Fadden 287,000 6.9 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 6 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
1946 464,737 10.7 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 4 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
1949 500,349 10.8 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 8 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1951 443,713 9.7 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 2 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1954 388,171 8.5 Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1955 347,445 7.9 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1958 John McEwen 465,320 9.3 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1961 446,475 8.5 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 2 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1963 489,498 8.9 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 3 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1966 561,926 9.8 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1969 523,232 8.5 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 1 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1972 Doug Anthony 622,826 9.4 Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
1974 736,252 9.9 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
1975 869,919 11.2 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 2 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1977 793,444 10.0 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 4 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1980 745,037 8.9 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1983 799,609 9.2 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 3 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
1984 Ian Sinclair 921,151 10.6 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 4 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
1987 1,060,976 11.5 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 2 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
1990 Charles Blunt 833,557 8.4 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 5 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
1993 Tim Fischer 758,036 7.1 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 2 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
1996 893,170 7.1 Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 2 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
1998 588,088 5.2 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 2 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
2001 John Anderson 643,926 5.6 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 3 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
2004 690,275 5.8 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 1 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
2007 Mark Vaile 682,424 5.4 Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 2 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
2010 Warren Truss 419,286 3.4 Template:Composition barTemplate:Efn Template:Increase 2 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
2013 554,268 4.2 Template:Composition barTemplate:Efn Template:Increase 3 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
2016 Barnaby Joyce 624,555 4.6 Template:Composition barTemplate:Efn Template:Increase 1 Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
2019 Michael McCormack 642,233 4.5 Template:Composition barTemplate:Efn Template:Steady Template:Steady 3rd Template:Yes2
2022 Barnaby Joyce 528,442 3.6 Template:Composition barTemplate:Efn Template:Steady Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2
2025 David Littleproud 588,770 3.8 Template:Composition barTemplate:Efn Template:Decrease 1 Template:Steady 3rd Template:No2

Template:Reflist

LeadershipEdit

Template:Further

List of leadersEdit

# Leader State Term start Term end Time in office Notes
1 File:WMcWilliams.JPG Template:Sortname Tasmania Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd
2 File:Earle Page.jpg Template:Sortname New South Wales Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:No wrap Prime Minister: 1939
Deputy PM: 1923–29, 1934–39
3 File:Archie Cameron 1940.jpg Template:Sortname South Australia 13 September 1939 Template:Dts Template:Ayd Deputy PM: 1940
4 File:Arthur Fadden.jpg Template:Sortname Queensland Template:Dts
Template:Small
Template:Small
Template:Dts Template:Ayd Prime Minister: 1941
Deputy PM: 1940–41, 1949–58
5 File:Sir John McEwen.jpg Template:Sortname Victoria Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd Prime Minister: 1967–68
Deputy PM: 1958–67, 1968–71
6 File:Doug Anthony 1974 (cropped).jpg Template:Sortname New South Wales Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd Deputy PM: 1971–72, 1975–83
7 File:Ian Sinclair 1970 (cropped).jpg Template:Sortname New South Wales Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd
8 Template:Sortname New South Wales Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd
9 File:Tim Fischer.jpg Template:Sortname New South Wales Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd Deputy PM: 1996–99
10 File:John Anderson at Newstead (cropped).jpg Template:Sortname New South Wales Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd Deputy PM: 1999–2005
11 File:Mark Vaile (TM).jpg Template:Sortname New South Wales Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Nowrap Deputy PM: 2005–07
12 File:Warren Truss Portrait 2010.jpg Template:Sortname Queensland Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd Deputy PM: 2013–16
13 File:Barnaby Joyce portrait.jpg Template:Sortname New South Wales Template:Dts 26 February 2018 Template:Ayd Deputy PM: 2016–18
14 File:Michael McCormack 2018-02 (cropped).jpg Template:Sortname New South Wales 26 February 2018 Template:Dts Template:Ayd Deputy PM: 2018–21
(13) File:Barnaby Joyce portrait.jpg Template:Sortname New South Wales 21 June 2021 30 May 2022 Template:Ayd Deputy PM: 2021–22
15 File:David Littleproud.jpg Template:Sortname Queensland 30 May 2022 Incumbent Template:Ayd

List of deputy leadersEdit

Order Name State Term start Term end Time in office Leader
1 Template:Sortname Victoria 24 February 1920 5 April 1921 Template:Ayd McWilliams
2 Henry Gregory Western Australia 5 April 1921 2 December 1921 Template:Ayd Page
vacant 23 February 1922 27 June 1922
3 William Fleming New South Wales 27 June 1922 16 January 1923 Template:Ayd
4 William Gibson Victoria 16 January 1923 19 November 1929 Template:Ayd
5 Thomas Paterson New South Wales 19 November 1929 27 November 1937 Template:Ayd
6 Harold Thorby Template:Ayd
New South Wales 27 November 1937 15 October 1940 Cameron
7 Arthur Fadden Queensland 15 October 1940 12 March 1941 Template:Ayd vacant
vacant 12 March 1941 22 September 1943 Fadden
8 John McEwen Victoria 22 September 1943 26 March 1958 Template:Nowrap
9 Charles Davidson Queensland 26 March 1958 11 December 1963 Template:Ayd McEwen
10 Charles Adermann Queensland 11 December 1963 8 December 1966 Template:Ayd
11 Doug Anthony New South Wales 8 December 1966 2 February 1971 Template:Ayd
12 Ian Sinclair New South Wales 2 February 1971 17 January 1984 Template:Nowrap Anthony
13 Ralph Hunt New South Wales 17 January 1984 24 July 1987 Template:Ayd Sinclair
14 Bruce Lloyd Template:Ayd
Victoria 24 July 1987 23 March 1993 Blunt
Fischer
15 John Anderson New South Wales 23 March 1993 1 July 1999 Template:Ayd
16 Mark Vaile New South Wales 1 July 1999 23 June 2005 Template:Ayd Anderson
17 Warren Truss Queensland 23 June 2005 3 December 2007 Template:Ayd Vaile
18 Nigel Scullion Northern Territory 3 December 2007 13 September 2013 Template:Ayd Truss
19 Barnaby Joyce Queensland 13 September 2013 11 February 2016 Template:Ayd
20 Fiona Nash New South Wales 11 February 2016 7 December 2017 Template:Ayd Joyce
21 Bridget McKenzie 7 December 2017 2 February 2020
Victoria Template:Ayd McCormack
22 David Littleproud Template:Ayd
Queensland 4 February 2020 30 May 2022 Joyce
23 Perin Davey New South Wales 30 May 2022 12 May 2025 Template:Ayd Littleproud
24 Kevin Hogan New South Wales 12 May 2025 Incumbent Template:Ayd Littleproud

List of Senate leadersEdit

The Country Party's first senators began their terms in 1926, but the party had no official leader in the upper chamber until 1935. Instead, the party nominated a "representative" or "liaison officer" where necessary – usually William Carroll. This was so that its members "were first and foremost representatives of their states, able to enjoy complete freedom of action and speech in the Senate and not beholden to the dictates of [...] a party Senate leader". On 3 October 1935, Charles Hardy was elected as Carroll's replacement and began using the title "Leader of the Country Party in the Senate". This usage was disputed by Carroll and Bertie Johnston, but a subsequent party meeting on 10 October confirmed Hardy's position.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> However, after Hardy's term ended in 1938 (due to his defeat at the 1937 election), the party did not elect another Senate leader until 1949 – apparently due to its small number of senators.<ref>Davey (2010), p. 58.</ref>

Unlike the leader in the House of Representatives, the Senate leader has not always been a member of the ministry or shadow ministry at all times.

# Name State Term start Term end Time in office Deputy
1 Template:Sortname New South Wales 10 October 1935 30 June 1938 Template:Ayd
vacant 30 June 1938 1949
2 Template:Sortname Queensland Template:Dts Template:Dts
3 Template:Sortname Victoria Template:Dts Template:Dts
4 Template:Sortname New South Wales Template:Dts Template:Dts
5 Template:Sortname Western Australia Template:Dts Template:Dts
6 Template:Sortname Victoria Template:Dts Template:Dts
7 Template:Sortname New South Wales Template:Dts Template:Dts
8 Template:Sortname Queensland Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd
9 Template:Sortname Queensland Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd
10 Template:Sortname Queensland Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Nowrap Sandy Macdonald
11 Template:Sortname Northern Territory Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd Ron Boswell
12 Template:Sortname Queensland Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd Fiona Nash
(11) Template:Sortname Northern Territory Template:Dts Template:Dts Template:Ayd
13 Template:Sortname Victoria Template:Dts incumbent Template:Ayd Matt Canavan

Past heads of government and opposition leadersEdit

Template:Col-begin Template:Col-2

FederalEdit

Name Role Term
Earle Page Prime Minister 7 April 1939 – 26 April 1939
Arthur Fadden Prime Minister 29 August 1941 – 7 October 1941
Leader of the Opposition 7 October 1941 – 23 September 1943
John McEwen Prime Minister 19 December 1967 – 10 January 1968

QueenslandEdit

Name Role Term
William Vowles Leader of the Opposition 28 July 1920 – 11 July 1923
Arthur Moore Leader of the Opposition 19 April 1924 – 12 May 1925
7 April 1936 – 15 July 1936
Ted Maher Leader of the Opposition 15 July 1936 – 21 May 1941
Frank Nicklin Leader of the Opposition 21 May 1941 – 12 August 1957
Premier 12 August 1957 – 17 January 1968
Jack Pizzey Premier 17 January 1968 – 31 July 1968
Joh Bjelke-Petersen Premier 8 August 1968 – 1 December 1987
Mike Ahern Premier 1 December 1987 – 25 September 1989
Russell Cooper Premier 25 September 1989 – 7 December 1989
Leader of the Opposition 7 December 1989 – 9 December 1991
Rob Borbidge Leader of the Opposition 10 December 1991 – 19 February 1996
Premier 19 February 1996 – 20 June 1998
Leader of the Opposition 20 June 1998 – 2 March 2001
Mike Horan Leader of the Opposition 2 March 2001 – 4 February 2003
Lawrence Springborg Leader of the Opposition 4 February 2003 – 18 September 2006
Jeff Seeney Leader of the Opposition 18 September 2006 – 29 January 2008
Lawrence Springborg Leader of the Opposition 29 January 2008 – 26 July 2008

VictoriaEdit

Name Role Term
John Allan Premier 18 November 1924 – 20 May 1927
Albert Dunstan Premier 2 April 1935 – 14 September 1943
Leader of the Opposition 14 September 1943 – 18 September 1943
Premier 18 September 1943 – 2 October 1945
John McDonald Leader of the Opposition 21 November 1945 – 20 November 1947
7 December 1948 – 27 June 1950
Premier 27 June 1950 – 28 October 1952
31 October 1952 – 17 December 1952

Western AustraliaEdit

Name Role Term
Charles Latham Leader of the Opposition 24 April 1933 – 8 October 1942
Arthur Watts Leader of the Opposition 8 October 1942 – 1 April 1947
Mia Davies Leader of the Opposition 14 April 2021 – 30 January 2023
Shane Love Leader of the Opposition 30 January 2023 – 25 March 2025

Template:Col-end

DonorsEdit

Template:See also For the 2015–2016 financial year, the top ten disclosed donors to the National Party were: Manildra Group ($182,000), Ognis Pty Ltd ($100,000), Trepang Services ($70,000), Northwake Pty Ltd ($65,000), Hancock Prospecting ($58,000), Bindaree Beef ($50,000), Mowburn Nominees ($50,000), Retail Guild of Australia ($48,000), CropLife International ($43,000) and Macquarie Group ($38,000).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The National Party also receives undisclosed funding through several methods, such as "associated entities". John McEwen House, Pilliwinks and Doogary are entities which have been used to funnel donations to the National Party without disclosing the source.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

See alsoEdit

Template:Portal

Further readingEdit

  • Aitkin, Don. The country party in New South Wales (1972)
  • Aitkin, Don. "'Countrymindedness': The Spread of an Idea", ACH: The Journal of the History of Culture in Australia, April 1985, Vol. 4, pp 34–41
  • Davey, Paul. The Nationals: the Progressive, Country, and National Party in New South Wales 1919–2006 (2006)
  • Davey, Paul. "Politics in the Blood – The Anthonys of Richmond" (2008)
  • Davey, Paul. "Ninety Not Out – The Nationals 1920-2010" (2010)
  • Davey, Paul. "The Country Party Prime Ministers – Their Trials and Tribulations" (2011)
  • Duncan, C.J. "The demise of 'countrymindedness': New players or changing values in Australian rural politics?" Political Geography, Sep 1992, Vol. 11 Issue 5, pp 430–448
  • Graham, B. D. "Graziers in Politics, 1917 To 1929", Historical Studies: Australia and New Zealand, 1959, Vol. 8 Issue 32, pp 383–391
  • Leithner, Christian. "Rational Behaviour, Economic Conditions and the Australian Country Party, 1922–1937", Australian Journal of Political Science, July 1991, Vol. 26 Issue 2, pp 240–259
  • Williams, John R. "The Organization of the Australian National Party", Australian Quarterly, 1969, Vol. 41 Issue 2, pp 41–51,
  • Template:Cite news

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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