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Australia’s opposition remained deadlocked this week as the Nationals sent Opposition Leader Sussan Ley a counterproposal aimed at buying time before she appoints a permanent, Liberal-only shadow frontbench.
Ley has demanded the three Nationals senators who crossed the floor on Labor’s hate‑law reforms — Bridget McKenzie, Ross Cadell and Susan McDonald — be sidelined from the frontbench for six months and that the Coalition reaffirm the principle of shadow‑cabinet solidarity and that neither party can overturn shadow‑cabinet decisions.
The three resigned their frontbench roles after voting against the agreed shadow‑cabinet position on January 22.
Nationals leader David Littleproud says those senators must be reinstated and has refused to accept Ley’s conditions, while some Liberals, including Dan Tehan, have urged flexibility on timing.
Ley initially set a hard deadline for reunification ahead of next week’s parliamentary sitting and briefly extended an immediate midday deadline to 9am the following day, but has warned she will fast‑track an all‑Liberal ministry if no deal is reached.
Internal Liberal factional tensions persist, with leadership rivals debating whether to soften Ley’s timetable.
🔗 Based On
ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)Nationals issue Ley with reunion counteroffer as deadline looms
ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)Live: Wong responds to call for Australia to arrest Israeli president
Sydney Morning Herald - Latest NewsTaylor pushes back on Ley’s hardball tactics as Littleproud digs in






















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