22 January 2026

UPDATED: Nats to go it alone; Littleproud says Coalition under Ley is 'untenable'

| By Chris Johnson
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David Littleproud

National leader David Littleproud says a coalition is untenable under the leadership of Sussan Ley. Photo David Littleproud

UPDATED 10 am: The Coalition has collapsed, with Nationals leader David Littleproud laying the blame firmly at the feet of Liberal leader Sussan Ley.

Last night, Ms Ley sacked three National Party frontbenchers – Bridget McKenzie, Ross Cadell and Susan McDonald – when they voted against the Shadow Cabinet position on the Albanese Government’s hate speech laws. The eight remaining Nationals on the Opposition’s front bench – in both Houses of Parliament – quit their positions Wednesday night.

This morning, he informed Ms Ley that the coalition was no more.

“It’s done. I spoke to Sussan Ley … and made her fully aware,” he said.

This is the second time since the election that the Nationals have walked away from the Coalition, but this split puts increasing pressure on the leadership of Ms Ley.

“The reality is we are at a juncture where no one in our ministry could work in a Sussan Ley ministry and my party made that clear,’ Mr Littleproud said.

“That’s why the Coalition was made untenable.”

He added that it was time for the Liberal Party to “reflect who they are, what they are, what they get to do. And us [not] being there probably allows them the opportunity to do that.”

Ms Ley said the focus of today – 22 January – should be on “the victims of the Bondi terrorist attack”.

“This is a National Day of Mourning and my responsibility as leader of the opposition and leader of the Liberal Party is to Australians in mourning,” she said.

More to come.

Leader of the Australian Liberal Party, Sussan Ley MP

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley has accepted the resignations of three senior Nationals who broke shadow cabinet solidarity, but has urged the rest of the senior Nationals to rethink their decisions to also quit. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

9:15 am: The Federal Opposition is once again in disarray, and the Coalition agreement is in tatters as Nationals frontbenchers quit the shadow ministry en masse on Wednesday night in response to Sussan Ley’s dumping of three Senators who broke cabinet solidarity.

Nationals leader David Littleproud and his whole senior team threw a massive tantrum to storm off to the Opposition’s back benches after three errant Nationals senators lost their frontbench positions.

Ms Ley is urging them to reconsider their decisions.

Labor’s hate speech laws cost the jobs of Nationals senators Bridget McKenzie, Ross Cadell and Susan McDonald, who defied the Opposition Leader on Tuesday night to vote against the Coalition’s official position to vote for the bill in the Senate.

While the Nationals, on the whole, voted against the Labor and Liberals agreed to amendments to the hate laws, shadow ministers have an obligation to uphold shadow cabinet solidarity.

On Wednesday, Ms Ley made it clear that those rules were not up for negotiation – even if Mr Littleproud had given his approval for the senators to break ranks.

And she pointed out that her shadow cabinet had voted unanimously to support the legislation if the Coalition’s changes to it were accepted.

READ ALSO Late Senate vote passes hate laws, despite a divided Opposition

In a statement, Ms Ley said shadow cabinet met on Sunday night, examined the legislation, and unanimously agreed on a “clear path forward” in the national interest.

The unanimous shadow cabinet decision was to “negotiate specific fixes” with the government, and having secured those amendments, members of the shadow cabinet were bound not to vote against the legislation.

“Maintaining a strong and functioning Coalition is in the national interest,” the Opposition Leader said.

“The Coalition exists to serve the Australian people. But shadow cabinet solidarity is not optional.

“It is the foundation of serious opposition and credible government.”

The three senators offered their resignations from the shadow cabinet late on Wednesday, and Ms Ley accepted them.

Following the resignations and Ms Ley’s acceptance, the Nationals called an emergency partyroom meeting. They decided that solidarity with their own senators was more important than shadow cabinet solidarity, or indeed Coalition solidarity.

The eight remaining Nationals on the Opposition’s front bench – in both Houses of Parliament – quit their positions Wednesday night.

Mr Littleproud had advised Ms Ley that that would be the most likely outcome if she accepted the resignations of the Nationals who had broken shadow cabinet solidarity.

Ms Ley had initially asked senators McKenzie, Cadell and McDonald to continue serving in the Coalition team, across their various parliamentary and committee duties, but from outside the shadow cabinet.

She also asked Mr Littleproud to provide three new nominees for appointment to the shadow cabinet.

That all soon became irrelevant as speculation of mass Nationals resignations turned into reality.

By 8 pm Wednesday, the Nationals leader wrote to the Liberal Party leader to inform her that he and his team were effectively taking their ball and going home.

READ ALSO One Nation support at record high, overtaking the Coalition

Ms Ley issued another statement at 9 pm on Wednesday.

“This evening, I spoke with Leader of the Nationals, David Littleproud, and strongly urged him not to walk away from the Coalition,” she said.

“I have received additional offers of resignation from National Party shadow ministers, which I and my Liberal leadership group have determined are unnecessary.

“The Liberal Party supports the Coalition arrangements because they deliver the most effective political alliance for good government. I note that in David’s letter, he has not indicated that the Nationals are leaving the Coalition.

“No permanent changes will be made to the shadow ministry at this time, giving the National Party time to reconsider these offers of resignation.”

The hate speech laws drafted in response to the Bondi terror attack passed the Senate around 11 pm on Tuesday, with support from the Liberal Party but not the Nationals.

The Federal Government had watered down its bill considerably to secure the Opposition’s vote, but the bill still split the Coalition.

It was split in two so gun reform could be passed as separate legislation with the support of the Greens.

Racial vilification elements of the original bill were abandoned before the legislation was introduced, due to the government being unable to secure agreement from either the Coalition or the Greens.

Liberal MP Andrew Hastie quit Ms Ley’s frontbench late last year, not long after Liberal Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price was sacked from it.

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It’s time the Nats faced reality. They are nothing if they are not part of the Coalition. The number of ministerial positions they get is out of proportion with their vote. At best, they are now a fringe party and, thanks to their dummy spits, without a voice in decision making.

Second split, perhaps not the last, third time’s the charm. And there is still time before the next election… Enough time for Poorlene to build a viable opposition? Perhaps. The PHON acronym would presumably have to go. Maybe something along the lines of Gina Rinehart’s One Nation Klan (GRONK) might suffice? Fans love to give themselves a name, they could be PHONies but GRONKs seems equally fitting.

Chris Johnson is a very good journalist but he’s being regularly upstaged by Penfold’s posts which are Comedy Gold 😂😂

Very kind of you franky, but it’s unlikely Chris considers himself comedian.

But isn’t it nice having an alternate point of view, some people take politics way too seriously 🤣

It would be nice to see some alternate views.

Unfortunately we only get unthinking regurgitation of the daily talking points from Goldfish who take politics way too seriously.

Yep, fully agree Chris. Sussan is done and with Albo floundering like a flapping goldfish out of water it’s time for a serious Coalition leader to be elected who can hold this awful government and their 30% primary vote to account.

Much ado about nothing much. Ley will gone very shortly and hopefully not just to the back bench. One of the last Turnbull apparatchiks with any power. Hopefully now the Liberals will elect a real Conservative and not just a paler version of an ALP politician.

Goldfish are Pengold’s speciality. Last year when the coalition dropped commitment to net zero Pengold crowed that Liberal polling numbers would leap in the next few weeks. They did not of course, which Pengold somehow forgot to mention. Now he cannot remember what he said a few days before about the bills passed earlier this week.

Yes Pengold, even the Albanese flapper can pass bills to better manage guns and hate groups, while you and the Liberals run a repeat showing of “we have no idea how to govern ourselves for a week let alone a country”. You sic that 21% Liberal primary vote onto the 30% Pengold, if continuing never to think helps you through the night.

We can only hope Rob, but yes let’s hope the Liberals put a proper leader in place this time, someone who’ll offer the nation real alternatives.

Just remember, you wanted this. Not me, but you. Here’s some of your groupthink greatest hits:
-it’s all albos fault
-he is not doing enough/quick enough
-implement jillian segal’s recommendations in full
-it’s all too rushed now (even though it apparently wasn’t quick enough)
-no, not THOSE recommendations (even though we insisted you do it)
-now albo is divisive because he called the bluff and we have to risk a very public backflip
-And finally you revert back to what this has always actually been about, replacing albo with a (now non-existent) coalition. It was never about bondi or antisemitism, was it? Careful what you wish for penfold.

TG – do you offer translation services, because that post is a little peculiar.

But you do seem to forget Albo’s had more positions than the Karma Sutra in the past few weeks on Royal Commissions, free speech, guns, the Coalition and of course on anti-semitism and voters are sick of it.

Wonderful clarity in your post, That Guy, while Pengold pulls his common inanity of putting up incomprehension where he has no response.

The Kama Sutra (do learn to spell) has some interesting positions, Pengold, though I am sure Albanese more boringly enjoyed passing legislation for the country while Liberals flapped their gums in both directions at once. It is quite true that polls indicate that voters appear sick of the Coalition on 21% compared with the ALP on 32%. Good of you to mention it.

Not as sick as we are of the coalition. They just keep falling apart and sliding in the polls. What’s worse is the coalition (competent, but losers non the less) are losing out to (the highly incompetent) one trick pony PHONies.

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