13 February 2026

Libs dump first-ever female leader in resounding win for Angus Taylor

| By Chris Johnson
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Sussan Ley leaves the Liberal Party’s room after having been dumped as the first-ever female leader. Photo: Chris Johnson.

The Liberal Party has dumped its first-ever federal female leader just nine months into the job, in a devastating partyroom vote for Sussan Ley, who lost to Angus Taylor 17 votes to 34.

Victorian Senator Jane Hume was elected deputy leader, beating Ted O’Brien, Dan Tehan and Melissa Price.

She is the first Senator to hold the deputy leadership role since 1990, a role traditionally held by a member of the House of Representatives.

Liberal MPs and Senators met at Parliament House on Friday morning (13 February) to decide Ms Ley’s fate.

With her support fast disappearing by the evening before, a vote to go ahead with a spill of positions was easily passed.

A leadership ballot was then held, and Mr Taylor emerged as the victor.

Ms Ley emerged from the meeting flanked by some of her supporters, but said nothing to the waiting media pack.

She smiled a little as she walked by, then looked straight ahead as she walked on.

READ ALSO Angus Taylor makes his move and quits Liberal frontbench to mount leadership challenge

As other Liberals emerged from the party room, some expressed their delight at the outcome while others said nothing at all.

Mr Taylor is yet to front the media.

Mr Tehan, who quit Ms Ley’s frontbench late on Thursday, went straight to the ABC’s new studios to declare he had voted for Mr Taylor.

“What we’ve been through over the last 10 or 11 months has been incredibly difficult – a lot of challenges after the huge election defeat in May,” he said.

“Then obviously with us, we saw the splitting in the Coalition, and then we saw some fairly catastrophic polling.

“The feedback that I was getting was that things did need to change.”

Labor has immediately launched pre-prepared attack ads with the slogan “Angus Taylor – Just another Liberal” and highlighting his track record while serving in Scott Morrison’s government.

“Taylor was the architect of Liberal policies for higher taxes, bigger deficits, getting rid of work from home, sacking of tens of thousands of frontline workers and a $600 billion taxpayer-funded nuclear scheme,” one ad says.

“And Taylor worked from day one to undermine the Liberals’ first female leader.”

Former Liberal prime minister Tony Abbott, however, said Mr Taylor’s election as Opposition Leader places the Liberals in a far better position to win the next election.

The latest polling placed the Liberal Party’s primary vote at a dismal 18 per cent, behind a surging One Nation vote on 27 per cent.

Ley to quit politics

Shortly after the vote, Ms Ley called a press conference to thank her supporters, express her respect for the party’s decision, and to wish Mr Taylor well.

She said there were “genuinely no hard feelings” against Mr Taylor or those who voted for him.

“My mother had just died. One of the things she said was when something ends in sadness, don’t dwell on the disappointments. Be grateful that you had it at all,” Ms Ley said.

“So today, I want to express gratitude to the Liberal Party that I have belonged to and loved for more than half of my adult life.

“I thank you for your loyalty, your unflinching loyalty.”

READ ALSO Aussies have a right to protest (and to pray) without getting roughed up by police

The now former opposition leader also announced she would soon be resigning from parliament, which will create by-election for her NSW seat of Farrer

“I will be spending the next couple of weeks thanking the amazing people of Farrer and expressing my gratitude today for the honour of representing them all 25 years,” she said.

“Shortly thereafter, I will be tendering my resignation to the Speaker.

“I’m not sure what comes next. I look forward to stepping away completely and comprehensively from public life, to spend time with my family.”

Jane Hume and Angus Taylor in a post to social media shortly after their partyroom wins. Photo: Angus Taylor on X.

Mr Taylor is yet to hold a media conference, but has instead posted a photo of himself and Senator Hume on social media to announce their wins.

“It’s an immense honour to be elected as leader of the Liberal Party,” he said on X.

“I am looking forward to working with my deputy, Jane Hume to serve the Australian people.”

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Not sure why the headline is about Leys’ gender?

The bottom line is that under Leys’ leadership, the opinion polls have shown that they are losing support, and that Pauline Hanson’s One Nation is more popular.

My personal opinion is that Ley is a very decent person. I used to live in the seat of Farrer, back in the days when Tim Fischer was the local member. Country people are good people.

Leys’ appointment to the leadership of the Libs following a bad electoral result where the leader is also defeated, was a poisoned chalice. This type of replacement is often a placeholder while the wheat is sifted from the charf.

For the ALP to immediately be running anti-Taylor ads, I think this is telling us that they consider Taylor more of a threat, than Ley was.

Capital Retro11:26 am 13 Feb 26

I can’t see the relevance of your trumpeting the fact that Ley was the first-ever Federal female Liberal leader.

What would be your reaction if there was a first-ever Federal Labor leader dumped by the Labor Party?

Wait a minute……………………………..

An alternate headline might read “Liberals dump worst-performing leader in history”. That Sussan is female is barely noteworthy. Once upon a time merit was far more important than quotas. Let’s hope Taylor can bring some fight and policy back into the Opposition. He certainly brings some real world experience, something sorely lacking within the government.

And how about the ALP’s reaction – spending money creating then running attack ads, sounds like they’re rather worried they might now be held to account for their dreadful performance. And they’re still pushing the “$600 billion nuke” fairytale. One suspects Taylor’s first point of attack is Labor’s trillion dollar renewables shambles and our exorbitant power prices.

Perhaps his starting point might be the very simple question – if renewables are cheaper why do they need taxpayer funding ? 🤔

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