23 May 2025

Liberals and Nationals pause Coalition bust-up for further talks

| By Andrew McLaughlin
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woman and two men in parliament house courtyard

Senator Bridget McKenzie, Nationals Leader David Littleproud and Deputy Leader Kevin Hogan. Photo: David Littleproud Instagram.

National Party leader David Littleproud has revealed that he and Liberal leader Sussan Ley have agreed to delay the dissolution of the Federal Coalition and to pursue a possible reconciliation.

The pause in hostilities comes after Mr Littleproud and Ms Ley were locked in talks this morning (22 May) after conflicting information emerged surrounding communications between the parties in the lead up to Tuesday’s sensational falling out.

At least four Nationals MPs, including Barnaby Joyce, Darren Chester and Michael McCormack, had reportedly expressed concerns over the split, and Ms Ley is reported to have reached out to them to try to garner support for a reconciliation.

The crisis talks come after Nationals’ leader in the Senate, Bridget McKenzie, told the ABC’s 7.30 on Wednesday night that Ms Ley’s refusal to agree to the Nationals’ four key policy demands had been the only reason her party had walked away from the Coalition.

Despite the Liberals wanting to put all policy positions on the table following the Coalition’s disastrous 3 May election showing, the Nationals insisted that four policies were non-negotiable.

These are commitments to establish a $20 billion Regional Australia Future Fund; to legislate federal divestiture powers that could break up big businesses that abuse market power; a universal service obligation to guarantee mobile coverage across Australia; and to lift Australia’s ban on nuclear energy.

However, it has been widely reported that other issues also contributed to the bust-up, including a refusal by the Nationals to guarantee the confidentiality and solidarity of a Coalition shadow cabinet.

READ ALSO Nationals’ dummy spit hands Labor an even sweeter victory

Shortly after Senator McKenzie’s segment ended, but while 7.30 host Sara Ferguson was still live on air, she read out a text from Sussan Ley’s office contradicting the claims Senator McKenzie had just made.

“It is not correct to suggest shadow cabinet solidarity was not a sticking point,” the message reportedly said.

“We have it in writing that it was a requirement from their leader’s office to ours.

“Her language was deliberate to make it sound like it was just about the policies. That is just not correct.”

Mr Littleproud admitted this morning that he had requested an exemption to shadow cabinet solidarity from Ms Ley, but said he had not raised that with his colleagues in the Nationals party room meeting when it was decided to quit the Coalition.

It was also revealed this morning that Senator McKenzie has sent a letter to her Liberal counterpart Michaelia Cash on 12 May – two days before the Liberals elected Ms Ley as their new leader to succeed Peter Dutton – which said, “depending on the outcome of negotiations between our two parties over coming weeks”, the Nationals were reconsidering their “position with respect to sitting with the Liberal Party as a Coalition in the Senate chamber”.

This afternoon, Mr Littleproud told the media that no such split was under consideration prior to his meetings with Ms Ley after her election to the leadership.

READ ALSO Ley disappointed by Coalition bust-up, but door remains open for reconciliation

Regarding the talks between him and Ms Ley this morning, Mr Littleproud said he had taken a “leap of faith” to pause the dissolution of the coalition so that Ms Ley could go back to her party room to possibly find some common ground. While he didn’t reveal what concessions he was prepared to give to bring the two parties back together, it has been reported that nuclear energy might be one of them.

He said both leaders had agreed to delay announcing their shadow front benches for a week to give them time to find some more common ground.

“She made an offer to reconvene her party room to discuss the four policy areas the National Party demand as part of a Coalition agreement, and I thank her for that,” he said.

“As a consequence, I’ve decided to send those spokespeople home as a sign of good faith. And Sussan, as a sign of good faith, will not be announcing a shadow cabinet.”

While she has not revealed when she would reconvene her party room, Ms Ley said she “welcomed” the Nationals’ decision to consider a reconciliation.

“Earlier today I wrote to, and met with David, inviting him to re-enter good-faith negotiations,” she said in a brief statement. “I am pleased he has accepted.

“In relation to the policy positions proposed by the Nationals party room, consistent with my consultation commitment, the Liberal Party will consider these, utilising our party room processes.”

Original Article published by Andrew McLaughlin on PS News.

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It’s a bad state of affairs in politics when one finds themselves nodding along in agreement with Barnaby Joyce and Michael McCormack!

I will vote for a bad labor government again if they drop net zero and keep nuclear. First time in 40 years I voted labor

Stephen Saunders7:19 am 23 May 25

“Nuclear Net Zero” kiboshed any chances Dutton had. Ley should drop Net Zero, and be very wary of speed-dating Nationals mob again. She might be better off going it alone. Either way, voters face six more years of gleeful betrayal, from United Nations Albanese.

It wasn’t the net zero part that was the problem with the policy. The Libs would be sensible to take the opportunity to reset I agree, the Nats running roughshod over policy is why they’re in the position they are now. The Libs can’t exactly re-establish themselves as a centre right conservative party if they’re not going to take climate change seriously.

“six more years of gleeful betrayal, from United Nations Albanese”, cooker conspiracy theories are tediously lame.

It would be a mistake for Ley and the Liberals to cave to the Nats. and their constituency of one after a day, especially if there are no concessions from the Nats. But the Liberals self owning is hardly a new phenomena.

All lovers have tiffs from time to time. But they shouldn’t be airing dirty laundry anywhere near the ABC who are wolves in sheep’s clothing.

You prefer Sky news, sheep acting as if they were wolves?

Is that when Sky are interviewing Labor pollies and welcoming Labor guest commentators ?

Yes, i certainly prefer Sky News. Have you ever watched it ?

That reply made no sense, and of course I have watched it. In the past Alan Jones was the most entertainingly dim but he is otherwise occupied just now, and the current lot are mostly drones.
.
As for your lovers metaphor, I think Littleproud has some controlling behaviour issues with his demands alongside threats of infidelity.

I have watched skynews, I would rather get my brain rot elsewhere

Hayward Maberley10:41 am 23 May 25

SAD, nominative determinism?

Sky After Dark Comedy Show, seems like some strange US sitcom set in a TV station where the inmates, current or ex rightwing politicians, media hacks of various sorts, RWR*Njs, Climate Change Denialists & other minions of the right.

Who appear to be paranoid, scared of the other, black/brown/yellow/aliens of any sort, of people who give facts and not “alternative facts”, those who have the temerity to question them, then are all very shouty at such, even at their own cohort, all the while exhibiting a slim grasp on reality.

Regional Australia has it on FTA, a desperate attempt to increase dismal ratings, no need to subscribe, one can observe the comedy when flicking through channels.

2020: Laughable episode, antediluvians Jones & others, Maurice Newman & David Flint. younger inmates, Bolt, Credlin, Dean et al, frothing at the mouth in lunatic ramblings about electoral fraud with Trump’s loss of both Electoral College & popular vote by c.7 million votes.

All blathering about POTUS election stolen from Trump, by massive voter fraud, including that carried out by USPS & other malefactors.

Questions which should have been asked of them, which they would have not cared to consider, if Democratic Party was exercising such fraud.

Down ballot they lost seats to Republicans in the House of Representatives?

Needed a run off win both the Georgia Senate seats?

2023: Laughable episode: Coalition lost NSW election, much frothing at the mouth with remarks about how Coalition had not gone hard enough right to satisfy them, hence losing the election.

2025: Laughable episode: Wipe out of the Lying Nasty Party Coalition leading to more frothing at mouth concerning LNP not hard enough in SAD ”culture war” & will no doubt have further bile, lies & nonsense spouted by the inmates.

*Second R Religious

Isn’t that the great thing about pay TV – you can choose to have it or not.

In the case of the ABC, for those of us who pay tax, we’re forced to fund leftist propaganda to the tune of a billion bucks a year.

Hayward Maberley1:08 pm 23 May 25

Conducted in May 2018 by Roy Morgan, the MEDIA Net Trust Survey reveals that while social media is deeply distrusted in Australia, the ABC is by far the nation’s most trusted media organisation.
http://www.bandt.com.au/mar
Half of all Australians (47 per cent) distrust social media, compared to only nine per cent who distrust the ABC…
Australians told us that their trust of the ABC is driven by its lack of bias and impartiality, quality journalism and ethics. While their distrust of Facebook and social media is driven by fake news, manipulated truth, false statistics and fake audience measurement…
…“The banking industry has an NTS of minus 18 percent, compared to the media industry with an NTS of minus seven per cent. So, while media industry is less toxic than banks, it is still in negative territory,” she said.
After the ABC, SBS is Australia’s second most trusted media brand. Fairfax comes in third as the only other media brand with a positive NTS.
SBS is also Australia’s most trusted commercial television network with an NTS of plus-five per cent – well ahead of the other three commercial networks, all with an NTS of between minus-six and minus-10 per cent.
“Australians told us that their trust of the ABC is driven by its lack of bias and impartiality, quality journalism and ethics. While their distrust of Facebook and social media is driven by fake news, manipulated truth, false statistics and fake audience measurement,” Levine said.

If you think the ABC is leftist propaganda then you don’t get out much. There are real “leftists” out there in the big bad world, Penfold, but you keep hiding behind your fantasies denying the broad centre.

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