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Opposition (Australia)

Second largest party in the Australian House of Representatives


Summary

Second largest party in the Australian House of Representatives

In Australian parliamentary practice, the Opposition or the Official Opposition consists of the second largest party or coalition of parties in the Australian House of Representatives, with its leader being given the title Leader of the Opposition. The Opposition serves the same function as the official opposition in other Commonwealth of Nations monarchies that follow the Westminster conventions and practices. It is seen as the alternative government and the existing administration's main opponent in the Australian Parliament and at a general election. By convention, the Opposition Leader in the federal Parliament comes from the House of Representatives, as does the deputy, although the Government and Opposition may also both have leaders in the Senate. The Opposition is sometimes styled as His Majesty's Loyal Opposition to show that, although the group may be against the sitting government, it remains loyal to the Crown (the embodiment of the Australian state), and thus to Australia.

The current Opposition at a federal level is the centre-right Liberal Party, led by Sussan Ley.

State and territory opposition

The opposition parties and leaders in the Australian states and territories are:

State/territoryOpposition party/coalitionLeader of the OppositionTerm startTenureMain article
Australian Capital TerritoryLiberalMark Parton10 November 2025
New South WalesLiberal (Coalition)Kellie Sloane21 November 2025
National (Coalition)
Northern TerritoryLaborSelena Uibo3 September 2024
QueenslandLaborSteven Miles28 October 2024
South AustraliaLiberalAshton Hurn8 December 2025
TasmaniaLaborJosh Willie20 August 2025
VictoriaLiberal (Coalition)Jess Wilson18 November 2025
National (Coalition)
Western AustraliaLiberalBasil Zempilas25 March 2025
National

References

References

  1. Maiden, Samantha. (18 November 2010). "Altar egos clash over Wills and Babykins". The Australian.
  2. (30 June 2022). "ACT Shadow Ministry Tenth Assembly".
  3. "Shadow Ministry". [[Parliament of New South Wales]].
  4. . (19 May 2023). ["Shadow Ministry - 14th Assembly"](https://parliament.nt.gov.au/members/shadow-ministry). *Legislative Assembly of the Northern Territory*.
  5. "Current Shadow Ministers". Queensland Parliament.
  6. (8 August 2023). "South Australia - 55th Parliament Shadow Ministry". The Parliament of South Australia.
  7. "Labor Shadow Ministry". Parliament of Tasmania.
  8. . (20 December 2022). ["Liberal Nationals Shadow Cabinet"](https://new.parliament.vic.gov.au/48f24a/contentassets/f02f227ef9104652a5a706db2b634a0d/shadow-ministry-60th-parl-dec-2022.pdf).
  9. "Shadow Ministers".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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