Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Young Nationals (Australia)

Youth division of the National Party of Australia

Young Nationals (Australia)

Summary

Youth division of the National Party of Australia

FieldValue
nameYoung Nationals
logo[[File:Young Nationals logo final.jpg300px]]
presidentCharlie Plant
colorcode
founded1957
ideology
positionCentre-right
headquartersBarton, Australian Capital Territory
membership3500
internationalInternational Young Democrat Union
mother partyNational Party of Australia
website
Young Nationals at 2025 Federal Council in Canberra

The Young Nationals is the youth division of the National Party of Australia, with membership open to those between 15 and 35 years of age. Young Nationals also have full party membership, and partake in state and federal conferences with equal rights to members of the senior party. They are active in National Party campaigning during all state and federal elections. It was first formed in Queensland in 1957, with other states following in subsequent years.

The movement is predominantly organised on the state division level, with each state organising its own events and policy as well as electing its own executive. In 2007 the Queensland Division of the Liberal Party of Australia and the Queensland National Party merged to become the Liberal National Party of Queensland (A division of the Federal Liberal Party and an affiliate of the Federal National Party). As part of this merger process, the Queensland Young Liberals and the Queensland Young Nationals were merged to become the Young Liberal National Party (Young LNP). The Young LNP is effectively the Queensland division of both the federal Young Liberals and the federal Young Nationals, and is the largest division of each of these movements. The federal executive of the Young Nationals comprises members elected from delegations from each affiliated state Young Nationals organisation, and the President of each affiliate. Policy can also be adopted by the movement's federal body. These policies are often then advocated by the Federal Young Nationals on the floor of the Federal Council of the National Party of Australia, as well as in representations made directly to members of parliament.

Political impact

Since the mid-2000s, the Young Nationals have had an increasingly significant impact on National Party policy development and campaign efforts. The Young Nationals notably changed the party platform to oppose any form of mandatory ISP-level internet censorship in 2010 and have also expressed strong federalist sentiments, having spearheaded a push to abolish the national curriculum. In 2015 the NSW division of the Young Nationals also voted on a motion to support same-sex marriage and free votes on the issue. The movement has also been one of the stronger elements in the National Party that has expressed support for voluntary student unionism (VSU), eventually persuading Senator Fiona Nash to ditch the parliamentary party's opposition to VSU.

Current federal executive

PositionOffice-bearerState
PresidentCharlie PlantQueensland (LNP)
Vice-PresidentAngus OlsenNew South Wales
SecretaryPeta HumphreysWestern Australia
TreasurerEmma BaillieNorthern Territory (CLP)
Policy OfficerPerrin RennieSouth Australia
Campaigns OfficerMia GeddesNew South Wales
Partnerships OfficerHenry MoffitNew South Wales
Publicity OfficerSebastian PadgetQueensland (LNP)
Immediate Past PresidentAngus WebberNew South Wales
New South Wales ChairJayden Whaites
Victorian PresidentJames Brook
Northern Territory President (CLP)Alicia Wilson
Queensland President (LNP)Benjamin Kozij
South Australian PresidentRyan Jellesma
Western Australian PresidentSebastian Schiano

Past presidents

OrdinalYearPresidentStateNotes
1968The Hon. Mike AhernQueenslandSubsequently the Member for Landsborough and Premier of Queensland
1975–1976Gary PikeQueensland
1976–1977Garry WestNew South WalesSubsequently the Member for Orange and Minister in the Greiner and Fahey coalition governments
1977–1979The Hon. Pat McNamaraVictoriaSubsequently the Member for Benalla and Deputy Premier of Victoria in the Kennett coalition government
1979–1981Michael BehanQueensland
1981–1983Nigel SmithNew South Wales
1983–1985Gerard WalshQueensland
1985–1987Julian AndersonQueensland
1987–1988Judy BrewerVictoriaNationals candidate for the seat of Benambra in the 1988 Victorian State election. Later the wife of former Deputy Prime Minister and Nationals leader Tim Fischer and appointed Life Member of the Young National Party of Australia in 1994.
1988–1989Aldo BorguQueensland
1989–1991Angus CalderNew South Wales
1991-1993Duncan AndersonWestern Australia
1993-1994Daniel KelliherVictoria
1994–1996Meredith DickieVictoriaLater the State Director of the Victorian Nationals 2002-2005
1996–1997Donald BurnettQueensland
1997–1998Douglas DoyleNew South Wales
1998–1999Robert MacaulayNew South Wales
1999–2000Stuart CopelandQueenslandSubsequently the Member for Cunningham and State Director of the Victorian National Party
2001–2002Scott MitchellVictoriaSubsequently the Federal Director of the National Party
2002–2004Tim DixonNew South Wales
2004–2006Chris KahlerQueensland
2006–2008Damian CallachorNew South WalesSubsequently the Chief of Staff to Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack
2008–2009The Hon. Martin Aldridge MLCWestern AustraliaSubsequently a Member for the Agricultural region
2009–2011The Hon. Sarah Mitchell MLCNew South WalesSubsequently a Member of the New South Wales Legislative Council and Minister in the Berejiklian coalition government
2011–2014Cr Cameron O'NeilQueenslandSubsequently Vice President of the LNP and elected to the Maranoa Regional Council
2014–2018Ruby CameronVictoriaNationals Candidate for Western Victoria Region in the 2010 Victorian State Election
2018–2019Daniel BanksNorthern Territory
2019–2022Alessia MarucaQueensland
292022-2025Angus WebberNew South Wales
302025-Charlie PlantQueensland

Criticism and Controversy

Whilst serving as NSW Young Nationals chairman, Jessica Price-Purnell and two other NSW Young Nationals staffers reportedly embarked on an 'emotional' rampage inflicting substantial damage on the party's Orange campaign office during the 2016 Orange state by-election, which included a hole being punctured in the wall, with party state director Nathan Quigley expressing concern for the mental health of the three women, all of whom admitted responsibility for the vandalism and paid compensation for the damage.

In 2018, it was revealed that the NSW Young Nationals had been infiltrated by a number of neo-Nazis and other far-right extremists. Senior Party figures, including Federal Leader Michael McCormack denounced these attempts, stating that "The Nationals will not tolerate extremism or the politics of hate. People found to engage with such radicalism are not welcome in our party". The leader of the NSW Nationals, John Barilaro, also denounced racism and fascism within the party.

As a result of these revelations, the NSW National Party terminated the memberships of 19 members.

References

References

  1. Cervini, Erica. (1999-09-01). "Party time". The Age.
  2. (2015-06-30). "Latest topics". ZDNet.
  3. (2010-06-21). "National Party members vote against internet filter". Delimiter.
  4. "Nationals seek to axe single curriculum". [[The Australian]].
  5. Hunter, Fergus. (31 August 2015). "NSW Young Nationals support same-sex marriage and condemn party leaders".
  6. "Young Nationals back gay marriage". news.com.au.
  7. (17 September 2005). "Nats call for changes to VSU". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  8. (22 August 2009). "Nationals vow to defeat emissions laws". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  9. (24 July 2010). "Nationals still oppose compulsory student union fees". [[ABC News (Australia).
  10. "The Young Nationals".
  11. "Copeland returns to politics".
  12. "LNP Executive".
  13. (5 December 2016). "Nationals' office damaged in by-election brouhaha".
  14. (2 November 2018). "'These guys are crazy': Barnaby Joyce backs 'Nazi' expulsions after backtrack".
  15. (31 October 2018). "Nationals clear man accused of leading alleged neo-Nazi branch stacking".
  16. (29 October 2018). "Far right extremists 'not welcome' in Nationals, leader says amid investigation".
  17. (15 October 2018). "NSW Young Nationals expel and suspend members over far-right links".
  18. (2 April 2021). "Former New Guard insider reveals neo-Nazi group's recruitment tactics". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  19. Mann, Alex. (12 October 2018). "Manifesto reveals alt-right's plans to go mainstream after 'infiltration' of NSW Young Nationals". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
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.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Young Nationals (Australia) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report