this post was submitted on 20 May 2025
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After an embarrassing defeat in the latest election, The Nationals David Littleproud, announced earlier today they will not be entering into the coalition agreement with the Liberal Party for the first time since 1987.

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[–] Zagorath@aussie.zone 39 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

A little more detail on how big this is. Since 1980, the Liberals and Nationals have been so tied together that we very often call them "the Coalition". Our news media reports on election results by saying how many seats the combined Coalition has won. In the state of Queensland, the two parties are fully merged into the Liberal National Party, or LNP, and the term LNP is sometimes unofficially used to refer to the Coalition elsewhere. In federal politics, LNP members choose whether they sit in the Liberal party room or the National party room. Peter Dutton was a Liberal-aligned Queensland LNP member.

For Germans, you can kinda think of this as equivalent to CDU/CSU splitting, with the main difference being that instead of different states, the Nationals represent rural areas and the Liberals represent urban and suburban areas. But it's fuzzy and they do sometimes softly compete against each other.

Also quick note: they're called the Liberals because they ostensibly stand for individual liberty. Personal freedoms etc. But they've evolved into crony capitalism and conservative culture wars.

[–] Aussieiuszko@aussie.zone 17 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

They're called the Liberals, because that's what liberalism is. Americans might better know this as classic liberalism, but the rest of the world knows it as liberalism.

[–] Gray@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Agreed on economic issues, but I disagree that liberalism is conservative on social issues the way that Australia's Liberals are. I think classical liberalism in an American context would be most closely associated with American libertarianism. Liberalism has a huge hard-on for laissez faire economics, but it also should ostensibly emphasize individual freedom more than anything else when it comes to social issues. Both Republicans in the US and Liberals in Australia might speak platitudes about their desire for free speech, but if you challenge that even a little you'll quickly find that they're just hard right wing conservatives hiding behind the moderated mask of liberalism.

[–] AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space 4 points 2 weeks ago

The Liberals were originally a broad church, with its most salient feature being that its members were more likely to own property. The more socially moderate members (sometimes referred to as “wets”, a term borrowed from the British Tories) started dwindling in the long Howard era (1997-2007 and 2011-2022 or so) when the party pivoted to Murdochian culture-war conservatism, and eventually lost almost all their historic seats in wealthy suburbs, while outer-suburban party branches were taken over by religious groups (pentecostals and Mormons, IIRC)

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