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Australia news as it happened: Angus Taylor to challenge Sussan Ley for Liberal Party leadership tomorrow; Israeli President arrives in Melbourne

Emily Kaine and Isabel McMillan
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 12.37pm on Feb 12, 2026
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What you need to know about the Liberal leadership challenge

By Nick Newling

If you are just catching up on the Liberal leadership challenge, here’s everything that has happened this morning after challenger Angus Taylor resigned from the shadow cabinet last night.

The morning kicked off with the resignation of Phil Thompson from the shadow NDIS portfolio. Along with his resignation letter, he and Senator Jess Collins requested a special party room meeting from Opposition Leader Sussan Ley. The meeting, in which the leadership would be voted on, has been scheduled for 9am tomorrow morning.

Taylor believes he has the numbers to win the leadership.

Member for Hume Angus Taylor sits on the backbench today in Parliament. Alex Ellinghausen

Shortly after Thompson’s resignation, Angus Taylor declared he was challenging for the leadership through an Instagram post. Ley then put up her own social media post saying she offered “a better future”.

Throughout the course of the day there have been a series of resignations from the frontbench by Taylor backers. The most high-profile resignations have come from home affairs spokesman Jonno Duniam and former finance spokesperson James Paterson. They were joined by senators Matt O’Sullivan and Claire Chandler. A number of MPs including Ben Small and Sarah Henderson have backed Taylor’s challenge.

There is also a race for the deputy leadership, currently held by shadow treasurer Ted O’Brien, with Victorian senator Jane Hume emerging as a frontrunner.

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What we covered today

By Isabel McMillan

Thanks for reading the national news blog. This is where we’ll end today’s coverage. We will be back tomorrow with the latest news, ahead of the 9am Liberal party room meeting where Angus Taylor is expected to challenge Sussan Ley’s Opposition leadership.

To conclude, here’s a look back at some of the day’s major stories:

  • Liberal leadership challenger Angus Taylor released an Instagram video in which he formally declared he is running for the party leadership. The video depicts Taylor in a white shirt with his sleeves rolled up, standing in a paddock, with dramatic music playing in the background. After his resignation yesterday, Taylor did not say he was challenging for the leadership. He posted the video this morning shortly after Liberal MPs Phil Thompson and Jess Collins delivered a request to Opposition Leader Sussan Ley for the party leadership to be spilled.
  • A special meeting of the Liberal party room has been scheduled for 9am tomorrow, in which Angus Taylor will challenge Opposition Leader Sussan Ley’s leadership of the party.
  • Eight MPs followed Taylor in resigning from the front bench. They are James Paterson, Jonno Duniam, Claire Chandler, Phil Thompson, Matt O’Sullivan, James McGrath, Michaelia Cash and Dan Tehan.
  • A small stand-off unfolded outside Government House in Melbourne between heavily armed police and a group of about 25 protesters, who heckled from the side of the road as Israeli President Isaac Herzog arrived. Herzog touched down in Melbourne this morning, where he was whisked past protesters in a motorcade straight from the airport about midday, and through the gates of Government House. He met with Governor Margaret Gardner and Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan for lunch before attending a Jewish community event this afternoon. This evening, thousands of protesters gathered to march against Herzog’s visit to Australia.

  • Reserve Bank governor, Michele Bullock, angrily pushed back at accusations from a Coalition senator that she is gaslighting Australians. Bullock, usually calm and reserved during parliamentary hearings, became angry after Nationals’ senator Matt Canavan used different measures of wage growth to suggest the governor was at odds with experience of most Australians.

  • And overseas, Canadian police identified the person who carried out a school massacre as an 18-year-old with mental health issues, but did not give a motive for one of the worst mass shootings in the country’s history. The killer, who police named as Jesse Van Rootselaar, died by suicide after the shooting in Tumbler Ridge, a remote community in the Pacific province of British Columbia. Police also revised the death toll down to nine from the initially reported 10, including Van Rootselaar.

Thanks again for joining us. This is Isabel McMillan signing off.

Ley’s supporters losing hope as Taylor tipped to take leadership

By Brittany Busch

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley’s supporters are rapidly losing hope as key figures swing Angus Taylor’s way ahead of tomorrow’s leadership spill.

We are now at eight MPs who have followed Taylor in resigning from the shadow frontbench, including James McGrath who voted for Ley when she and Taylor went head-to-head for the leadership following last year’s election wipeout. Ley won by four votes, but there has since been a series of departures and her lead has narrowed to just one.

Both camps have been saying tomorrow’s vote will be close, but momentum has shifted in the past 24 hours and the most likely outcome at present is that Taylor will win.

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley and Angus Taylor are going toe-to-toe on Friday. Alex Ellinghausen

Wong probed on Rudd’s resignation

By Matthew Knott

Foreign Minister Penny Wong has faced questions about whether Kevin Rudd sought an extra year as ambassador to the United States before announcing he would step down early from the role.

During Senate estimates hearings on Thursday, Liberal senator Sarah Henderson repeatedly asked whether Rudd had requested a fifth year as Australia’s top diplomat in Washington DC, on top of the four years the government granted him.

Outgoing Australian ambassador to the United States Kevin Rudd.Alex Ellinghausen

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced last month that Rudd would end his posting in April and return to his former job as head of the Asia Society think tank in New York.

Wong said: “We had already extended it, that’s my recollection.”

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Tehan to nominate as deputy leader

By Rob Harris

Liberal MP Dan Tehan has resigned from the Coalition’s frontbench and will nominate as deputy leader if a spill motion is successful in Friday’s party room ballot.

The Victorian - a former trade and education minister - joined Thursday’s mass exodus of Sussan Ley’s shadow ministry, announcing in a statement his resignation as energy and emissions reduction spokesman.

Victorian MP Dan Tehan is the latest to abandon the shadow frontbench.Dominic Lorrimer

“This is not a decision I have taken lightly,” he said. “If I am successful, there are four priorities I will make my focus.

“We need to immediately unify, hold this dreadful Albanese Labor government to account, develop a policy manifesto true to our values and make us match fit to win elections.”

Eighth MP resigns from Ley’s frontbench

By Michelle Griffin

And then there were eight.

Dan Tehan, the opposition’s energy spokesman who saw off a teal challenger in the Victorian seat of Wannon, just resigned from the frontbench as well.

Hundreds of jobs to go as lithium giant pulls pin on processing plant

By Michael Philipps

US lithium giant Albemarle has shut down its Kemerton lithium hydroxide processing plant in Western Australia, in a move expected to impact about 250 workers at the site.

The company announced overnight it would idle its last operating train at the plant and place it into care and maintenance immediately.

The Albemarle lithium hydroxide plant at Kemerton in WA has has been placed into care and maintenance.

The Kemerton processing plant, located near Bunbury, produced lithium hydroxide using spodumene from the nearby Greenbushes mine.

A statement from Albemarle said the company would aim to meet customer demand for lithium hydroxide through other production channels.

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Heavy security ‘obscure and odd’, Israeli president says

By Chip Le Grand

Israeli President Isaac Herzog has struck an upbeat tone in his address to Melbourne’s Jewish community, saying he will return to Israel with hope in his heart after witnessing the beauty and resilience of Australian Jews.

“We came here to be with you, to look you in the eye, to embrace and remember,” he said.

“We return to Israel feeling empowered.”

However, the president said it was “obscure and odd” that so many police were needed to protect him from harassment while speaking in public.

Canadian school shooter identified as 18-year-old

By David Ljunggren

Ottawa: Canadian police have identified the person who carried out a school massacre as an 18-year-old with mental health issues, but did not give a motive for one of the worst mass shootings in the country’s history.

The killer, who police named as Jesse Van Rootselaar, died by suicide after the shooting in Tumbler Ridge, a remote community in the Pacific province of British Columbia. Police also revised the death toll down to nine from the initially reported 10, including Van Rootselaar.

Police at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School on Wednesday.AP

Two severely injured victims remain in hospital.

“We have a history of police attendance at the family residence. Some of those calls are related to mental health issues,” Deputy Commissioner Dwayne McDonald, commander of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in British Columbia, told a press conference on Wednesday (Ottawa time).

Ley’s senior leadership group shrinks again

By Brittany Busch

Opposition Senate leader Michaelia Cash has quit Sussan Ley’s frontbench.

Cash is the seventh MP to follow Angus Taylor in resigning, upping the pressure on Ley ahead of a leadership spill tomorrow.

Senator Michaelia Cash is the latest to quit the shadow frontbench.Dominic Lorrimer

Cash, James Paterson and Jonno Duniam are significant losses for Ley because they were in her senior leadership group.

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Penny Wong ‘troubled’ by police force against praying Muslim protesters

By Matthew Knott

Foreign Minister Penny Wong says she felt troubled by footage of NSW Police officers forcibly moving on a group of Muslim men praying outside Town Hall during a protest against Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s visit in Sydney.

“I think Australians believe people have a right to pray in peace,” Wong told Senate estimates, responding to a question from Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong said the events outside Town Hall were “confronting”.Alex Ellinghausen

“I believe many Australians would have found those scenes confronting, and I think it would have been particularly confronting for Muslim Australians. I found them confronting.

“I would say that freedom of religion and the peaceful expression of different views is a core part of who we are.”

Muslim groups said they were outraged by the police’s behaviour during the protest.

Wong said she would wait until an investigation by NSW Police into what occurred on Monday night is completed before she makes a definitive comment about NSW Police’s handling of the protest.

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