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Nationals quit Coalition frontbench en masse after Littleproud bombshell letter to Ley

Paul Sakkal

Updated ,first published

The Coalition is in tatters after Nationals leader David Littleproud and all the party’s frontbenchers joined three rebel senators in quitting their positions after they broke shadow cabinet solidarity, following through with a bombshell threat he made to Opposition Leader Sussan Ley on a day of high drama.

Triggering one of the biggest crises in conservative politics for a generation, Littleproud and 10 Nationals frontbenchers quit Ley’s frontbench on Wednesday evening, after she had accepted the resignations of three Nationals earlier in the day. It is the second time since the 2025 election the Coalition has been in jeopardy after Littleproud made the dramatic decision to ditch the partnership in May.

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley and Nationals leader David Littleproud in parliament.Alex Ellinghausen

Hours after Littleproud made his call, Ley released a statement saying she was trying to persuade him to change his mind. “This evening, I spoke with leader of the Nationals, David Littleproud, and strongly urged him not to walk away from the Coalition,” she said in a statement.

“I have received additional offers of resignation from National Party shadow ministers, which I and my Liberal leadership group have determined are unnecessary.

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“The Liberal Party supports the Coalition arrangements because they deliver the most effective political alliance for good government. I note that in David’s letter, he has not indicated that the Nationals are leaving the Coalition.

“No permanent changes will be made to the shadow ministry at this time, giving the National Party time to reconsider these offers of resignation.”

This masthead obtained a letter sent by Littleproud to Ley on Wednesday morning saying that Ley had the right to sack frontbenchers Bridget McKenzie, Susan McDonald and Ross Cadell after they broke from the Liberals to vote against the government’s bill to crack down on hate groups on Tuesday night.

But, Littleproud argued in the letter, Ley should avoid doing so because the legislative process was so rushed and the shadow cabinet had never signed off on a final bill – a claim heavily contested by the Liberals.

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“If these resignations are accepted, the entire National Party ministry will resign to take collective responsibility,” Littleproud wrote in a hand-signed letter sent to Ley.

“Opposing this bill was a party room decision. The entire National Party shadow ministry is equally bound.”

Hours after Littleproud’s letter, Ley accepted the resignations with the full backing of right-wing Liberal powerbrokers, such as Michaelia Cash, James Paterson and Jonno Duniam.

Nationals senators Ross Cadell, Matt Canavan, Bridget McKenzie and Susan McDonald voting against the hate speech bill.Alex Ellinghausen

Nationals MPs then met at a 6pm on Wednesday and decided to follow through with the threat, leading Littleproud and deputy Kevin Hogan and others to also depart the frontbench.

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The stunning move will almost inevitably lead to the Coalition dissolving, most likely for a longer period than the brief split after the May election.

After spending weeks piling pressure on Labor over its flat-footed response to the Bondi massacre, a tortuous few days of sparring over hate speech laws pulled the Coalition apart and plunged it into a fresh crisis as polls showed One Nation pulling support from the opposition’s right flank.

Photo: Matt Golding

The joint Liberal-Nationals shadow cabinet on Sunday made an in-principle agreement to back Labor’s crackdown on hate groups so long as they were amended in line with Coalition demands, which they were.

That agreement started to fall apart on Monday when Nationals backbencher Matt Canavan, who has often set the agenda inside the junior Coalition partner, started to campaign against the bill over concerns it would target mainstream religious and political groups.

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After the frontbenchers voted against the hate-speech laws, they sent resignation letters to Ley on Wednesday morning, as first reported by this masthead, in acknowledgement that they had breached convention as shadow ministers to toe the party line.

Ley repeatedly told Littleproud about the need for his MPs to stick with the agreed position before the vote, Liberal sources speaking on the condition of anonymity said.

But Ley, under pressure to prove that she could enforce discipline, said she had accepted the resignations hours later on Wednesday afternoon, saying: “Shadow cabinet solidarity is not optional. It is the foundation of serious opposition and credible government.

“I made it clear to David Littleproud that members of the shadow cabinet could not vote against the shadow cabinet position. The shadow cabinet was unanimous in its endorsement to support this bill subject to several amendments that we did then secure.”

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One top Liberal said: “Littleproud is threatening to pull the Nationals out of the frontbench at the same time as saying in private that he hopes the Coalition can stay together. It’s a nonsensical position.”

Flailing in the polls, Ley took the decision to let the frontbenchers go, with the full backing of the right-wing Liberal powerbrokers. Duniam and Ley convinced right-wing Liberals such as Andrew Hastie to back the hate-crimes bill that made visa cancellations easier and allowed for the prohibition of hate groups such as neo-Nazis and radical Islamists.

Even Ley’s critics in the Liberal Party backed her stance against the Nationals on Wednesday as they expressed private fury at Littleproud for failing to bring his party into a coherent position on the laws.

But the long-run implication for Ley might still be devastating if the wounds caused by the resignations, or an even more damaging Coalition split, erode Ley’s standing further and fuel a leadership challenge from Hastie or Angus Taylor, who missed the parliamentary week as he was on holiday in Europe.

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One Liberal made the point that several inner-city Liberal frontbenchers wanted to vote for Labor’s gun restrictions but voted against the laws in line with Coalition policy, an example the Nationals could not emulate against the backdrop of a backlash among online free speech advocates.

The scale of the libertarian/far-right discontent towards Labor’s policies was evident on the social media feed of right-wing darling Hastie, whose posts were flooded with messages urging a vote for One Nation, which opposed the laws.

Nationals frontbencher Anne Webster said of a split earlier on Wednesday: “We are not afraid to do it again.”

Foreign Minister Penny Wong seized on the tension to create a leadership test for Ley.

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“A very important question now is there for Sussan Ley. The shadow cabinet made a decision to support this legislation, but shadow cabinet members have voted against it. Will she enforce the convention that people, shadow cabinet members, who vote against the shadow cabinet position have to resign, or will she squib it?” Wong said earlier.

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Paul SakkalPaul Sakkal is Chief Political Correspondent. He previously covered Victorian politics and won a Walkley award and the 2025 Press Gallery Journalist of the Year. Contact him securely on Signal @paulsakkal.14.Connect via X or email.

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