Leader of the Liberal Party of Australia

The Leader of the Liberal Party is the highest office within the Liberal Party of Australia and the LiberalNational Coalition. The position is currently held by Prime Minister Scott Morrison and has been since 24 August 2018, whom represents the Division of Cook in New South Wales. Scott Morrison is the fourteenth leader of the Liberal Party.

Leader of the Liberal Party
Incumbent
Scott Morrison

since 24 August 2018
TypeThe Honourable
Member ofFederal Executive,
Coalition
Term lengthNo fixed term
Inaugural holderRobert Menzies
Formation21 February 1945
Unofficial namesLeader of the Coalition
DeputyJosh Frydenberg
WebsiteScott Morrison

The current Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party is Member for Kooyong and Treasurer, Josh Frydenberg. Frydenberg was elected under the same circumstances as Scott Morrison after the 2018 leadership spills.

History

The Liberal Party leadership was first held by former United Australia Party leader and eventual co–founder Robert Menzies, along with eighteen political organisations and groups.[1]

Scott Morrison is the current leader and was elected to be Leader and Prime Minister, first in a leadership spill,[2][3] and second, in an upset federal election victory on the 18th of May 2019.[4][5]

Following the oustings of two Liberal Prime Ministers in 3 years, Scott Morrison introduced a new threshold to trigger a Liberal Party leadership change in government, requiring two-thirds of the partyroom vote to trigger a spill motion. The change was introduced at an hour long party room meeting on the evening of 3 December 2018. Morrison said the changes, which were drafted with feedback from former prime ministers John Howard and Tony Abbott, would only apply to leaders who lead the party to victory at a federal election.[6]

Role

Since the days of Menzies, the Liberal Party has either been in government with a coalition or in opposition to the Labor. Thus, the leader of the Liberal Party can often be the Prime Minister of Australia or Leader of the Opposition. Furthermore, the leader picks the Cabinet and is also the leader of the Coalition. The Liberal Party has never had a leader of the party from the Senate.

Leaders of the Liberal Party

Note: the right-hand column does not allocate height proportional to time in office.

A list of leaders (including acting leaders) since 1945.[7]

No. Leader
(birth–death)
Portrait Electorate Took office Left office Prime Minister (term)
1 Robert Menzies
(1894–1978)
Kooyong, Vic. 21 February 1945 20 January 1966 Curtin (1941–1945)
Forde (1945)
Chifley (1945–1949)
Himself (1949–1966)
2 Harold Holt
(1908–1967)
Higgins, Vic. 20 January 1966
(unopposed)
17 December 1967
(died in office)
Himself (1966–1967)
3 John Gorton
(1911–2002)
Higgins, Vic. 9 January 1968
(elected)
10 March 1971 McEwen[lower-alpha 1] (1967–1968)
Himself (1967–1971)
4 William McMahon
(1908–1988)
Lowe, NSW 10 March 1971
(elected)
20 December 1972 Himself (1971–1972)
Whitlam (1972–1975)
5 Billy Snedden
(1926–1987)
Bruce, Vic. 20 December 1972
(elected)
21 March 1975
6 Malcolm Fraser
(1930–2015)
Wannon, Vic. 21 March 1975
(elected)
11 March 1983
Himself (1975–1983)
Hawke (1983–1991)
7 Andrew Peacock
(b. 1939)
(1st time)
Kooyong, Vic. 11 March 1983
(elected)
5 September 1985
8 John Howard
(b. 1939)
(1st time)
Bennelong, NSW 5 September 1985
(elected)
9 May 1989
(7) Andrew Peacock
(b. 1939)
(2nd time)
Kooyong, Vic. 9 May 1989
(elected)
3 April 1990
9 John Hewson
(b. 1946)
Wentworth, NSW 3 April 1990
(elected)
23 May 1994
Keating (1991–1996)
10 Alexander Downer
(b. 1951)
Mayo, SA 23 May 1994
(elected)
30 January 1995
(8) John Howard
(b. 1939)
(2nd time)
Bennelong, NSW 30 January 1995
(unopposed)
29 November 2007
Himself (1995–2007)
11 Brendan Nelson
(b. 1958)
Bradfield, NSW 29 November 2007
(elected)
16 September 2008 Rudd (2007–2010)
12 Malcolm Turnbull
(b. 1954)
(1st time)
Wentworth, NSW 16 September 2008
(elected)
1 December 2009
13 Tony Abbott
(b. 1957)
Warringah, NSW 1 December 2009
(elected)
14 September 2015
Gillard (2010–2013)
Rudd (2013)
Himself (2013–2015)
(12) Malcolm Turnbull
(b. 1954)
(2nd time)
Wentworth, NSW 14 September 2015
(elected)
24 August 2018 Himself (2015–2018)
14 Scott Morrison
(b. 1968)
Cook, NSW 24 August 2018
(elected)
Incumbent Himself (2018–present)

Living former party leaders

There are seven living former party leaders, all of whom were elected, and four who were Prime Minister. From oldest to youngest:

Leader Term of office Date of birth
Andrew Peacock 1983–1985; 1989–1990 (1939-02-13) 13 February 1939
John Howard 1985–1989; 1995–2007 (1939-07-26) 26 July 1939
John Hewson 1990–1994 (1946-10-28) 28 October 1946
Alexander Downer 1994–1995 (1951-09-09) 9 September 1951
Malcolm Turnbull 2008–2009; 2015–2018 (1954-10-24) 24 October 1954
Tony Abbott 2009–2015 (1957-11-04) 4 November 1957
Brendan Nelson 2007–2008 (1958-08-19) 19 August 1958
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See also

Notes

  1. After the Disappearance of Harold Holt, the Deputy Prime Minister, McEwen, took over as a caretaker until the leadership election of the Liberal Party was concluded.

References

  1. "Menzies Creates the Liberal Party". ABC. 1944. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  2. Sweeney, Lucy; Belot, Henry. "Scott Morrison beats Peter Dutton in Liberal spill to succeed Malcolm Turnbull; Julie Bishop loses deputy position". ABC. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  3. "Scott Morrison is new Australian PM as Malcolm Turnbull ousted". BBC. 24 August 2018. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  4. Murphy, Katharine (22 May 2019). "Scott Morrison won the unwinnable election. Now the hard part begins". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  5. Probyn, Andrew (20 May 2019). "Scott Morrison goes from accidental Prime Minister to homespun hero in election 2019". ABC. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  6. "Scott Morrison summons Liberal MPs to after-hours meeting to pass changes to leadership spill rules". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 3 December 2018. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  7. "Our History". Liberal Party. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
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