Liberal/National merger

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A merger of the Liberal and National political parties in Australia, currently in a coalition federally and in three states, has been an on-going debate for decades[1] due to the demise of the National vote.[2][3][4][5][6][7] It is argued that the decline in the vote is due to the decline in the rural population as well as National Party policies becoming increasingly indistinguishable from Liberal Party policies.[8] Such a merger would also likely see the involvement of the Country Liberal Party, given that it is affiliated with both parties.

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[edit] Merger

Merger plans came to a head in May 2008, when the Queensland state Liberal Party gave an announcement not to wait for a federal blueprint but instead to merge now. The new party, the "Liberal National Party"[9], has a self-imposed deadline of late July for party registration.[10] Queensland Liberal Party president Gary Spence has been accused by some in his party of misleading the public about his party's level of support for the merger.[11] Queensland Liberal Party members are participating in a postal ballot, starting on May 27 and ending on June 23. If a majority is achieved, a constitutional convention would be held in July to approve the new party, and would be finalised by way of formal agreement between the parties' two federal executives.[12]

[edit] History

In Queensland, the only state where the Nationals are the dominant coalition partner in state politics, following Lawrence Springborg's re-election to the National leadership, support emerged especially from the National side for a merger of coalition parties in an attempt to address the declining National/rural vote and Labor's current domination of all levels of government.

In the 1980s, former Nationals MP Peter Nixon undertook a review of the party and "concluded it should seriously consider amalgamating with the Liberals". Former Nationals leader Doug Anthony wrote not long afterwards: "Any objective and rational National Party member who read this report would have to accept that amalgamation was the only realistic course. Regrettably there are still too many who don't want to read it and who don't want to face reality, that the role of a specialist party looking after the needs of rural people is in decline."

At the 2007 federal election, the vote had declined to 5.49 percent, with 10 of 150 seats, the party's lowest ever. Furthermore, that includes just one of the seats the Australian Electoral Commission classifies as provincial, Hinkler in Queensland, compared to four held by the Liberals and 16 by Labor.[1]

[edit] Country/National electoral results

Federal results in the Lower House since 1919[13]
Year 1919 1922 1925 1928 1929 1931 1934 1937 1940 1943
% 9.26 12.56 10.74 10.47 10.27 12.25 12.61 15.55 13.71 6.96
House Seats 11 of 75 14 of 75 14 of 75 13 of 75 10 of 75 16 of 75 14 of 74 16 of 74 14 of 74 7 of 74
Year 1946 1949 1951 1954 1955 1958 1961 1963 1966 1969
% 10.70 10.87 9.72 8.52 7.90 9.32 8.51 8.94 9.84 8.56
House Seats 11 of 74 19 of 121 17 of 121 17 of 121 18 of 122 19 of 122 17 of 122 20 of 122 21 of 124 20 of 125
Year 1972 1974 1975 1977 1980 1983 1984 1987 1990 1993
% 9.44 9.96 11.25 10.01 8.97 9.21 10.63 11.50 8.42 7.17
House Seats 20 of 125 21 of 127 23 of 127 19 of 124 20 of 125 17 of 125 21 of 148 19 of 147 14 of 148 16 of 148
Year 1996 1998 2001 2004 2007
% 8.21 5.29 5.61 5.89 5.49
House Seats 19 of 148 16 of 148 13 of 150 12 of 150 10 of 150

[edit] References

[edit] External links