Election Name: | 2022 National Party of Australia leadership spill |
Type: | presidential |
Vote Type: | Caucus |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 2021 National Party of Australia leadership spill |
Previous Year: | 2021 |
Election Date: | 30 May 2022 |
Candidate1: | David Littleproud |
Color1: | 006644 |
Popular Vote1: | ≥11 |
Candidate2: | Barnaby Joyce |
Color2: | 006644 |
Popular Vote2: | <11 |
Candidate3: | Darren Chester |
Color3: | 006644 |
Popular Vote3: | <11 |
Leader | |
Before Election: | Barnaby Joyce |
After Election: | David Littleproud |
Election Name: | 2022 National Party of Australia deputy leadership spill |
Type: | presidential |
Vote Type: | Caucus |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 2021 National Party of Australia leadership spill |
Previous Year: | 2021 |
Election Date: | 30 May 2022 |
Candidate1: | Perin Davey |
Colour1: | 006644 |
Popular Vote1: | Unopposed |
Deputy Leader | |
Before Election: | David Littleproud |
After Election: | Perin Davey |
A leadership spill for the federal leadership of the National Party of Australia was held on 30 May 2022. The spill follows the federal election in which the Coalition, of which the Nationals form part, lost government, earlier in the same month. The incumbent leader, Barnaby Joyce, had served as Deputy Prime Minister in the outgoing government. He lost against his deputy David Littleproud, who was elected party leader.
A separate leadership vote for the National Party's Coalition partner Liberal Party was also held on the same day.
The Coalition lost the 2022 Australian federal election to the Labor opposition led by Anthony Albanese. There was significant media coverage surrounding the impact that comments made by Nationals politicians had on the loss of Liberal seats to independents, Labor and the Greens, particularly surrounding climate policy.[1] The Nationals do not officially release the results of party leadership elections.
Littleproud won the spill and became the new party leader, with Perin Davey as his deputy.[4] Even though Davey was a Senator, Bridget McKenzie was elected and remained leader of the Nationals in the Senate.[5]