Leader of the Opposition (Australia) explained

Post:Leader of the Opposition
Insignia:Coat_of_Arms_of_Australia.svg
Insigniacaption:Commonwealth Coat of Arms
Flag:Flag of Australia (converted).svg
Flagcaption:Flag of Australia
Flagborder:yes
Incumbent:Peter Dutton
Incumbentsince:30 May 2022
Department:Opposition of Australia
Shadow Cabinet of Australia
Reports To:Parliament
Termlength:While leader of the largest political party in the House of Representatives that is not in government
Inaugural:George Reid
Formation:1901
Salary:$390,000

In Australian federal politics, the Leader of His Majesty's Loyal Opposition, more commonly referred to as the Leader of the Opposition is an elected member of parliament (MP) in the Australian House of Representatives who leads the opposition. The Leader of the Opposition, by convention, is the leader of the largest political party in the House of Representatives that is not in government.[1]

When in parliament, the opposition leader sits on the left-hand side of the centre table, in front of the opposition and opposite the prime minister. The opposition leader is elected by his or her party according to its rules. A new leader of the opposition may be elected when the incumbent dies, resigns, or is challenged for the leadership.

Australia is a constitutional monarchy with a parliamentary system and is based on the Westminster model. The term "opposition" has a specific meaning in the parliamentary sense. It is an important component of the Westminster system, with the opposition directing criticism at the government and attempts to defeat and replace the Government. The opposition is therefore known as the "government in waiting" and it is a formal part of the parliamentary system. It is in opposition to the government, but not to the Crown; hence the term "His Majesty's Loyal Opposition".[2]

To date there have been 35 opposition leaders, 19 of whom also have served terms as prime minister.[3]

The current Leader of the Opposition is Peter Dutton of the Liberal Party, following a leadership election on 30 May 2022. The current Deputy Leader of the Opposition is Sussan Ley, who was elected deputy leader of the Liberal Party on the same date.

Role

The opposition leader is the opposition's counterpart to the prime minister. The opposition leader is expected to be ready to form a new government if the incumbent government is unable to continue in office. This typically occurs when the opposition wins a federal election, after which the opposition leader is appointed prime minister. However, the opposition leader may also be called upon to form government if the incumbent government loses the confidence of the House (most recently in 1941) or that of the governor-general (most recently in 1975).[1]

The opposition leader is the head of the shadow ministry, allocating portfolios and, in the case of the Coalition, determining its membership. The opposition leader is assisted by a deputy leader of the opposition, who is also recognised in the standing orders and entitled to an additional salary. Both the opposition leader and deputy opposition leader are entitled to a degree of special preference from the Speaker of the House.[1]

The position of opposition leader has no constitutional basis but exists as a matter of convention in the Westminster system. A 1960 inquiry into parliamentary salaries and allowances observed:[1]

The Leader of the Opposition has to make himself master of all the business which comes before the House (not merely that of one or two departments); he has to do this at times at short notice and under constant pressure; and he gets no help from permanent officials. At all times he is the spokesman for those who are critical of or opposed to the Government, and he must be unceasingly vigilant and active. He and the Prime Minister should be the most powerful agents in guiding and forming public opinion on issues of policy.

Whereas according to the Coalition agreement the Leader of the National Party serves as Deputy Prime Minister when the Coalition is in government,[4] no such agreement exists when the Coalition is in Opposition, and no National Party politician has ever served as Deputy Leader of the Opposition.

History

George Reid became the de facto leader of the opposition in the lead-up to the inaugural 1901 federal election, following the appointment of Edmund Barton to lead a caretaker government as Australia's first prime minister. His status was confirmed when the House of Representatives met for the first time after the election. The opposition leader was initially not entitled to any salary or entitlements beyond those of an ordinary member of parliament. As a result, Reid had to maintain his legal practice in Sydney to support himself and was able to attend just over one-third of the sitting days in the first session of parliament.[5]

Although the role was firmly established, the House did not formally recognise the position of opposition leader in its records until 1920.[1] It was recognised by statute for the first time with the passage of the Parliamentary Allowances Act 1920, which granted its holder an additional allowance.[5] Prime Minister Andrew Fisher had previously offered Opposition Leader Alfred Deakin an allowance in 1910. Deakin declined, but did accept a paid secretary.[6] In 1931, the office was incorporated into the House's standing orders for the first time, with the opposition leader granted the right to exceed the time limit for speeches in certain instances.[1]

Salary

The opposition leader's salary is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal, an independent statutory body.[7] As of 1 July 2019, the incumbent is entitled to a parliamentarian's base salary of A$211,250 plus an additional 85% loading, equating to a salary of around $390,000.[8]

List of leaders of the opposition

No. LeaderPartyConstituencyTook officeLeft officePrime MinisterRef
1George Reid Free TradeEast Sydney (NSW)19 May 190117 August 1904 Barton 1901–03[9]
Deakin 1903–04
 Watson 1904
2Chris Watson LaborBland (NSW)18 August 19045 July 1905 Reid 1904–05
(1)George Reid Free Trade / Anti-SocialistEast Sydney (NSW)7 July 190516 November 1908 Deakin 1905–08
 Fisher 1908–09
3Joseph CookAnti-SocialistParramatta (NSW)17 November 190826 May 1909
4Alfred Deakin LiberalBallaarat (Vic)26 May 19092 June 1909
5Andrew Fisher LaborWide Bay (Qld)2 June 190929 April 1910 Deakin 1909
(4)Alfred Deakin LiberalBallaarat (Vic)1 July 191020 January 1913 Fisher 1910–13
(3)Joseph CookParramatta (NSW)20 January 191324 June 1913
(5)Andrew Fisher LaborWide Bay (Qld)8 July 191317 September 1914 Cook 1913–14
(3)Joseph Cook LiberalParramatta (NSW)8 October 191417 February 1917 Fisher 1914–15
 Hughes 1915–23
 
6Frank Tudor LaborYarra (Vic)17 February 191710 January 1922 
7Matthew CharltonHunter (NSW)25 January 192229 March 1928 
 Bruce 1923–29
8James ScullinYarra (Vic)29 March 192822 October 1929 
9John Latham NationalistKooyong (Vic)20 November 19297 May 1931 Scullin 1929–32
10Joseph Lyons United AustraliaWilmot (Tas)7 May 19316 January 1932
(8)James Scullin LaborYarra (Vic)6 January 19321 October 1935 Lyons 1932–39
11John CurtinFremantle (WA)1 October 19357 October 1941 
 Page 1939
 Menzies 1939–41
 Fadden 1941
12Arthur Fadden CountryDarling Downs (Qld)7 October 194123 September 1943 Curtin 1941–45
13Robert Menzies United AustraliaKooyong (Vic)23 September 194319 December 1949
 Liberal Forde 1945
 Chifley 1945–49
14Ben Chifley LaborMacquarie (NSW)19 December 194913 June 1951 Menzies 1949–66
15H. V. EvattBarton (NSW) 1940–58
Hunter (NSW) 1958–60
20 June 19519 February 1960 
16Arthur CalwellMelbourne (Vic)7 March 19608 February 1967 
 Holt 1966–67
17Gough WhitlamWerriwa (NSW)8 February 19672 December 1972 
 McEwen 1967–68
 Gorton 1968–71
 McMahon 1971–72
18Billy Snedden LiberalBruce (Vic)20 December 197221 March 1975 Whitlam 1972–75
19Malcolm FraserWannon (Vic)21 March 197511 November 1975
(17)Gough Whitlam LaborWerriwa (NSW)11 November 197522 December 1977 Fraser 1975–83
20Bill HaydenOxley (Qld)22 December 19778 February 1983
21Bob HawkeWills (Vic)8 February 198311 March 1983
22Andrew Peacock LiberalKooyong (Vic)11 March 19835 September 1985 Hawke 1983–91
23John HowardBennelong (NSW)5 September 19859 May 1989[10]
(22)Andrew PeacockKooyong (Vic)9 May 19893 April 1990 
24John HewsonWentworth (NSW)3 April 199023 May 1994 
 Keating 1991–96
25Alexander DownerMayo (SA)23 May 199430 January 1995[11]
(23)John HowardBennelong (NSW)30 January 199511 March 1996
26Kim Beazley LaborBrand (WA)19 March 199622 November 2001 Howard 1996–07[12]
27Simon CreanHotham (Vic)22 November 20012 December 2003[13]
28Mark LathamWerriwa (NSW)2 December 200318 January 2005[14]
(26)Kim BeazleyBrand (WA)28 January 20054 December 2006
29Kevin RuddGriffith (Qld)4 December 20063 December 2007[15]
30Brendan Nelson LiberalBradfield (NSW)3 December 200716 September 2008 Rudd 2007–10[16]
31Malcolm TurnbullWentworth (NSW)16 September 20081 December 2009 [17]
32Tony AbbottWarringah (NSW)1 December 200918 September 2013 [18]
 Gillard 2010–13
 Rudd 2013
33Bill Shorten LaborMaribyrnong (Vic)13 October 201330 May 2019 Abbott 2013–15[19]
Turnbull 2015–18[20]
Morrison 2018–22[21]
34Anthony AlbaneseGrayndler (NSW)30 May 201923 May 2022
35Peter Dutton LiberalDickson (Qld)30 May 2022Incumbent Albanese 2022–

List of deputy leaders of the opposition

Deputy LeaderPartyConstituencyTook officeLeft officeLeaderRef
 Commonwealth Liberal PartyParramatta (NSW)26 May 19092 June 1909 Deakin 1909
 Labor PartySenator for South Australia (SA)2 June 190929 April 1910 Fisher 1909–10
 Commonwealth Liberal PartyParramatta (NSW)1 July 191020 January 1913 Deakin 1910–13
Swan (WA)20 January 191324 June 1913Cook 1913
 Labor PartySenator for South Australia (SA)8 July 19137 September 1914 Fisher 1913–14
 Commonwealth Liberal PartySwan (WA)8 October 191417 February 1917 Cook 1914–17
Albert Gardiner Labor PartySenator for New South Wales (NSW)17 February 1917March 1927 Tudor 1917–22
 Charlton 1922–28
James ScullinYarra (Vic)17 March 192729 March 1928 [22]
Darling (NSW)29 March 19281929 Scullin 1928–29
Dalley (NSW)192922 October 1929
 Nationalist PartyHenty (Vic)20 November 19297 May 1931 Latham 1929–31
 United Australia PartyKooyong (Vic)7 May 19316 January 1932 Lyons 1931–32
Frank Forde Labor PartyCapricornia (Qld)7 January 19327 October 1941 Scullin 1932–35
 Curtin 1935–41
 United Australia PartyNorth Sydney (NSW)9 October 194114 April 1944 Fadden 1941–43
 Menzies 1943–49
Wentworth (NSW)14 April 194419 December 1949 
 Liberal Party 
 Labor PartyBarton (NSW)19 December 194913 June 1951 Chifley 1949–51
Melbourne (Vic)13 June 19519 February 1960 Evatt 1951-60
Werriwa (NSW)7 March 19608 February 1967 Calwell 1960–67
Bass (Tas)9 February 19675 December 1972  Whitlam 1967–72
 Liberal PartyFlinders (Vic)20 December 197211 November 1975 Snedden 1972–75
Fraser 1975
 Labor PartyMelbourne Ports (Vic)11 November 197522 December 1975 Whitlam 1975–77
Reid (NSW)22 December 197522 December 1977
Lionel BowenKingsford Smith (NSW)22 December 1977 11 March 1983Hayden 1977–83
Hawke 1983
 Liberal PartyBennelong (NSW)11 March 19835 September 1985 Peacock 1983–85
Menzies (Vic)5 September 198517 July 1987 Howard 1985–89
Kooyong (Vic)17 July 19879 May 1989
Senator for Western Australia (WA) 1989–90
Pearce (WA) 1990
9 May 198924 March 1990 Peacock 1989–90
Flinders (Vic)24 March 199013 March 1993 Hewson 1990–94[23]
Chisholm (Vic)13 March 199323 May 1994[24]
Higgins (Vic)23 May 199419 March 1996Downer 1994–95[25]
Howard 1995–96
 Labor PartyHolt (Vic)19 March 199619 October 1998 Beazley 1996–2001[26]
Hotham (Vic)19 October 199822 November 2001
Jenny MacklinJagajaga (Vic)22 November 200118 September 2006 Crean 2001–03[27]
 Latham 2003–05
 Beazley 2005–06
Lalor (Vic)4 December 20063 December 2007 Rudd 2006–07[28]
Julie Bishop Liberal PartyCurtin (WA)3 December 200718 September 2013 Nelson 2007–08[29]
 Turnbull 2008–09
 Abbott 2009–13
Tanya Plibersek Labor PartySydney (NSW)14 October 201330 May 2019 Shorten 2013–19[30]
Corio (Vic)30 May 201923 May 2022Albanese 2019–22[31]
Sussan Ley Liberal PartyFarrer (NSW)30 May 2022Incumbent Dutton 2022–

See also

Notes

Notes and References

  1. Book: https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/House_of_Representatives/Powers_practice_and_procedure/Practice7/HTML/Chapter2/The_(official)_Opposition . House of Representatives Practice . Chapter 2: House, Government and Opposition, the (official) Opposition . May 2018 . 2021-11-07 . 27 June 2023 . http://webarchive.nla.gov.au/awa/20230627030549/https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/House_of_Representatives/Powers_practice_and_procedure/Practice7/HTML/Chapter2/The_(official)_Opposition . live .
  2. Book: Jaensch, Dean . Dean Jaensch . The Politics of Australia . . 1997 . Melbourne . 100 . 0-7329-4128-8.
  3. Web site: A House for the nation . Commonwealth of Australia . 14 December 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070830183221/http://www.houseforthenation.gov.au/explore/ahn03_p9.html . 30 August 2007 .
  4. News: Why can't Malcolm Turnbull sack Barnaby Joyce?. The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Michael. Koziol. Eryk. Bagshaw. 16 February 2018. 24 February 2018. 24 February 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180224113340/http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/why-can-t-malcolm-turnbull-sack-barnaby-joyce-20180216-p4z0lt.html. live.
  5. Web site: Australia's first Parliament: Her Majesty's loyal opposition. FlagPost. Australian Parliamentary Library. Dianne. Heriot. 12 February 2019. 9 February 2020. 17 February 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200217191644/https://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/download/library/prspub/6493674/upload_binary/6493674.pdf. live.
  6. Book: Brett, Judith. The Enigmatic Mr Deakin. 14 August 2017. Text Publishing. 9781925498660. 397.
  7. News: Salary. Department of Finance. 9 February 2020. 23 June 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210623164448/https://maps.finance.gov.au/guidance/remuneration/salary. dead.
  8. News: Pay rise coming for federal politicians as they prepare to return to Canberra. ABC News. 8 June 2019. 9 February 2020. Matthew. Doran. 2 July 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200702101309/https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-06-07/federal-politicians-payrise-backbenchers-morrison-albanese/11189016. live.
  9. Book: https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/House_of_Representatives/Powers_practice_and_procedure/Practice7/HTML/Appendices/Appendix4 . House of Representatives Practice . Appendix 4: Leaders of the Opposition . 805–806 . May 2018 . 2021-11-07 . 7 November 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211107045200/https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/House_of_Representatives/Powers_practice_and_procedure/Practice7/HTML/Appendices/Appendix4 . live .
  10. Hon John Howard MP. ZD4. 2021-11-07.
  11. 4G4. Hon Alexander Downer MP. 2021-11-07.
  12. PE4. The Hon Kim Beazley MP. 2021-11-06.
  13. Hon Simon Crean MP. DT4. 2021-11-07.
  14. K26. Mr Mark Latham MP. 2021-11-07.
  15. Hon Kevin Rudd MP. 83T. 2021-11-07.
  16. Hon Brendan Nelson MP. RW5. 2021-11-07.
  17. 884. Hon Malcolm Turnbull MP. 2021-11-07.
  18. Hon Tony Abbott MP. EZ5. 2021-11-07.
  19. DZS. Hon Chris Bowen MP. 2021-11-06.
  20. Hon Bill Shorten MP. 00ATG. 2021-11-07.
  21. Hon Anthony Albanese MP. R36. 2021-11-07.
  22. News: Inter-state . . 18 March 1927 . 7 November 2021 . 6 . Trove.
  23. Hon Peter Reith MP. WI4. 2021-11-07.
  24. Hon Dr Michael Wooldridge MP. 8E4. 2021-11-07.
  25. Hon Peter Costello MP. CT4. 2021-11-07.
  26. Hon Gareth Evans QC, MP. VD4. 2021-11-07.
  27. Hon Jenny Macklin MP. PG6. 2021-11-03.
  28. Hon Julia Gillard MP. 83L. 2021-11-03.
  29. Hon Julie Bishop MP. 83P. 2021-11-07.
  30. Hon Tanya Plibersek MP. 83M. 2021-11-07.
  31. HWQ. Hon Richard Marles MP. 2021-11-07.