In contrast to some other jurisdictions, in Australia, governments relying on minor parties and independents to enact policies and especially to hold power, are readily characterised by oppositions and commentators as unstable, even chaotic and an undesirable deviation from the stability of majority parliaments. The almost unremarked exception is the Liberals' long and frequent reliance on the National Party and its predecessors to form government. This paper explores the role of the National Party in minority Coalition governments and considers why this form of minority government attracts so little comment, noting the inter-party and intra-party systems and strategies that give the appearance of stability
The trust Australians have in their political leaders is falling. Only 27 per cent of Australians th...
... and other minority governments. In Inside Story, Peter Browne surveys a surprisingly strong fiel...
It has become an established fact of Australian politics that when the non-Labor side of politics is...
Australian politics has featured relatively stable conservative coalitions at both national and sub-...
Minority government is becoming more common. With support declining for traditional parties and incr...
A steady decline in major party support in Commonwealth nations has resulted in changing parliamenta...
As support for established political parties wane and the electorate becomes more volatile, minority...
As the major political parties keep a close eye on the election count, there\u27s a bit of contingen...
While there exists a large and expanding comparative literature on coalition formation and governmen...
Political parties are an important, indeed almost ubiquitous, feature of liberal-democracy systems o...
Over the past two decades there have been at least ten examples of this political phenomenon in the ...
In a two-party unicameral parliament, the official opposition is deemed to be the largest majority p...
Within Westminster-based majority parliaments, the presence of minority government runs contrary to ...
The thesis examines the proposition that the role of a minor party is determined, not by its total s...
For about one hundred years Australian politics has been dominated by a "two party system" but there...
The trust Australians have in their political leaders is falling. Only 27 per cent of Australians th...
... and other minority governments. In Inside Story, Peter Browne surveys a surprisingly strong fiel...
It has become an established fact of Australian politics that when the non-Labor side of politics is...
Australian politics has featured relatively stable conservative coalitions at both national and sub-...
Minority government is becoming more common. With support declining for traditional parties and incr...
A steady decline in major party support in Commonwealth nations has resulted in changing parliamenta...
As support for established political parties wane and the electorate becomes more volatile, minority...
As the major political parties keep a close eye on the election count, there\u27s a bit of contingen...
While there exists a large and expanding comparative literature on coalition formation and governmen...
Political parties are an important, indeed almost ubiquitous, feature of liberal-democracy systems o...
Over the past two decades there have been at least ten examples of this political phenomenon in the ...
In a two-party unicameral parliament, the official opposition is deemed to be the largest majority p...
Within Westminster-based majority parliaments, the presence of minority government runs contrary to ...
The thesis examines the proposition that the role of a minor party is determined, not by its total s...
For about one hundred years Australian politics has been dominated by a "two party system" but there...
The trust Australians have in their political leaders is falling. Only 27 per cent of Australians th...
... and other minority governments. In Inside Story, Peter Browne surveys a surprisingly strong fiel...
It has become an established fact of Australian politics that when the non-Labor side of politics is...