Ley faces Leadership Challenge as Coalition Climate Divide Deepens
CANBERRA – โฃOpposition Leader Sussan โคLey isโข almost certain to faceโ a leadership challenge nextโ year,โข according to sources withinโข the Liberal Party, as a deepening rift over climate policyโค threatens to fracture the โCoalition. โฃThe challenge follows the Nationals’ โขformal abandonment of a commitment to net zero emissions โคby 2050.
Senator Andrew Bragg has suggested the Liberalโ Party retain a pledge to reduce โฃemissions, though not โnecessarily by โฃ2050, stating, “We need to make sure weโ have a โcredible policy to present to โpeopleโ whoโฃ live in urban Australia.” He alsoโ argued โmaintaining the Coalition agreement should not be โa “blank cheque” โคto the Nationals.
Liberal MPโ Tim Wilson reinforced thisโค sentiment, telling Sky News โฃthe Liberal Party was “not National Party-lite” and would “make our own decisions about โฃour own policy, and we will stand up for what we believe in.”
Theโข Nationals’โ decision has drawn criticism from โคteal independents, who successfully โcampaigned against Liberals in inner-city seats on platforms prioritizing climate โฃaction. Kooyong MP Monique Ryan, who defeated former Liberal treasurer Josh โคFrydenbergโ in 2022, stated, “I โthink people areโข asking what the Liberals care aboutโฆ and at the moment all they seem to care about is theirโ own political prospects, which are โขheading to oblivion if they continue to behaveโ thisโค way.”
Former Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce expressed satisfaction with the party’s new โposition,โฃ though he hasโฃ not yet โrejoined the Nationals party room and has not ruled out defecting to One โฃNation.โข He โขcredited Nationals senator Matt Canavanโ with initiating the shiftโค away from the 2050 target.
The escalating tensions raise โฃquestions about the future of the Coalition and Ley’s leadership as theโ partiesโ grappleโค with divergingโค approaches โฃto a โขkeyโ policy area.