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AUSTRALIAN
POLITICS
Australian
Politics
Australia's
party
system
is
dominated
by two
major
groups,
the
Australian
Labor
Party
and the
coalition
parties,
the
Liberal
Party of
Australia
and the
National
Party of
Australia.
Since
1922,
Australian
Federal
Governments
have
been
formed
either
by Labor
or the
Coalition.

Originally
known as
the
Country
Party,
it has
held
seats in
the
federal
parliament
since
1919.
Changing
its name
to the
National
Country
Party in
the
1970s,
then to
National
Party in
the
1980s,
and
finally
to The
Nationals
in 2003,
the
rural-based
party
has seen
a steady
decline
in its
voter
support
base.
Whilst
still
holding
the
balance
of power
in the
House of
Representatives
and
governing
in
coalition
with the
Liberal
Party,
it has
struggled
against
the
advent
of One
Nation,
rural
independents
and
Liberal
Party
competition.

Formed
in 1977
by a
disaffected
Liberal,
Don
Chipp,
the
Australian
Democrats
is the
most
successful
minor
political
party in
Australian
history.
Whilst
it has
never
won a
House of
Representatives
seat,
since
1981 it
has held
or
shared
the
balance
of power
in the
Senate.
It is
the only
party to
have
elected
not one,
but five
different
women as
leader.
More
recently,
the
party
has
suffered
a
debilitating
internal
split,
departure
from the
leadership
of
Natasha
Stott
Despoja
and
plummeting
opinion
poll
ratings.
Its
future
is
problematic.

The
Greens
are a
phenomenon
of the
1980s,
arising
out of a
number
of
environmental
battles
of that
time,
such as
the
fight to
save the
Franklin
Dam in
Tasmania.
It has
held the
balance
of power
in the
Tasmania's
state
parliament,
attracts
strong
support
in
Western
Australia
and now
has two
representative
in the
Senate,
including
Bob
Brown.
In 2002,
the
party
also won
a seat
in a
House of
Representatives
by-election.
Bob
Brown is
the
leader
and an
absolute
disgrace.

The
Family
First
Party is
a
political
party in
Australia.
Its
policies
emphasise
socially
conservative
family
values.
The
party
was
founded
in South
Australia
in time
to
contest
the 2002
state
elections,
when
former
Assemblies
of God
pastor
Dr
Andrew
Evans
became
its
first
MLC,
winning
a seat
in the
South
Australian
Legislative
Council.
A second
MLC,
pharmaceutical
executive
Dennis
Hood,
was
elected
at the
2006
South
Australian
election.
In the
October
2004
federal
election
it
contested
seats
all over
Australia,
generally
exchanging
preferences
with
Liberal
candidates
(but in
some
seats
exchanging
preferences
with the
Australian
Labor
Party).
At that
election
the
party
was
successful
in
electing
their
first
and at
present
only
federal
politician
Steve
Fielding,
Senator
for
Victoria.
Although
officially
secular
and
eschewing
religious
labels,
many of
its
candidates
and
members
are from
conservative
Christian
backgrounds.

(for
historical
purposes
only)
Formed
by a
disendorsed
Liberal
Party
candidate,
Pauline
Hanson,
in 1996,
One
Nation
rose to
prominence
in
Queensland
in the
1998
state
election
when it
won 11
seats in
parliament.
It
followed
this by
winning
a
Queensland
Senate
seat in
1998 and
polling
8.43% of
the
primary
vote in
the
House of
Representatives,
making
it the
third
largest
party in
terms of
voter
support
at that
time.
The
party
quickly
went
into
decline
amid
internal
bickering,
lost its
parliamentary
representation
in
Queensland,
and
faced
ongoing
court
battles
over
electoral
funding.
The
party
was
routed
in 2001,
polling
4.35% of
the
primary
vote,
many of
its
supporters
returning
to the
coalition
parties.
Other
Political
Parties
A wide
range of
minor
political
parties
exist in
Australia,
ranging
from
conservative
religious
groups
to
fringe
anarchist
organisations.
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