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    You are at:Home»Trending & Viral News»Australia news live: Nationals break coalition with Liberals saying parties need ‘time apart’ after eight decades together; RBA interest rates decision today | Australia news
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    Australia news live: Nationals break coalition with Liberals saying parties need ‘time apart’ after eight decades together; RBA interest rates decision today | Australia news

    Earth & BeyondBy Earth & BeyondMay 20, 20250013 Mins Read
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    Australia news live: Nationals break coalition with Liberals saying parties need ‘time apart’ after eight decades together; RBA interest rates decision today | Australia news
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    Liberals and Nationals taking ‘time apart’ after eight decades as a coalition

    Littleproud says the National-Liberal breakup is about “taking a deep breath” and saying to the Australian people it is “time apart for us to be better”.

    He is speaking live:

    We have had a coalition of over 80 years and I suspect we will have one in the future. It has been broken before. What this is about is taking a deep breath and say to the Australian people this is time apart [for] us to be better, focus on them.

    This is a healthy part of our democracy which should be proud of.

    Nationals leader David Littleproud (centre), deputy leader Kevin Hogan (left) and Senate leader Bridget McKenzie speak to the media at Parliament House on Tuesday.
    Nationals leader David Littleproud (centre), deputy leader Kevin Hogan (left) and Senate leader Bridget McKenzie speak to the media at Parliament House on Tuesday. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP
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    Updated at 03.36 BST

    Key events

    Caitlin Cassidy

    Caitlin Cassidy

    Turning back to the Our Watch report that found governments must roll out respectful relationships education (RRE) across all Australian schools to address the growing challenges of AI-generated pornography, tech-facilitated abuse and sexual harassment.

    Yarrunga Primary School in the Victorian regional city of Wangaratta implemented respectful relationships education (RRE) in 2019 after experiencing “strong gendered violence” amongst students.

    Its acting principal, Michael Jenkins, said teachers were grappling with physical aggression between boys, students excluding other genders from games and disrespectful behaviour towards female staff.

    Between 2019 and 2020, there was nearly a 50% decrease in antisocial behaviour – such as teasing, physical aggression and sexualised comments – dropping from 114 incidents to 61.

    Jenkins said it was crucial to build emotional literacy and intelligence in young people, particularly in response to worsening behaviour after the pandemic.

    Young people are not always aware of how their behaviour can impact other people and they are often mimicking behaviours that they think are okay and it has gone unchallenged. The reality is that we are teaching young people how to be good young people in the world, and respectful relationships education is a key part of that.”

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    Greens say Labor call for more Gaza aid ‘meaningless’ without threat of sanctions

    The Greens deputy leader, Mehreen Faruqi, has condemned the Albanese government for not joining the UK, Canada and France in threatening a “concrete” response against Israel’s expansion of its war on Gaza.

    “Words won’t stop bombs. Words won’t stop the killing. Words won’t stop starvation,” Faruqi said in a statement after the foreign minister, Penny Wong, issued a joint statement with the foreign ministers of 22 other countries raising concerns over the UN and humanitarian partners not being able to deliver aid to Gaza under a new model reportedly approved by Israel’s security cabinet.

    Mehreen Faruqi. Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP

    Faruqi’s statement continues:

    Calling on Israel to allow aid through, without backing it with real action, is meaningless … At the very least, the Prime Minister could join the statement of our allies – the United Kingdom, Canada, and France – who have threatened sanctions against Israel. Signing a donor statement on aid does not absolve Labor of its complicity in Israel’s genocide, nor does it make up for their refusal to impose a single consequence for the slaughter of over 50,000 Palestinians.

    More on this story below:

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    Updated at 04.16 BST

    SES warns of more flash flooding in affected areas

    Andrew Cribb, NSW SES northern zone commander, has issued another warning about flash flooding, of which he says more can be expected as the rainfall continues.

    Cribb says:

    The SES has absolutely seen unprecedented rainfall in several areas in a short amount of time. That has led [to] flash flooding, and we will continue to see that flash flooding even though the predicted rainfall rates are a little lower than what we have experienced.

    The short, intense bursts of rain that we expect will create further flash flooding and risk to the residents of the areas affected. This flash flooding is hitting the ground where it is absolutely saturated and running downhill towards the river catchments and the river tributaries which will prolong any flooding or indeed, increase the rises of those.

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    Updated at 04.07 BST

    Heavy rain expected until Wednesday, BoM says

    Steve Bernasconi, hazard preparedness and response manager for the Bureau of Meteorology, has run through the rainfall totals across parts of NSW, which range from 61mm at Gloucester to 267mm at Taree over 24 hours – including 190mm at Taree in just 6 hours.

    Bernasconi says:

    This is a multi-day event, a multi-day weather event that’s turned into a multi-day flood event. And it will be focused on the Hunter and the mid-north coast today and into tomorrow with the potential for rainfall to still persist along the coast into the end of the week and weekend …

    I’ve been asked to explain what’s causing this. A coastal trough that’s been positioned on the coast now for a couple of days persists. And it’s positioned around about the central mid-north coast area, and it’s expected to track slowly northwards today.

    That means heavy to intense rainfall is expected on the southern side of that trough through today and into Wednesday.

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    Updated at 03.55 BST

    About 4,400 people across affected regions without power

    The Swansea MP, Yasmin Catley, says Lostock dam and Glennies Creek dam are continuing to spill, and Patterson River has exceeded the major flood level.

    Glenbawn dam is continuing to rise and more rain is expected. Chichester dam has peaked just 30mm short of a red alert.

    A number of roads are closed across the Hunter region. About 400 people in Newcastle were without power this morning and about 4,000 on the mid-north coast.

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    Updated at 03.50 BST

    Four evacuation centres set up in flood-hit areas

    There are four evacuation centres currently operating in the region: at Wingham, Dungog, Taree and Bulahdelah, says Jihad Dib.

    Alerts will go out if and when other evacuation centres are set up. Communities are being door-knocked before they are affected by flooding.

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    Updated at 03.47 BST

    Authorities delivering update on NSW floods

    The NSW emergency services minister, Jihad Dib, is speaking to media about the flooding situation in the Hunter Valley and mid-north coast.

    The Upper Hunter region has seen rainfall of up to 270mm in the past 24 hours, Dib says:

    That’s unusual weather. That is a lot of rain compared to what we would normally receive. We’re also seeing that spread out across the entire region. What we already know is that there are already ground is saturated. The dams are pretty full and the rivers are full, so with that, the expectation is that there will be some flooding.

    There are 1,600 SES volunteers on the ground at the moment, Dib says. They have performed 24 flood rescues over the past 24 hours:

    Many of those rescues, unfortunately, are as a result of people going through flood waters. I don’t know how many times I need to say this – please, do not drive through flood waters. Not only do you put yourself at risk, you put others at risk and you put them in harm’s way. We need people to be sensible. We need people to follow the instructions. We need people to be cautious.

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    Updated at 03.46 BST

    Kevin Hogan says he hopes Nationals and Liberals get back together after time apart

    Nationals deputy leader, Kevin Hogan, says he views the Coalition split like a relationship breakup that will eventually end up back together again. He hopes sooner rather than later:

    Maybe we’ve all broken up in a relationship that’s been important to us, and very often, more often than not, you get back together and join back together with clearer clarity and focus on what the relationship was about and when you get back together, how it is going to work even better.

    That’s how I’m viewing this. I think that it is really important for the Coalition that that happens.

    We are always best as a country with a strong Coalition. I hope, my wish in the future, is that it is going to happen again sooner rather than later, but we needed to make, for us, a principled stand on things today that we could not move on.

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    Updated at 03.41 BST

    Liberals and Nationals taking ‘time apart’ after eight decades as a coalition

    Littleproud says the National-Liberal breakup is about “taking a deep breath” and saying to the Australian people it is “time apart for us to be better”.

    He is speaking live:

    We have had a coalition of over 80 years and I suspect we will have one in the future. It has been broken before. What this is about is taking a deep breath and say to the Australian people this is time apart [for] us to be better, focus on them.

    This is a healthy part of our democracy which should be proud of.

    Nationals leader David Littleproud (centre), deputy leader Kevin Hogan (left) and Senate leader Bridget McKenzie speak to the media at Parliament House on Tuesday. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP
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    Updated at 03.36 BST

    Nationals have ‘no animosity’ towards Liberal: Littleproud

    Littleproud says the decision that the Nationals will not re-enter into coalition with the Liberals was made with “no animosity”:

    There is no animosity, no angst, no heat. It is predicated on respect and understanding …

    The Nationals leader says this is one of the hardest political decisions of his life:

    I did not make it by myself. The collective wisdom of everyone in that room today, getting to work through their lived experience of who they represent and what they [are] able to leave for them and next generations. I think our democracy is healthier for it. You’ve got 19 individual prepared to do that, to come here and get [to] the core purpose of why we are here.

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    Updated at 03.09 BST

    Littleproud leaves door open for resuming coalition when ‘Liberals decide what they want to be’

    Littleproud has been asked whether he has just made both the National and Liberal parties “irrelevant in government … purely because of numbers”. The Nationals leader says:

    No, this is mature conversation that both Sussan [Ley] and I had around their need to rediscover who they are and what they want to be. I need to leave a legacy for those people that I represent, for the 30% of Australians that live outside a capital city. I don’t intend to take a step back when I take big steps forward in three years.

    I think that we can and will work together when the Liberals decide what they want to be and much of the capital cities that they want to be able to be prosecuting their case in. My job [is] not to be a drag on their boat and I’ve got to say, I never saw a billboard. I never saw a piece of material from the Labor party attacking me, or the National party at the last election. The National party didn’t drag anyone’s vote down in the capital city because we’re able to focus on the things that are important to us. This is a principled position. We come here not wanting to have to scrap over every last crumb.

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    Updated at 03.05 BST

    Liberal party ‘going on a journey of rediscovery’, Littleproud says

    National’s leader David Littleproud reiterates the decision not to re-enter a coalition agreement with the Liberal party is “on a principle basis”.

    He says the Liberal party are “going on a journey of rediscovery”:

    It’s on a principle position of making sure that those hard-fought wins are maintained and respected, we continue to look forward. We look forward to what else we can do as a party and as part of an opposition now that we can shape the lives of regional Australians for the better.

    We don’t want to have to look back and to waste energy on trying to re-prosecute the casement we should be continuing to look forward. And so, I had a respectful conversation with Sussan Ley this morning, sat down, made it very clear that we remain committed to having the door open, respecting the position that Sussan has been put in. That she is a leader that needs to rebuild the Liberal party. They are going on a journey of rediscovery, and this will provide them the opportunity to do that without the spectre of the National party imposing their will. But, setting clear boundaries, and parameters about what’s important to us – about what we achieved as a Coalition in the last three years. Building on that. Not having to look back, and to fight for things, but to actually focus on what’s important. Changing the lives of people in regional Australia – young kids in regional Australia.

    David Littleproud announces the Nationals will split from Liberals. Photograph: ABC News
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    Updated at 02.58 BST

    David Littleproud says Nationals will not re-enter into coalition with the Liberals

    Nationals leader David Littleproud says the Nationals will not be re-entering a Coalition agreement with the Liberal party.

    He is speaking live:

    After the discussions that both Sussan Ley and I have had over the ensuing period, our party room has got to a position where we will not be re-entering a Coalition agreement with the Liberal party after this election. What we have got to a position is that the National party will sit alone on a principle basis. On the basis of looking forward, not having to look back and to try and actually regain important policy pieces that change the lives of the people we represent.

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    Updated at 02.52 BST

    Tom McIlroy

    Tom McIlroy

    Nationals to make announcement on future of Coalition partnership

    There is growing speculation about the future of the Coalition in Canberra this morning, amid drawn-out negotiations over a new deal between the Liberals and the Nationals.

    Nationals leader David Littleproud is going to speak to the media at Parliament House at 11.45am, after a party room meeting with MPs this morning.

    The party says Littleproud will make “an announcement in relation to the Coalition agreement.”

    He will be accompanied by the deputy leader, Kevin Hogan, and Senate leader Bridget McKenzie.

    If the Nationals don’t enter into a coalition with the Liberals, their MPs would likely not be part of the formal opposition and would not have frontbench positions.

    Nationals leader David Littleproud. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

    Littleproud has met with the opposition leader, Sussan Ley, since the 3 May election but the pair have so far not signed off on the traditional written agreement which influences the shadow ministry and some policy areas.

    Net zero carbon emission commitments and the opposition’s nuclear policy are key sticking points between the two sides.

    Some in the Nationals say they should go their own way in this term of parliament. That sentiment has been echoed by some Liberals, including the former MP Jason Falinski, who has argued in recent days the Nationals are a drag on the Liberals pitch to inner-city voters.

    We will bring you more news in the next half an hour.

    Share

    Updated at 02.51 BST

    Australia Break Coalition Decades decision interest Liberals Live nationals News parties rates RBA time today
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