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Our History

In 1944, the Liberal Party of Australia was founded after a three-day meeting held in a small hall not far from Parliament House in Canberra. The meeting was called by the then Leader of the Opposition (United Australia Party) Robert Menzies.

Robert Menzies had already served as Prime Minister of Australia (1939-41), but he believed that the non-Labor parties should unite to present a strong alternative government to the Australian people.

Eighty men and women from 18 non-Labor political parties and organisations attended the first Canberra conference.

They shared a common belief that Australians should have greater personal freedom and choice than that offered under Labor’s post-war socialist plans.

Robert Menzies believed the time was right for a new political force in Australia – one which fought for the freedom of the individual and produced enlightened liberal policies.

In his opening address at that meeting, he said:

…what we must look for, and it is a matter of desperate importance to our society, is a true revival of liberal thought which will work for social justice and security, for national power and national progress, and for the full development of the individual citizen, though not through the dull and deadening process of socialism.

It is often said that Robert Menzies stood for the ‘forgotten people’ of Australia; those mainstream Australians whose goals, needs and aspirations had been ignored by Government.

On October 16, 1944, the name The Liberal Party of Australia was adopted, uniting the many different political organisations. Two months later, at the Albury Conference, the Party’s organisational and constitutional framework was drawn up.

The name Liberal was chosen deliberately for its associations with progressive nineteenth century free enterprise and social equality. By May 1945 membership of the Liberal Party had swelled to 40,000.

It fought its first election in 1946 with some success and in 1947, the Liberal Party won State Government in Western Australia, South Australia and Victoria. In 1949 the Liberals, in coalition with the Country Party, were first elected to national government.

Sir Robert Menzies went on to lead Australia and the Liberal Party for 17 years, before he retired from politics in 1966.

The Liberal Party has become Australia’s most successful postwar party; it was elected to Government for 23 years from 1949 to 1972, and for another term of more than seven years from 1975 to 1983.

In 1996, the Australian people again re-elected the Liberal Party, in Coalition with the National Party of Australia, to govern Australia in a landslide win, and in 1998, 2001 & 2004 that government was re-elected.

In 2013, the Abbott Coalition Government took office. In September 2015, Malcolm Turnbull was sworn in as Australia’s 29th Prime Minister. In August 2018, Scott Morrison was elected leader of the Liberal Party and became Australia’s 30th Prime Minister.

Following the 2022 federal election, Peter Dutton was elected as the leader of the Liberal Party. 

Our Leaders

Robert Menzies 1944 – 1966 Prime Minister (1949 – 1966)
Harold Holt 1966 – 1967 Prime Minister
John Gorton 1968 – 1971 Prime Minister
William McMahon 1971 – 1972 Prime Minister
Bill Snedden 1972 – 1975 Leader of the Opposition
Malcolm Fraser 1975 – 1983 Prime Minister
Andrew Peacock 1983 – 1985 Leader of the Opposition
John Howard 1985 -1989 Leader of the Opposition
Andrew Peacock 1989 – 1990 Leader of the Opposition
John Hewson 1990 – 1994 Leader of the Opposition
Alexander Downer 1994 – 1995 Leader of the Opposition
John Howard 1995 – 2007 Prime Minister (1996 – 2007)
Brendan Nelson 2007 – 2008 Leader of the Opposition
Malcolm Turnbull 2008 – 2009 Leader of the Opposition
Tony Abbott 2009 – 2015 Prime Minister (2013 – 2015)
Malcolm Turnbull 2015 – 2018 Prime Minister
Scott Morrison 2018 – 2022 Prime Minister
Peter Dutton 2022 – Present Leader of the Opposition

Our Electoral Success – from Past to Present

Federal

Governed in coalition
1949 – 1972
1975 – 1983
1996 – 2007
2013 – 2022

Victoria

Governed in own right
1948 – 1950
1955 – 1982
Governed in coalition
1947 – 1948
1992 – 1999
2010 – 2014

New South Wales

Governed in coalition
1965 – 1976
1988 – 1995
2011 – 2023

Queensland

Governed in coalition
1957 – 1983
1996 – 1998
Governed as Liberal National Party
2012 – 2015
2024 – Present

South Australia

Governed as Liberal
Country League

1933 – 1965
1968 – 1970
Governed as Liberal Party
1979 – 1982
1993 – 2002
2018 – 2022

Western Australia

Governed in coalition
1947 – 1953
1959 – 1971
1974 – 1983
1993 – 2001
2008 – 2017

Tasmania

Governed in coalition
1969 – 1972
Governed in own right
1982 – 1989
1992 – 1998
2014 – present

Northern Territory

NT Country Liberal Party
1974 – 2001
2012 – 2016
2024 – present

ACT

Self-government since 1989

Governed in coalition
1989 – 1991
1995 – 2001

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