Angus Taylor

Last updated

Angus Taylor
MP
Angus Taylor 2018 portrait black.jpg
Official portrait, 2018
Leader of the Opposition
Assumed office
13 February 2026
Avatar of Angus Taylor MP Angus Taylor 2015.jpg
Avatar of Angus Taylor MP
Angus Taylor MP
@Angustaylor4hume

1000 extra carparks for rail commuters right across the north of Hume!

1 May 2019 [107] [108]
Avatar of Angus Taylor MP Angus Taylor 2015.jpg
Avatar of Angus Taylor MP
Angus Taylor MP
@Angustaylor4hume

Replying to @Angustaylor4hume

Fantastic. Great move. Well done Angus

1 May 2019 [109]

Naomi Wolf conflict

In his 2013 maiden parliamentary speech, Taylor stated he first encountered "political correctness" in 1991 at Oxford University when "a young Naomi Wolf lived a couple of doors down the corridor. Several graduate students ... decided we should abandon the Christmas tree in the common room because some people might be offended." Taylor went on to say democratic rights were being "chipped away by shrill elitist voices". [110] In 2019, after part of the speech was shared online, Wolf noted Taylor's recollection of her was not possible as she left Oxford in 1988, and rejected any implication she opposed Christmas trees as she "loves Christmas". She described his reference to "elites" as "antisemitic dogwhistling." A spokesman for Taylor said he never stated Wolf was one of the graduates against the Christmas tree. [111] Taylor denied any form of antisemitism and demanded an apology from her over the claim, stating the accusation was offensive as he had a Jewish grandparent. [112]

Electricity price rise delay

Before the 2022 election, Taylor reportedly ordered the Australian Energy Regulator to delay their announcement of the Default Market Offer by several weeks. [113] The announcement indicated that benchmark electricity prices would rise up to 18.3%. [114] Incoming energy minister Chris Bowen accused Taylor of having ordered the delay to increase the Coalition's chances at the election. [115]

Opposition to the Voice

Taylor and fellow Liberal MP Andrew Hastie caused controversy after misquoting former High Court Justices Robert French and Kenneth Hayne regarding the 2023 Australian Indigenous Voice referendum. [116]

Shadow minister (2022–2026)

Following the Coalition's defeat at the 2022 election, he was appointed as shadow treasurer in the shadow ministry of Peter Dutton. [117] Taylor was re-elected at the 2025 election, and, following Dutton's defeat in his own seat, contested the Liberal leadership election, losing to Deputy Leader Sussan Ley. [118] [119] [120]

On 28 May 2025, after his leadership election loss, Taylor was appointed to the position of shadow minister for defence in Ley's shadow ministry. On the evening of 11 February 2026, he resigned from the shadow ministry admist rising speculation of a leadership spill from him against Ley. [121] [122] Taylor formally announced his candidacy for leader of the Liberal Party on the morning of 12 February, [123] with a second leadership spill motion being launched on that day. [124] Taylor subsequently defeated Ley at the spill, winning 34 votes to Ley's 17. [125] [126]

Leader of the Opposition (2026–present)

Upon being elected as the leader of the Liberal Party and the leader of the Opposition, Taylor announced the issue of immigration being his top priority. [127] His election was to the dismay of notable Moderates, such as former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, labelling him a "best qualified idiot". [128] As of 13 February 2026, he has yet to announce his new shadow cabinet.

In his first speech as party leader and leader of the Opposition at a press conference, Taylor announced a revised Liberal Party policy; calling for lower immigration and an immigration policy that "puts the interests of Australians first, and puts Australians values at the centre of that policy". [129] [130] He also targeted "net-zero ideology" and "Labor's bad carbon taxes", and voiced support for lower inflation, interest rates, and taxes. [131]

Publications

Taylor has published reports as part of the ANZ Bank Insight series. The first of these, Earth, Fire, Wind and Water – Economic Opportunity and the Australian Commodities Cycle, focused on the opportunities and challenges faced by Australia's commodity exporters in the face of the commodities boom, and was described as a "landmark report" by The Australian . [132] The second was Greener Pastures – The Soft Commodity Opportunity for Australia and New Zealand, arguing that a soft commodity boom was taking over from the hard commodity boom.[ citation needed ] Other reports and articles include The Future for Freight, focused on reform in the freight transport sector, and "More to Nation Building than Big Bucks", critiquing the Labor Government's comparison between its National Broadband Network and the Snowy Mountain Scheme. [133]

In February 2013, Taylor authored the report, "A proposal to reduce the cost of electricity to Australian electricity users" while a director at Port Jackson Partners. The report said that the Coalition could immediately drop the renewable energy target entirely and save up to A$3.2 billion by 2020 and still meet emissions reduction targets. [134]

Taylor was a member of a taskforce asked by the Victorian Government to investigate the development of a coal seam gas industry in the state. [18] Reporting in November 2013, the report found that Victoria should promote the production of additional and largely on-shore gas supply. [18] The taskforce was headed by former federal Liberal minister Peter Reith with other members representing energy companies, associated industries and lobby groups. [135]

Personal life

Taylor is an amateur triathlete; he competed in the 2009 ITU Triathlon Age Group World Championship on the Gold Coast representing Australia, placing 36th. [13] [136]

He resides near Goulburn on a farm with his wife, Sydney barrister Louise Clegg and their four children. [1] [137]

Notes

    References

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