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    HomeAsiaAustralian opposition leader faces leadership challenge as senior lawmaker quits

    Australian opposition leader faces leadership challenge as senior lawmaker quits

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    By Renju Jose

    SYDNEY, Feb 12 (Reuters) - ‌Australian opposition leader Sussan Ley is facing a leadership challenge less than ​a year into the role, after a senior figure in her shadow cabinet said she was not the right person ⁠to lead the conservative Liberal Party and resigned to challenge her.

    "The Labor government has failed and the Liberal Party has lost its way," Angus Taylor said in a video posted on social media ​on Thursday, after stepping down as the shadow defence minister.

    "I believe we need strong and decisive leadership to give ‌Australians clarity, courage and confidence in providing a vision for the future," he said.

    Australian media widely reported a vote of Liberal members of parliament will happen on Friday morning.

    Ley's office did not immediately respond to ⁠a request seeking comment. In a post on X on Thursday, Ley made ⁠no reference to the leadership challenge, saying instead "we will take the pressure off families, fix the budget, and keep Australia safe".

    Taylor is a leading figure in the conservative faction within the Liberal party, while Ley has support from so-called moderate members. Ley's popularity has slid amidst infighting, both within the Liberal ‌Party and with its National Party coalition partner, over issues including action on climate change, hate ⁠speech laws and immigration.

    Supporters of both factions said they have the ‌majority support, Australian media reports said. So far, six shadow ministers, ​including Taylor, have resigned, according to the reports.

    Taylor, who has been a member of the House of Representatives since 2013, said urgent action was needed to restore confidence in the Liberals, whose support ‌has been eroding following a massive election loss to the centre-left Labor ​Party in May.

    Opinion polls have shown the ⁠Liberal-National opposition coalition losing voters to far-right populist Senator Pauline Hanson and her ‌anti-immigration party, One Nation.

    A Newspoll published this week by ⁠The Australian newspaper showed the coalition's primary vote falling to 18%, while support for One Nation surged to 27%, and described Ley as the most unpopular major party leader in more than two ​decades.

    Ley, a former outback pilot who ‌once mustered livestock and raised three children on a farm before graduating from university, became the first ⁠woman to lead the Liberals in May after ​then-leader Peter Dutton lost his seat at the election.

    (Reporting by Renju Jose in Sydney; Editing by ​Sonali Paul, Stephen Coates and Lincoln Feast.)

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