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Australia’s opposition coalition reunites after split over hate laws

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SYDNEY, Feb 8 (Reuters) - ​Australia's conservative opposition coalition reunited on Sunday after the junior partner National Party severed ties last month ⁠with the Liberal Party over its decision to back government hate speech laws drafted in the wake ‍of the Bondi massacre.

"The coalition is back together and looking ​to the future, not to the past," Liberal Party leader Sussan Ley said alongside National Party leader David ​Littleproud in a media conference televised from Canberra.

The coalition split, the second in less than a year, was triggered after Australia's parliament passed the centre-left Labor government's anti-hate laws in the wake of ‌the mass shooting that killed 15 in December. The ‌laws were backed by the Liberal Party but opposed by some ​National Party senators.

"It's been disappointing, we've got to where we are but it was over a substantive ‌issue," Littleproud said.

Under the long-standing partnership, the Nationals broadly ⁠represent the interests of rural communities and the ‌Liberals city seats.

The coalition has ​come under recent pressure from populist Senator Pauline Hanson's anti-immigration One Nation party, which has surged in polling, ⁠while the Liberal ⁠Party lost a swath of seats at last year's federal ​election, won by Labor in a landslide.

(Reporting by Sam McKeith in Sydney; ‌Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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