In some countries, the phrase "crossing the floor" describes members of a government party or parties who defect by voting with the opposition against some piece of government-sponsored legislation. Political parties commonly allow their members a free vote on some matters of personal conscience. In Australia, one of the major parties, the
Australian Labor Party requires members to pledge their support for the collective decisions of the caucus, which theoretically prohibits them from "crossing the floor" in this sense; however, in practice, some Labor members disregard this pledge, despite the disciplinary action which may result. Senator
Fatima Payman was elected to the Senate with the Labor Party in 2022. On 25 June 2024, Payman
crossed the floor to vote in favour of a resolution supporting Australian recognition of Palestinian statehood, voting with the crossbench against the government and opposition. Payman was suspended from the Labor Party while discussions took place about her willingness to follow the Caucus solidarity required of Labor members, but Payman resigned on 4 July 2024, becoming an independent Senator. Among other parties, crossing the floor is rare, although then Senator
Barnaby Joyce of the
National Party crossed the floor 28 times. Tasmanian Senator
Sir Reg Wright voted against his own party, the
Liberal Party, on 150 occasions, which has been claimed as a record for this form of crossing the floor in the Australian Parliament. By convention in Australia, members of the government and shadow ministries are bound to vote as per the party room line and when they fail to do so, they are expected to resign or offer to resign from their ministry position. This results in a situation where crossing the floor as a minister or shadow minister has become viewed as a lack of confidence in whoever the current leader happens to be. In 2026, this convention resulted in the split of the
Liberal–National Coalition, after three National shadow ministers voted against laws in the wake of the
2025 Bondi Beach shooting despite the Coalition officially supporting them.
Sussan Ley, the Leader of the Opposition and a member of the Liberal Party, the senior partner in the Coalition, accepted their resignations. The situation rapidly escalated with all National shadow ministers resigning their positions, and on 22 January 2026, the full withdrawal of the Nationals from the Coalition, breaking it up. ==See also==