. Crossbenchers sit in the curved seats between the two sides. In the federal
Parliament of Australia as well as the
parliaments of the Australian states and territories, the term refers to any
minor party and
independent members of parliament. More precisely, a crossbencher is any member who is not part of the governing party or parties, nor the party or parties forming what is known as the
official opposition, sometimes known simply as the opposition. Unlike the United Kingdom, the term is used by both the lower and upper houses of each parliament (where applicable), who sit on the crossbenches between the government and opposition benches. Federal elections in the early 21st century have seen an increase in the size and power of the crossbench in both houses of parliament. The
Australian Parliament as elected at the
2010 election was the first
hung parliament in the
House of Representatives since the
election of 1940, with the
Australian Labor Party and the
Coalition winning 72 seats each of 150 total. Six crossbenchers held the
balance of power:
Greens MP
Adam Bandt and
independent MP
Andrew Wilkie,
Rob Oakeshott and
Tony Windsor declared their support for Labor on
confidence and supply, independent MP
Bob Katter and
National Party of Western Australia MP
Tony Crook declared their support for the Coalition on confidence and supply. The resulting 76–74 margin entitled Labor to form a
minority government. The Australian senate, which uses the
single transferable vote form of
proportional representation to elect its 76-seat chamber, frequently has enough Senators on the crossbench that the governing party has to negotiate with it to get legislation passed. The
2 July 2016 double dissolution election, for example resulted in a chamber with the
Liberal/
National Coalition having 30 seats, the
Australian Labor Party with 26 seats, the
Greens with nine seats,
One Nation with four seats and the
Nick Xenophon Team with three seats. The other four seats were each won by
Derryn Hinch, the
Liberal Democratic Party,
Family First, and
Jacqui Lambie. The number of crossbenchers increased by two to a record 20 (all but the ones of the Liberal/National coalition and the ALP: 9+4+3+4). The
Liberal/National Coalition government required at least nine additional votes to reach a senate majority. Generally, senators broadly aligned with the Coalition (
centre-right to
right-wing senators and parties) sit on the same side of the crossbench as the Coalition benches, while those more aligned with Labor (such as
centre-left to
left-wing parties) sit on the same side of the crossbench as the Labor benches. This tends not to be the case in the House of Representatives, both due to the different electoral system, which means fewer crossbenchers are elected, and the fact that the official government and opposition
frontbenches extend across the inner rim of the entire hemicycle. ==New Zealand==