In April 2013 Joyce won the Nationals preselection for the
House of Representatives seat of
New England in
New South Wales for the
September 2013 election. The seat was held on a margin of 21.52% by
independent politician
Tony Windsor, who had decided to retire. Independent state parliamentarian
Richard Torbay had been preselected as National candidate in August 2012, but was pushed out due to concerns about his ownership of several
Centrelink buildings and reports that he received secret donations from
Labor interests to run against National candidates. Joyce had expressed interest in transferring to the lower house for some time. He had initially mulled running in
Maranoa, which included his home in St George, but this was brought undone when that seat's longtime member,
Bruce Scott, refused to stand aside in his favour. When Torbay's candidacy imploded, the state Nationals felt chagrin at Joyce's renewed interest, even though he had been born in Tamworth and had spent much of his youth on both sides of the Tweed. They initially floated NSW Deputy Premier
Andrew Stoner as a replacement for Torbay. Ultimately, however, Joyce faced little opposition in the preselection contest. He resigned from the Senate on 8 August 2013, and
Barry O'Sullivan was selected to replace him in the Senate. Joyce won the seat of New England with a margin of 21 points. He was the first person to win back both a Senate seat and a House of Representatives seat previously lost by the Coalition. The Nationals had held New England without interruption from 1922 until Windsor won the seat in 2001, and had been heavily tipped to regain it with Windsor's retirement. During Windsor's tenure, most calculations of "traditional" two-party matchups between the Nationals and Labor had shown it as a comfortably safe National seat. Joyce is one of
only a handful of people to have represented multiple states in parliament, and the only person to have represented one state in the Senate and a different state in the House of Representatives. By Windsor's account, Joyce revealed that if Windsor had contested the seat, rather than retired, Prime Minister Abbott's office was ready to finance a range of projects in the New England to aid Joyce's campaign (including $50 million for Armidale hospital); however, once there was no competition, all but $5 million was reallocated to other electorates. and
Kelly O'Dwyer in 2016 Following the 2013 election, Joyce was elected deputy leader of the Nationals. On 18 September 2013, Joyce was sworn in as Minister for Agriculture. On 21 September 2015, this portfolio was expanded to include Water Resources in the
First Turnbull Ministry. In September 2015 Joyce gained international attention after warning actor
Johnny Depp that his two pet dogs would be
euthanised if not removed from Australia after being imported illegally. At the
2016 election Joyce faced a challenge from Tony Windsor, who came out of retirement to contest.
Seat-level polling in New England found Joyce and Windsor neck and neck, however Joyce won with a majority on the primary vote, enough to retain the seat without the need for preferences.
Election as Nationals leader On 11 February 2016
Leader of the National Party,
Warren Truss announced his intended retirement and Barnaby Joyce was elected unopposed as his replacement, with
Fiona Nash as his deputy. Joyce was sworn in as Deputy Prime Minister of Australia on 18 February 2016. On 7 December 2017,
Bridget McKenzie replaced Nash as deputy leader of the Nationals.
Constitutional eligibility On 14 August 2017 Joyce became embroiled in the
2017 Australian parliamentary eligibility crisis, announcing to the House of Representatives that he had received advice from the New Zealand High Commission that he could possibly hold New Zealand citizenship by descent from his father. Joyce asked the government to have him referred to the High Court in the
Court of Disputed Returns for consideration and clarification of his eligibility alongside that of senators Ludlam, Waters, Canavan and Roberts. Later in the day, the New Zealand
Department of Internal Affairs and the
Crown Law Office confirmed that Joyce was indeed a New Zealand citizen. He quickly renounced his New Zealand citizenship. On 27 October 2017, the
High Court ruled that Joyce had been ineligible to be a candidate for the House of Representatives at the time of the 2016 election, since he had been a dual citizen at that time, and that his election was therefore invalid. The ruling cast doubt on the validity of ministerial decisions made after August 2017. Following the crisis, Joyce was humorously nominated as the
2018 New Zealander of the Year, receiving the second highest number of votes. On 2 December 2017 Joyce won the ensuing
New England by-election with a healthy two-party swing of 7.5 percent, in the process winning almost two-thirds of the primary vote. He was sworn back into the House four days later, and on the same day was reappointed as Deputy Prime Minister as well as Minister for Agriculture and Water Resources. Prime Minister Turnbull had taken on that portfolio himself after Joyce was forced out of Parliament for the first time. On 20 December 2017, in a
rearrangement of the Second Turnbull Ministry, Joyce was appointed as the Minister for Infrastructure and Transport. During the by-election for New England,
Gina Rinehart awarded Joyce the first "National Agricultural and Related Industries prize", worth $40,000. This was criticised by Labor, and Joyce's office later said that he would "politely decline" the money.
Affair On 7 December 2017 Joyce announced that he had separated from his wife. On 6 February 2018,
The Daily Telegraph reported that he was expecting a child with his former communications staffer Vikki Campion.
Richard Di Natale of the Greens called on Joyce to resign for "clearly breaching the standards required of ministers". However, Turnbull forced Joyce to go on a week of personal leave instead of acting as prime minister while Turnbull visited the United States. He also announced that the parliamentary code of conduct would be reworded to forbid sexual relationships between ministers and their staff. On 21 February, Turnbull ordered an investigation into whether Joyce had breached the ministerial code of conduct. As of May 2018, the investigation into Joyce's travel expenses was ongoing. In February 2018, Turnbull's office relied on a technicality in stating that Joyce had not breached the ministerial code of conduct when his lover was employed by fellow MPs, arguing Vikki Campion could not be considered the Deputy Prime Minister's "partner" at the time.
Alleged sexual harassment and resignation The Nationals received a formal complaint alleging that Joyce had sexually harassed a Western Australian woman. Joyce's spokesman called the complaint "spurious and defamatory." On 23 February, Joyce announced that he would formally resign on 26 February as leader of the National Party, step down from his ministerial portfolios and move to the backbench. On resignation, Joyce lost his Deputy Prime Minister's and ministerial salaries of $416,000 a year, to receive a backbencher's salary of only about $200,000. Regional Development Minister
John McVeigh became Acting Minister for Infrastructure and Transport.
A leadership ballot within the National Party resulted in
Michael McCormack becoming party leader and deputy prime minister. In September 2018, it was announced that the National Party's eight-month investigation into the allegations of sexual harassment had been unable to make a determination, and that the report would remain confidential.
Second period as Nationals leader On 4 February 2020, Joyce
unsuccessfully challenged McCormack as leader of the National Party. Joyce returned as leader of the Nationals on 21 June 2021, following a
leadership spill. On 29 June 2021, during the second COVID-19 lockdown in Sydney and while being the active Deputy Prime Minister, Barnaby Joyce was fined $200 for not wearing a mask in breach of COVID-19 health orders. In February 2022, it was revealed that Joyce sent a text in March 2021 labelling Prime Minister
Scott Morrison a "hypocrite and a liar." Joyce offered his resignation to the Prime Minister after this became public, but the offer was rejected. After the Coalition's defeat at the
2022 election, Joyce was challenged by his deputy
David Littleproud and party member
Darren Chester at a
leadership spill on 30 May 2022. Joyce lost to Littleproud, ending his 11-month term as the leader.
Shadow Minister Subsequently, Joyce became Shadow Minister for Veterans' Affairs in the
Coalition shadow cabinet. In February 2024 Joyce was filmed lying on a Canberra footpath late at night after apparently falling off a planter box, and subsequently swearing into his phone. He later explained he had mixed medication with alcohol. There was pressure on the National Party to remove Joyce from the frontbench. In July 2024 Joyce faced calls to resign as a Shadow Minister after he likened ballot papers to bullets at a protest against a wind farm in
Lake Illawarra.
Return to the backbench Following the
2025 election, Joyce was not appointed to a shadow cabinet position. This led to speculation that he would quit the Nationals and join
One Nation, which increased when Joyce had a meal with
Pauline Hanson in her office at Parliament House.
Move to the crossbench On 27 November 2025, Joyce announced that he would resign from the National Party to sit as an independent MP. He stated that he had not yet made a decision on whether to join One Nation, but that he was "strongly considering it". He affirmed that he would not recontest his seat of New England at the next federal election. On 8 December, Joyce formally announced he had joined One Nation, becoming the party's sole member in the House of Representatives. He is also the third
member of One Nation to sit in the House of Representatives in the party's history, after Hanson and
George Christensen. In a statement, Joyce confirmed that he intended to run as a One Nation Senate candidate for New South Wales at the next election. In 2017, Joyce had said Australia would "go down the toilet", if it was run by One Nation. ==Political positions==