- Source: 2020 National Party of Australia leadership spill
- Cate Blanchett
- Partai Nasional Liberal Queensland
- Malcolm Turnbull
- Scott Morrison
- 2020 National Party of Australia leadership spill
- Leadership spill
- September 2015 Liberal Party of Australia leadership spill
- 2018 Liberal Party of Australia leadership spills
- 2009 Liberal Party of Australia leadership spill
- 2021 National Party of Australia leadership spill
- 2022 National Party of Australia leadership spill
- February 2015 Liberal Party of Australia leadership spill motion
- 2010 Australian Labor Party leadership spill
- March 2013 Australian Labor Party leadership spill
A leadership spill for the federal leadership of the National Party of Australia was held on 4 February 2020, and was called by the Member for Wide Bay, Llew O'Brien.
The spill was called amid reports that former Deputy Prime Minister and Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce was considering a challenge against the incumbent, Michael McCormack. Following the spill in the regularly scheduled party room meeting, McCormack retained his position as leader. Some National MPs claimed the vote was as close as 11 to 10, however others say it was closer to 16-5.
A ballot for the deputy leadership was also held following Bridget McKenzie's resignation following the 2018–20 "Sports rorts" affair. It was won by David Littleproud.
Candidates
= Declared
=Leader
Michael McCormack, incumbent leader
Barnaby Joyce, MP for New England
Deputy Leader
David Gillespie, MP for Lyne
Keith Pitt, MP for Hinkler and Assistant Minister to the Deputy Prime Minister
David Littleproud, MP for Maranoa and Minister for Water Resources
= Declined
=Deputy Leader
Matt Canavan, Senator for Queensland, Minister for Resources and Northern Australia
Darren Chester, MP for Gippsland
Aftermath
As Matt Canavan resigned the day before the spill to support Joyce in the leadership spill, Canavan joined McKenzie in the backbenches. However, they remained deputy and leader of the Nationals in the Senate, despite losing their ministerial portfolios, as the other three Nationals senators were first-termers and thus considered ill-equipped to assume the leadership positions.
On 10 February 2020, O'Brien quit the Nationals party room and sat with neither Nationals nor the Liberals, but remained a member of the Liberal National Party and sat with the Morrison government in parliament. The following day he was elected the Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, having been nominated by the Labor Opposition to the position made vacant by the resignation of Kevin Hogan, who had recently been elevated to the Ministry. O'Brien was elected over the Government's nominated choice, Nationals MP Damian Drum. O'Brien returned to sit in the Nationals party room in December 2020.