Leader of the Opposition (Australia)

[1] The opposition leader is the head of the shadow ministry, allocating portfolios and, in the case of the Coalition, determining its membership.

[1] The position of opposition leader has no constitutional basis but exists as a matter of convention in the Westminster system.

A 1960 inquiry into parliamentary salaries and allowances observed:[1] The Leader of the Opposition has to make himself master of all the business which comes before the House (not merely that of one or two departments); he has to do this at times at short notice and under constant pressure; and he gets no help from permanent officials.

George Reid became the de facto leader of the opposition in the lead-up to the inaugural 1901 federal election, following the appointment of Edmund Barton to lead a caretaker government as Australia's first prime minister.

As a result, Reid had to maintain his legal practice in Sydney to support himself and was able to attend just over one-third of the sitting days in the first session of parliament.

[5] Although the role was firmly established, the House did not formally recognise the position of opposition leader in its records until 1920.

[5] Prime Minister Andrew Fisher had previously offered Opposition Leader Alfred Deakin an allowance in 1910.

Billy Snedden and Andrew Peacock on 12 October 1973. Both served as Opposition Leader, but never became Prime Minister.
In the Australian House of Representatives , the Leader of the Opposition sits at the front table to the left of the Speaker's chair (on the right-hand side in this photo).