List of whips in the Australian House of Representatives

Whips have managed business and maintained party discipline for Australia's federal political parties in the House of Representatives since Federation. The term has origins in the British parliamentary system. As the number of members of parliament and amount of business before the House has increased, so too has the number of whips. The three parties represented in the first Parliament each appointed one whip. Each of today's three main parties appoint a chief whip, while the Australian Labor Party and Liberals each have an additional two whips and the Nationals have one additional whip. Until 1994, a party's more senior whip held the title "Whip", while the more junior whip was styled "Deputy Whip". In 1994, those titles became "Chief Whip" and "Whip", respectively. The current Chief Government Whip in the House of Representatives is Joanne Ryan of the Australian Labor Party, in office since 31 May 2022. The most recent Chief Opposition Whip in the House of Representatives was Bert van Manen of the Liberal Party, who lost his seat of Forde after the 2025 election; the Liberals have now appointed Aaron Violi as the Chief Opposition Whip to succeed him in the upcoming 48th Parliament.

While many whips have gone on to serve as ministers, only three have gone on to lead their parties: Labor's Frank Tudor, the Country Party's Earle Page, and the National Party's Mark Vaile. Page is the only one of them to have served as prime minister (albeit for only a short time), and Vaile is the only one to have served as deputy prime minister. Tudor, less auspiciously, was the only of them to serve as leader of the opposition.

Page was also one of four people to serve as whip while representing Cowper, the others being Francis Clarke (Protectionist), John Thomson (Commonwealth Liberal and Nationalist), and Garry Nehl (National). As of May 2025, one other constituency has the same distinction: Griffith, represented by William Conelan, Wilfred Coutts, Don Cameron, and Ben Humphreys — all of them belonging to the Labor Party except for Cameron (a Liberal). Oddly, the last three served in the seat consecutively from 1961 to 1996, although Coutts had previously represented the division from 1954 to 1958.