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Pauline Hanson's One Nation
Australian political party
Australian political party
| Field | Value | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| logo | Pauline Hanson's One Nation logo.svg | |||||
| logo_size | 175 | |||||
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| name | One Nation | |||||
| abbreviation | ||||||
| leader | Pauline Hanson | |||||
| chairperson | Pauline Hanson | |||||
| registered | ||||||
| foundation | ||||||
| ideology | {{ubl | class=nowrap | ||||
| Australian nationalism{{refn | <ref name | Springer}} | ||||
| Right-wing populism{{refn | <ref name | Springer/}} | ||||
| youth_wing | Young Nation | |||||
| position | Right-wing to far-right{{refn | {{cite web | last=Jervis-Bardy | first=Dan | date=7 October 2025 | title= |
| ‘The ground is shifting’: what’s driving One Nation’s surge and could it replace the ‘floundering Liberals’? | url | https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/oct/07/the-ground-is-shifting-whats-driving-one-nations-surge-and-could-it-replace-the-floundering-liberals?CMP=share_btn_url | website=theguardian.com | access-date=17 December 2025 | quote=The former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce said the rise in support for One Nation was part of a global “phenomenon” underpinning far-right populist movements including Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, Donald Trump in the US as well as in Italy, France and Germany.}}}} | |
| headquarters | 2/6–12 Boronia Rd, Brisbane | |||||
| blank1_title | Party branches | |||||
| blank1 | ||||||
| colours | Orange Blue | |||||
| seats1_title | House of Representatives | |||||
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| seats2_title | Senate | |||||
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| seats3_title | State and territory lower houses | |||||
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| seats4_title | State and territory upper houses | |||||
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| website | ||||||
| country | Australia |
|Hansonism |Australian nationalism |Right-wing populism ‘The ground is shifting’: what’s driving One Nation’s surge and could it replace the ‘floundering Liberals’?|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/oct/07/the-ground-is-shifting-whats-driving-one-nations-surge-and-could-it-replace-the-floundering-liberals?CMP=share_btn_url |website=theguardian.com |access-date=17 December 2025 |quote=The former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce said the rise in support for One Nation was part of a global “phenomenon” underpinning far-right populist movements including Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, Donald Trump in the US as well as in Italy, France and Germany.}}}} One Nation (ON), officially known as Pauline Hanson's One Nation (PHON), is a conservative right-wing populist political party in Australia. It is led by its founder Pauline Hanson, who has been a senator for Queensland since 2016 and previously served in the House of Representatives from 1996 to 1998.
The party had electoral success when it was established in the late 1990s, before suffering an extended decline after 2001. Nevertheless, it has had a profound impact on debates on multiculturalism and immigration in Australia. Following Hanson's return as leader and the 2016 federal election, the party gained four seats in the Senate, including one for Hanson herself, in Queensland. Since 2025, the party has had four seats in the senate.
One Nation's platform includes policies such as citizen-initiated referenda and opposition to the introduction of a treaty with Australia's Aboriginal population. It also favours restricting foreign ownership of Australian land and denounces economic rationalism and globalisation. The party opposes abortion. One Nation supports a general reduction in the levels of net migration and seeks to withdraw Australia from the United Nations Refugee Convention. One Nation has called climate science a "scam" and wants Australia to withdraw from the Paris Climate Accords. One Nation also seeks for Australia to withdraw from the United Nations and the World Health Organization.
History
1997: One Nation founded
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Shortly after being elected to federal parliament, Hanson formed the One Nation party with co-founders David Oldfield and David Ettridge. During the formative days of One Nation, Oldfield was employed by Liberal Party backbench MP Tony Abbott as a political advisor. One Nation was launched on 11 April 1997, at an event held in Ipswich, Queensland. The party was officially registered by the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) on 27 June.
1998: First elections
The 1998 Queensland state election produced One Nation's greatest electoral success, with the ALP winning 44 seats to be the largest party in the Assembly, the Coalition winning 32 seats and One Nation winning 11 seats. During the campaign, polling for One Nation led to commentators saying One Nation might secure the balance of power in a hung parliament. During the campaign, all three major political parties suffered a decline in voter support due to One Nation having entered the fray. The National Party saw an 11.1% drop in support, their Liberal Party coalition partners lost 6.7% and Labor's vote dropped 4.0%. To the surprise of many pundits, the One Nation Party received 22.7% of the first preference vote, giving them the second largest voter turnout for any party in Queensland during the 1998 election. One Nation drew the majority of its support from regional and rural Queensland, winning nine of its 11 seats in rural and regional electorates.
With nearly 23% of the vote, One Nation gained a higher percentage of the vote than any other third party (i.e. not Labor or Coalition) at the state or territory level since Federation. This was also the only election at which a third party gained more votes than both the Liberal Party and the National Party considered separately.
Subsequently, the One Nation contingent in the Queensland Parliament split, with dissident members forming the rival City Country Alliance in late 1999.
At the 1998 federal election, Hanson contested the new seat of Blair after a redistribution effectively split Oxley in half. Hanson lost to Liberal candidate Cameron Thompson, and the One Nation candidate in Oxley lost the seat to ALP candidate Bernie Ripoll. One Nation candidate Heather Hill was elected as a senator for Queensland. Hill's eligibility to sit as a senator was successfully challenged in Sue v Hill under the Australian Constitution on the basis that she had failed to renounce her childhood British citizenship, despite being a naturalised Australian citizen. The seat went to the party's Len Harris following a recount.
Political scientists Ian McAllister and Clive Bean, in an analysis of the 1998 federal election, found that although it was assumed that One Nation supporters came from a traditionally conservative demographic, instead:
Within a year of One Nation's electoral success, three of the 11 Queensland MPs elected had quit the party claiming the leadership had too much control over the party.
Internal disputes and claims of corruption
The party was affected by internal divisions and has split several times. Lawsuits involving ex-members did eventually force Hanson to repay approximately $500,000 of public funding won at the 1998 Queensland election amid claims by Abbott that the party was fraudulently registered. Abbott established a trust fund called "Australians for Honest Politics Trust" to help bankroll civil court cases against the party. The suits alleged that the party was undemocratically constituted in order to concentrate all power in the hands of three people—Hanson, Ettridge and Oldfield (in particular Oldfield)—and that it technically had only two members: Ettridge and Hanson. Even though Hanson's fraud charges were dropped, the Electoral Commission of Queensland never reimbursed Hanson for the monies that they collected from the claim.
The first Annual General Meeting of the One Nation party was held in April 1999, which critic Paul Reynolds said demonstrated that One Nation lacked organisation.
At the 1999 New South Wales state election, David Oldfield was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Council. In October 2000, Hanson expelled Oldfield from the party after a disagreement. His expulsion created even more instability in a party which was constantly embroiled in scandal and internal strife. Oldfield attacked Hanson publicly, saying that "everything including her maiden speech and every word of any consequence that she's said since, has actually been written for her". Oldfield engineered a split within the party, creating One Nation NSW, in 2001. The new party took advantage of electoral party registration laws to register itself as a political party under the 'One Nation' name with the NSW electoral commission, and achieved registration in April 2002.
At the 2001 Western Australian state election One Nation won three seats in the state, however the party was reduced to three seats the same year at the 2001 Queensland state election. During the 2001 Australian federal election, the party's vote fell from 9% to 5.5%. Hanson failed in her bid to win a Senate seat from Queensland, despite polling a strong 10% of the primary vote. Hanson also failed to win a seat in the New South Wales Legislative Council.
Electoral fraud charges
In 2001, disendorsed One Nation candidate Terry Sharples accused the party of not having the 500 members needed for registration, and called for the party to be deregistered, which was carried by the Supreme Court. Hanson appealed the verdict but was unsuccessful. Hanson appeared before the Brisbane Magistrates Court to face charges of electoral fraud, that same year. Hanson pleaded not guilty to the charges, claiming that she was being subjected to "a political witch-hunt." While court hearings proceeded, Hanson ran for a seat in the NSW Upper House as an independent, but only received 1.9 per cent of the vote.
Both Ettridge and Hanson were found guilty of fraudulently registering One Nation and obtaining more than $500,000 from the AEC, in 2003. Crown lawyers accused them both of falsely claiming more than 500 people were party members when they were not truly members. Hanson was sentenced to three years in jail, stating outside the court that the verdict was "Rubbish, I'm not guilty... it's a joke".
It was later disclosed that Abbott had been working behind the scenes to take Ettridge and Hanson down, meeting with several disgruntled One Nation members including Sharples. On 6 November of that same year, Hanson was released from prison after successfully appealing her conviction; she was acquitted on all counts.
2004–2013: Electoral decline
At the 2004 Queensland state election, One Nation polled less than 5% of the vote and its sole elected representative, Rosa Lee Long, acted as an independent. One Nation attempted to defend its Queensland Senate seat at the 2004 federal election, but lost it (effectively to the National Party). Len Harris's Senate term expired on 30 June 2005.
On 8 February 2005, One Nation lost federal party status but was re-registered in time for the 2007 federal election. It still had state parties in Queensland and New South Wales. Subsequently, it created another state party in Western Australia. In the February 2005 Western Australian state election, the One Nation vote collapsed.
In the 2006 South Australian state election, six One Nation candidates stood for the lower house. Their highest levels of the primary vote was 4.1% in the district of Hammond and 2.7% in Goyder, with the other four hovering around 1%. They attracted 0.8% (7559 votes) of the upper house vote. One Nation consequently won no seats in that election.
In the 2006 Queensland state election, the party contested four of 89 seats, and its vote collapsed. It suffered a swing of 4.3% to be left with just 0.6% of the vote. Its only remaining seat in the state (and country), Tablelands, was retained with an increased majority by Rosa Lee Long. Tablelands was abolished prior to the 2009 Queensland state election, with Lee Long failing to win the seat of Dalrymple.
In the 2012 Queensland state election the party unsuccessfully contested six seats. The party received only 2,525 first preference votes (representing 0.1% of the total cast) across the state.
2013–2015: Hanson's return as leader
Hanson rejoined One Nation as a rank-and-file member in 2013. Later that year, she unsuccessfully contested the Senate for New South Wales at the 2013 federal election. In 2014, Hanson was reappointed as leader by the One Nation executive. She contested the seat of Lockyer for the party at the January 2015 Queensland state election, falling 114 votes short of defeating sitting Liberal National Party member Ian Rickuss.
In 2013, it was reported by One Nation that the party had more than 5000 members, with the figure rising since Hanson returned as party leader.
In July 2015, Hanson announced that the party was renamed the original "Pauline Hanson's One Nation" and contested in the Senate for Queensland at the 2016 federal election.
In the lead up to the 2016 election, Hanson arranged a "Fed Up" tour that began in July 2015 as part of her re-election campaign, flying in a private plane to Rockhampton prior to a Reclaim Australia rally, piloted by James Ashby.
2016–present: Return to federal politics
At the 2016 federal election the party polled 4.3% (+3.8) of the nationwide primary vote in the Senate. Only Queensland polled higher for the party than their nationwide percentage − the party polled 9.2% (+8.6) of the primary vote in that state. Pauline Hanson (QLD) and three other One Nation candidates − Malcolm Roberts (QLD), Brian Burston (NSW) and Rod Culleton (WA) were elected to the Senate. Elected to the 3rd Queensland Senate spot, as per convention Hanson is serving a six-year term while the three other One Nation Senators who were elected in the last half of spots were appointed to three-year terms. Culleton was stripped of his seat in January 2017 after he was declared bankrupt. In March 2017, the High Court ruled that Culleton's election to the Senate was invalid in any event because of a criminal conviction in New South Wales. After a court-ordered recount, Culleton was replaced by the second candidate on the WA list, Peter Georgiou.
Resignations, disendorsements and ineligibility
Rod Culleton (WA) left the party in December 2016, after months of legal troubles and party infighting to sit as an independent bringing the number of party senators to three. On 3 February 2017, the High Court of Australia ruled that Culleton's election was invalid due to a conviction for which he was subject to being sentenced at the time of the election, notwithstanding that the conviction was subsequently annulled. The resulting vacancy was filled by a recount of the votes at the election, which resulted in Peter Georgiou taking the seat and returning the One Nation representation in the Senate to four.
During the 2017 Western Australian state election, several One Nation candidates either quit or were disendorsed. Dane Sorensen provided a copy of the party's Western Australian "candidate agreement" form for this election, which all candidates had to sign. It includes an "administration fee" of $250,000 if an elected candidate subsequently leaves the party. One Nation previously formed a 'conservative bloc' with the Liberal Democratic Party and Shooters, Fishers and Farmers Party in the Western Australia Legislative Council.
On 27 October 2017, the full High Court, as Court of Disputed Returns, ruled that Malcolm Roberts had been ineligible to be elected to the Parliament. On 13 November, Senator Fraser Anning took Roberts' seat after a Senate recount. However, on the same day Anning left the party to become an Independent.
On 14 June 2018, Senator Brian Burston announced his resignation from the party to sit as an independent, following a month-long clash with Hanson centred around the Turnbull Government's corporate tax cuts, on which Hanson had reversed her position. This reduced the party to 2 senators, with Hanson remaining the only member of One Nation elected at the 2016 Federal election.
Hanson wears a burqa into the Senate
Main article: Pauline Hanson's burqa incidents
Hanson drew widespread condemnation when she wore the full Islamic dress into Senate Question Time, before calling for the burqa to be banned in Australia on 17 August 2017. Audible gasps of shock were heard in the parliament. Liberal Party Senator and Attorney-General of Australia, George Brandis condemned Hanson's actions, declaring to the parliament that "To ridicule that community, to drive it into a corner, to mock its religious garments is an appalling thing to do. I would ask you to reflect on that". Senator Brandis received applause and praise from all sides of parliament for his response.
"it is OK to be white"
On 15 October 2018, a Senate motion brought by the party stating "it is OK to be white" was defeated 31–28 in a vote. The government expressed regret at the support the vote received, blaming it to an administrative error in which its senators were mistakenly instructed to vote positively. Critics noted that the phrase "it's OK to be white" has been associated with white supremacist rhetoric.
Mark Latham joins One Nation
Former Labor Party leader Mark Latham joined the party in November 2018 as leader for New South Wales. He successfully contested a seat in the Legislative Council, winning it in March 2019.
James Ashby controversies
On 22 May 2017, a new scandal arose when a taped conversation between Hanson and political advisor James Ashby was released. The tape showed that Ashby had supported charging One Nation candidates inflated prices for campaign materials.
In March 2019, One Nation was the subject of a two-part Al Jazeera documentary series asserting that the party was soliciting financial assistance from the National Rifle Association of America and Koch Industries in order to change Australian gun control laws. Al Jazeera used an undercover reporter posing as a gun rights advocate. In response, One Nation leader Pauline Hanson condemned the documentary as a "hit piece" by a Qatar government backed news agency and announced that she had filed a complaint with the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation. Similar sentiments were echoed by the One Nation officials, James Ashby and Steve Dickson, who were featured in the documentary. In response to the documentary, the Australian Electoral Commission said that none of the activities shown in the documentary violated section 326 of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 since they occurred overseas.
2019 election and Family Court claims
At the May 2019 federal election, One Nation polled 5.40% (up 1.12%) for the nationwide Senate primary vote. The party polled higher than their national vote in Queensland, taking 10.27% up 1.08%, of the primary vote in the senate.
The PHON House of Representatives candidate for the Division of O'Connor, Dean Smith, who won 8.4% (7,252) votes, was in December of the same year a target of recruitment for Neo-Nazi group The Base. In secretly recorded tapes of his "interview" by a recruiter, Smith tells of his hatred of immigrants and his wish to "save the race". He tells the recruiter that he had become "more and more extreme and passionate about my views", and disillusioned with One Nation and the possibility of a political solution. However, he was deemed too great a risk for The Base because of his political profile, so was not admitted into their ranks.
Also in 2019, Hanson received widespread condemnation in the Australian media after claiming that domestic violence victims routinely lie to the Family Court. The Law Council of Australia called for the abandonment of a federal parliamentary inquiry into the family law system, citing concerns that the hearings were being used by Hanson for political purposes to undermine domestic violence claims made by women.
2022 elections and the Albanese Government
In April 2022, it was "formally confirmed" that during the 2022 South Australian state election that One Nation's Sarah Game won a seat within the South Australia legislative council (upper house) making history as One Nation's first member of South Australian parliament.
In April 2022, Queensland MP George Christensen who had represented the division of Dawson for the Liberal National party announced he had joined One Nation with the intention of contesting for the Senate in the upcoming Federal election.
One Nation ran 149 candidates in the 2022 federal election, the only seats where they did not run in were inner Melbourne-based Higgins and the rural Queensland seat of Kennedy, held by Bob Katter. One Nation was criticised for running "ghost candidates" in several electorates for the 2022 federal election, who were not campaigning in the lead-up to the election and who had no online presence. Additionally, many did not live in the electorates they were listed as being the candidates for. Despite this, the AEC has said that it is not against the rules. One Nation had promised in the lead-up to the election that it would run candidates in all seats.
In December 2022, One Nation won its first seat in Victorian parliament, with Rikkie-Lee Tyrrell winning a seat during the 2022 Victorian state election, representing the Northern Victoria Region in the Victorian Legislative Council.
2023 and the Indigenous Voice to Parliament referendum
On 17 January 2023, New South Wales MP, Tania Mihailuk, announced her intention to join the party, previously representing the electoral district of Bankstown for the Labor Party before becoming an independent. Mihailuk announced that she would run for a seat in the Legislative Council at the 2023 state election.
One Nation contested the 2023 Narracan state supplementary election in Victoria on 28 January, One Nation candidate Casey Murphy received 6.04% of the vote.
One Nation increased their total from to two to three seats in the Legislative Council, with leader Mark Latham re-elected for another term, Tania Mihailuk filled the vacant seat left behind by Latham, who had previously resigned to recontest the upper house at the top of One Nations ticket.
One Nation ran in the 2023 Fadden by-election, One Nation ran Sandy Roach, their candidate in the 2022 election, One Nation received 8.90% of the vote, coming in third place.
In August 2023, Pauline Hanson intervened in the New South Wales state branch of the party, and removed Mark Latham as leader of the party in New South Wales. On 22 August 2023, Mark Latham left the party to become an independent; he was joined by his colleague Rod Roberts.
One Nation campaigned heavily against the Indigenous Voice to parliament in the referendum held in October that year, One Nation supported the No vote and was against holding a referendum on the matter. The referendum was defeated in all states and territories with the exception of the Australian Capital Territory.2023 Australian Indigenous Voice referendum
Tania Mihailuk was announced as the next leader of One Nation in New South Wales in December.
2024 and 2025
One Nation offered to support the Albanese Governments tax cut changes. Pauline Hanson stated that Anthony Albanese had broken his promise on tax cut changes, but was willing to support the changes because going against it would be like "throwing the baby out with the bathwater".
Then United Australia Party National Director Craig Kelly joined One Nation on 27 February; he took the position of Federal Campaign Director for the party. He left the party in late August.
On 29 February, Independent Ben Dawkins, a member of the Western Australian Legislative Council, announced he would be joining One Nation, making him the first One Nation member in the State since the party lost all its seats in the 2021 Western Australian state election, which the Labor party won in a landslide.
In early August, incumbent MP for Mirani Stephen Andrew announced his resignation from One Nation after they did not endorse him as their candidate for Mirani. One Nation did not win any seats at the State election held that year, but did see a slight increase in its primary vote. New South Wales MLC Tania Mihailuk announced her resignation from One Nation on 20 December 2024. Western Australian MLC Ben Dawkins had announced his own resignation three days earlier.
At the 2025 Western Australian state election One Nation had better fortunes and won two seats in the Western Australian Legislative Council, which saw State leader Rod Caddies elected to Parliament.
In the lead-up to the 2025 Australian federal election, pollsters recorded an increase in One Nations primary vote, particularly near the end of the campaign period where the party began to come close to or surpass their result at the 1998 Australian federal election. One Nation ran 147 candidates in the House of Representatives, and a Senate team for each state and territory except for the Australian Capital Territory. One Nation won 6.4% of the vote in the House of Representatives, the second-best result for the party since its inception. One Nation won a senate seat in New South Wales and Western Australia with Warwick Stacey and Tyron Whitten, doubling its Senate representation.
In May 2025, South Australian MLC Sarah Game quit the party, citing brand issues associated with One Nation, it came after her mother and leader of One Nation in South Australia, Jennifer Game, resigned from the party after she was not chosen to head the party ticket in the Legislative Council for the 2026 South Australian state election.
Since the 2025 Australian federal election, One Nation has experienced a renewed polling surge, reaching up to 23% and overtaking that of the Greens. There has been media that former deputy prime minister of Australia and Nationals member Barnaby Joyce is in talks to join the party, and potentially succeeding Hanson as its leader. During this period, Hanson announced she would begin the process to change the party's name from Pauline Hanson's One Nation to simply One Nation.
On 8 December 2025, Joyce formally announced he had joined One Nation, becoming the party's sole member in the House of Representatives. In a statement, Joyce confirmed that he intended to run as a One Nation Senate candidate for New South Wales at the next election.
State and territory branches
| Branch | Leader | Lower house seats | Upper house seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pauline Hanson's One Nation – ACT | No leader | ||
| Pauline Hanson's One Nation – New South Wales | No leader | ||
| Pauline Hanson's One Nation – Northern Territory | No leader | ||
| Pauline Hanson's One Nation – Queensland | James Ashby | ||
| Pauline Hanson's One Nation – South Australia | No leader | ||
| Pauline Hanson's One Nation – Tasmania | No leader | ||
| Pauline Hanson's One Nation – Victoria | Rikkie-Lee Tyrrell | ||
| Pauline Hanson's One Nation – Western Australia | Rod Caddies |
Ideology
One Nation's policies and ideology have been described as based on ultranationalism, right-wing populism, and opposition to immigration. Its policies have been also described as nationalist, national-conservative, socially conservative, conservative, and protectionist. Its political position has been described as right-wing,*
- extreme right, and far-right.*
Early years
In its early years, One Nation's policies were said to be synonymous with opposition to affirmative action for Aboriginal communities. Some key themes of Pauline Hanson's 1998 maiden speech were opposition to what she said were increasingly high rates of immigration from Asian countries and an argument for economic protectionist policies.
During its inception, One Nation rallied against Liberal and Labor immigration and multicultural policies which, it argued, were leading to "the Asianisation of Australia."
Former Australian Prime Minister Paul Keating denounced Hanson in a speech in 1996, saying that she projected "the ugly face of racism" and was "dangerously divisive and deeply hurtful to many of her fellow Australians."
Hanson and One Nation have disputed accusations of racism and argue that the main parties are out of touch with many Australians on the issues of immigration, asylum seekers, and multiculturalism; and have ended up adopting some of the policies One Nation initially called for. Milton Osborne noted in 1999 that research indicated Hanson's initial supporters did not cite immigration as a major reason for their support for One Nation, but instead they were most concerned about economic issues and unemployment. A 2001 study showed that One Nation had extensive informal ties and received endorsements from far-right movements due to the party requiring "the support of those groups in establishing the party and because of a convergence of interests".
Contemporary
Writer Hans-Georg Betz described One Nation and Pauline Hanson in 2019 as among "the first prominent radical right-wing populist entrepreneurs to mobilize popular resentment against a very specific target — the intellectual elite" and that in the twenty-first century where "today's army of self-styled commentators and pundits summarily dismissing radical right-wing populist voters as uncouth, uneducated plebeians intellectually incapable of understanding the blessings of progressive identity politics, Hanson's anti-elite rhetoric anno 1996 proved remarkably prescient, if rather tame." Betz also argued that One Nation differs from European right-wing parties by focusing on its own brand of populism which he termed Hansonism based on Hanson's personality and debates unique to Australian society.
Despite the party's early image as an anti-immigration party, the party has - since 2016 - run a number of migrant Chinese and Indian candidates in elections.
Political scientist Ian McAllister argues the current version of One Nation from 2017 does not have much in the way of policy beyond an "anti-establishment stance" while others have argued it has changed to focus its policies on opposition to Islam.
During the 2017 Queensland state election, One Nation disendorsed its Bundamba candidate Shan Ju Lin after her anti-gay social media post. Lin accused James Ashby of deciding on Hanson's behalf that Lin should be disendorsed. In December 2016, Andy Semple withdrew as a candidate for Currumbin, after the party told him to delete an LGBT joke on Twitter.
Various One Nation election candidates have made anti-LGBT comments, such as one saying in 2019, "The only thing worse than a gay person with power is a woman", another in 2017 calling same-sex marriage "poof poof marriage" and making the comment, "You see when we consummate a marriage kids are generally born 9 mths later when gays consummate its [sic] just bum sex for enjoyment", and a third – also in 2017 – saying that "Norwegian homosexuals" are behind a "mind control program".
Policies
Immigration and asylum
One Nation supports a reduction in the levels of net migration to "closer to the 20th century average of 70,000". The party also calls for a travel ban on certain countries, similar to one enacted by the Trump administration in the United States. The party also supports stronger assimilation of immigrants. One Nation also seeks to withdraw Australia from the United Nations Refugee Convention and is opposed to the UN Global Compact on Migration. One Nation has been described as anti-Islam.
Following the end of lockdowns in Australia as a result of COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, the party has voiced support for establishing a zero-net immigration policy, similar to the one Australia had introduced during the pandemic. One Nation supports permitting only highly skilled migrants from culturally cohesive countries to settle in Australia.
In 2018 Hanson called for immigration numbers to be capped at 75,000 a year. In 2025, Hanson called for immigration to be cut to 130,000 a year.
The economy and employment
One Nation supports a broadly protectionist platform, saying that it would review free trade agreements and revoke any "that are not in Australia's best interest", they also wish to reimplement import tariffs. It is opposed to foreign ownership of Australian agricultural land and businesses, as well as the privatisation of water assets. Wishing to prioritise jobs for Australian nationals, it would investigate "the abuse of foreign work visas."
One Nation backed the Turnbull Government's controversial 2018 corporate tax cuts.
The party would move foreign-owned multinationals out of the corporation tax system and into a transactions based system, saying that too many of them pay no tax on profits made in Australia.
Domestic policies
The party argues for the introduction of Citizens Initiated Referenda (CIR) and states it will review the salaries and pensions paid to Australian politicians. In 2021, the Senate approved a motion tabled by Pauline Hanson which called on the federal government to reject the teaching of critical race theory in Australian schools. It also supports a ban on wearing the burqa in public spaces. One Nation has backed Hanson's comments regarding downplaying scientific consensus on climate change. During the debate on the Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Act 2017 which would legalise same-sex marriage in Australia, Hanson and other members of One Nation expressed their opposition to same-sex marriage. However, Hanson also stated the party would not take an official stance on same-sex marriage and that One Nation senators would be allowed a free vote on the issue.
One Nation is broadly anti-abortion, particularly relating to late term abortions, describing itself as "pro-life". The party favours policies such as a gestational limit for abortions, banning sex-selective abortion, and doctors' rights to allow for them to object to performing such a procedure.
One Nation wants to introduce mandatory photo ID for Medicare cards.
One Nation members and parliamentarians have criticised the increasing use of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander flags alongside the Australian one.
The party wants to remove building code mandates, such as removing the requirement for new buildings to be wheelchair-compliant. One Nation also wants to reduce funding for arts and abolish the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA).
Law and order
One Nation claims it will increase rehabilitation facilities for drug addicts and introduce life sentences for drug traffickers, Pauline Hanson has previously voiced her support of medicinal cannabis but strong objection to recreational drug usage and opposition to pill testing. The party supports gun ownership but wants tougher sentences for arms traffickers. The party is opposed to any form of sharia law in Australia.
Welfare and pensions
One Nation is in favour of a substantial increase in the aged pension and disability support pension. It was reported in 2016 that One Nation had voted with the Liberal government on a number of welfare cuts. One Nation is also opposed to increasing the age of entitlement to 70 years, and supports a $100 a week increase under the work bonus scheme for pensioners.
In 2024, One Nation cooperated with the Albanese government and minister Bill Shorten in reforming the National Disability Insurance Scheme to crack down on alleged misuse of the system and to reign in the growing costs of the program.
COVID-19 vaccines
Many politicians, commentators and scientists claim that One Nation senators have spread misinformation and conspiracies on the effectiveness and scientific basis of COVID-19 vaccines. One Nation opposes vaccine mandates, but denies being against vaccinations. However, in 2021, One Nation MLC Mark Latham said that vaccinated people should be exempt from Sydney's COVID-19 lockdown.
One Nation introduced legislation in 2021 pertaining to COVID-19 mandates, with the bill proposing banning discrimination on COVID-19 vaccination status in the fields of goods, services, facilities, employment, education, accommodation, and sport. It was supported by five Liberal-National senators; it was not passed.
Climate change and energy
One Nation senators are frequent critics of any action on climate change and have called climate science a "scam". One Nation has spread debunked conspiracy theories about climate change not occurring or being part of a plot by the United Nations. The party wants Australia to withdraw from the Paris Climate Accords.
One Nation says it is "Embracing Australian coal", stating that "baseload coal as a critical part of Australia’s energy mix" and supports extending existing coal power generation capacity. One Nation also embraces Australian gas, calling it a "key national asset", wants to "lift any bans on new gas appliances in Australian households", "treat Australian gas as a strategic asset", eliminate "red, green and black tape" from the gas industry and "end the effective moratorium on offshore gas and petroleum exploration".
Voting system and preferences
In 2019, One Nation called for the abolition of full preferential voting in favour of optional preferential voting at House of Representatives elections. The announcement came shortly after Scott Morrison announced that the Liberal Party would preference One Nation behind Labor in several seats for the 2019 federal election. In Australia, optional preferential voting is currently only used for Legislative Assembly elections in New South Wales and for council elections in most warded local government areas in Queensland.
One Nation is also against the use of group voting tickets, which are currently only used for Legislative Council elections in Victoria. The party has strongly criticised Glenn Druery, a "preference whispererer" who founded the Minor Party Alliance. In the lead-up to the 2022 state election, Hanson claimed that Druery was rigging the election in favour of the incumbent state Labor government of Daniel Andrews, after a leaked video showed that Druery was trying to create a crossbench that Labor could work with. Prior to the incident, in 2017, Druery admitted that he had been directing the preferences of micro-parties away from One Nation since 1999.
Other
In March 2025, Hanson said the party wants Australia to leave the United Nations, the World Health Organization (WHO), and the World Economic Forum, cut funding for the National Disability Insurance Scheme and abolish the National Indigenous Australians Agency and the Department of Climate Change.
Voter base
Surveys of voters at the 1998 federal election and the 1998 Queensland state election found One Nation voters were more likely than other voters to be male, residents of rural electorates, blue-collar workers and firearm owners. On measurements of political views, One Nation voters were distinguished by their anti-immigrant and anti-Aboriginal sentiments and by their dissatisfaction with or alienation from the political environment. On metrics of union membership, economic insecurity and identification as members of the working class, One Nation voters were nearly identical to Labor voters. However, a clear majority of One Nation voters were former Liberal and National voters rather than former Labor voters.
One Nation has historically performed best in regions where the Labor Party once performed well in, but in recent years have been trending more to the right over policies regarding mining and climate change. The regions where One Nation has seen the most electoral success are the Central Queensland, Darling Downs and Wide Bay–Burnett regions of Queensland and the Hunter Valley region of New South Wales, all of which are working-class regions that have historically relied on coal mining as part of their local economy, and all were once strongholds for the Labor Party.
Election results
Federal
| Election year | House of Representatives | Senate | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | # votes | % votes | # seats | # overall seats | +/– | 1998 | 2001 | 2004 | 2007 | 2010 | 2013 | 2016 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (D-D) | 2019 | 2022 | 2025 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 936,621 | 8.43 | 0 | 1,007,439 | 8.99 | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
| 498,032 | 4.34 | 0 | 644,364 | 5.54 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||
| 139,956 | 1.19 | 0 | 206,445 | 1.73 | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
| 32,650 | 0.26 | 0 | 52,708 | 0.42 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||
| 27,184 | 0.22 | 0 | 70,672 | 0.56 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||
| 22,046 | 0.17 | 0 | 70,851 | 0.53 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||
| 175,020 | 1.29 | 0 | 593,013 | 4.28 | 4 | ||||||||||||||||
| 438,587 | 3.08 | 0 | 788,203 | 5.40 | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
| 727,464 | 4.96 | 0 | 644,744 | 4.29 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||
| 991,814 | 6.40 | 0 | 899,296 | 5.67 | 2 |
New South Wales
| Election year | Legislative Assembly | Legislative Council | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | 1999 | 2019 | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 281,147 | 7.53 | 0 | 225,668 | 6.34 | 1 | ||||||||
| 49,948 | 1.10 | 0 | 306,933 | 6.90 | 2 | ||||||||
| 84,683 | 1.80 | 0 | 273,496 | 5.92 | 1 |
Victoria
| Election year | Legislative Assembly | Legislative Council | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | 1999 | 2022 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8,181 | 0.29 | 0 | Did not contest Legislative Council | |||||||||
| 10,323 | 0.28 | 0 | 76,734 | 2.04 | 1 |
Western Australia
| Election year | Legislative Assembly | Legislative Council | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | 2001 | 2005 | 2008 | 2017 | 2021 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 98,321 | 9.58 | 0 | 103,571 | 9.88 | 3 | |||||||||||
| 17,580 | 1.64 | 0 | 17,435 | 1.59 | 3 | |||||||||||
| Did not contest Legislative Assembly | 7,012 | 0.63 | 0 | |||||||||||||
| 65,192 | 4.93 | 0 | 110,480 | 8.19 | 3 | |||||||||||
| 17,824 | 1.26 | 0 | 21,259 | 1.48 | 3 | |||||||||||
| 61,174 | 4.00 | 0 | 59,296 | 3.82 | 2 |
South Australia
| Election year | House of Assembly | Legislative Council | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | 2002 | 2006 | 2010 | 2022 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22,833 | 2.41 | 0 | 16,829 | 1.80 | 0 | |||||||||
| 2,591 | 0.28 | 0 | 7,559 | 0.81 | 0 | |||||||||
| Did not contest House of Assembly | 4,972 | 0.51 | 0 | |||||||||||
| 28,664 | 2.63 | 0 | 46,051 | 4.23 | 1 |
Queensland
| Election year | Legislative Assembly | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | 1998 | 2001 | 2004 | 2006 | 2009 | 2012 | 2015 | 2017 | 2020 | 2024 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 439,121 | 22.68 | 11 | |||||||||||||
| 179,076 | 8.69 | 8 | |||||||||||||
| 104,980 | 4.88 | 2 | |||||||||||||
| 13,207 | 0.60 | 0 | |||||||||||||
| 9,038 | 0.38 | 1 | |||||||||||||
| 2,525 | 0.10 | 0 | |||||||||||||
| 2,525 | 0.92 | 0 | |||||||||||||
| 371,193 | 13.73 | 1 | |||||||||||||
| 204,316 | 7.12 | 0 | |||||||||||||
| 248,334 | 8.00 | 1 |
Northern Territory
| Election year | Legislative Assembly | # votes | % votes | # seats | +/– | 2001 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,074 | 1.32 | 0 |
Maps
File:1998 Queensland election - PHON Vote Strength.svg|1998 Queensland state election. File:2022 Australian federal election - One Nation.png|2022 Australian federal election.
Leaders
Federal
Unlike the Queensland state leadership, the changes of the federal leadership of the party were largely undocumented (besides Hanson's terms), due to previously having low media attention and confusion of branch leadership within the party.
In August 2017, the party's constitution was changed so that Hanson would be party President for as long as she may wish, and to choose her successor, who may also continue until resignation.
| No. | Image | Leader | Electorate | Term | Notes | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 1 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 2 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 3 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 4 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | (1) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:Pauline Hanson (438351804) (cropped).jpg | 100x100px]] | Pauline Hanson | MP for Oxley (1996–1998) | 11 April 1997 – | |||||||||||
| 5 August 2002 | First leadership | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:JohnFischer.jpg | 100x100px]] | John Fischer | MLC for Mining & Pastoral Regions | ||||||||||||
| (2001–2005) | 5 August 2002 – | ||||||||||||||
| 1 June 2004 | Also leader of One Nation WA | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Ian Nelson | — | 6 December 2009 – | |||||||||||
| 24 March 2012 | Also former party director and treasurer | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Jim Savage | — | 13 May 2013 – | |||||||||||
| 18 November 2014 | Former party executive and leader of One Nation Queensland | ||||||||||||||
| [[File:Pauline Hanson 2017 01 (cropped).jpg | 100x100px]] | Pauline Hanson | Senator for Queensland | ||||||||||||
| (2016–) | 18 November 2014 – | ||||||||||||||
| present | Second leadership |
New South Wales
| No. | Image | Leader | Electorate | Term | Notes | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 1 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 2 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 3 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | David Oldfield | MLC | ||||||||||
| (1997–2007) | |||||||||||||
| City of Manly Alderman | |||||||||||||
| (1991–1999) | 27 March 1999 – | ||||||||||||
| 8 October 2000 | Sacked as leader after party intervention | ||||||||||||
| Later leader of breakaway party, One Nation NSW (2000–2004) | |||||||||||||
| [[File:Brian_Burston.jpg | 100x100px]] | Brian Burston | Senator for New South Wales | ||||||||||
| (2016–2019) | |||||||||||||
| City of Cessnock Deputy Mayor | |||||||||||||
| (1987–1999) | 31 March 2010 – | ||||||||||||
| 17 June 2018 | Resigned as leader after party intervention | ||||||||||||
| [[File:Mark_Latham.png | 100x100px]] | Mark Latham | MP for Werriwa | ||||||||||
| (1994–2005) | |||||||||||||
| MLC | |||||||||||||
| (2019–present) | |||||||||||||
| Labor Opposition Leader | |||||||||||||
| (2003–2005) | 7 November 2018 – | ||||||||||||
| 14 August 2023 | Sacked as leader after party intervention | ||||||||||||
| [[File:Tania Mihailuk MP.jpg | 100x100px]] | Tania Mihailuk | Mayor of Bankstown | ||||||||||
| (2006–2011) | |||||||||||||
| MLC | |||||||||||||
| (2023–present) | |||||||||||||
| MLA for Bankstown | |||||||||||||
| (2011–2023) | 10 December 2023 – | ||||||||||||
| 20 December 2024 | Resigned as leader over administrative and funding issues |
Victoria
| No. | Image | Leader | Electorate | Term | Notes | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 1 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 2 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Andrew Carne | — | 1997 – | |||||||
| 21 May 1998 | |||||||||||
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Robyn Spencer | — | 21 May 1998 – | |||||||
| 13 June 1998 | Wife of South Australia leader Rodney Spencer, also former leader of AAFI | ||||||||||
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Rikkie-Lee Tyrrell | MLC for Northern Victoria | ||||||||
| (2022–present) | 27 November 2022 – | ||||||||||
| present | First One Nation MP elected in Victoria |
Western Australia
| No. | Image | Leader | Electorate | Term | Notes | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 1 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 2 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 3 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:JohnFischer.jpg | 100x100px]] | John Fischer | MLC for Mining and Pastoral Region | ||||||||||
| (2001–2005) | 10 February 2001 – | ||||||||||||
| 1 June 2004 | Resigned, was also Federal leader of One Nation | ||||||||||||
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Ron McClean | — | 1 June 2004 – | |||||||||
| 9 January 2017 | |||||||||||||
| [[File:Colin_Tincknell.png | 100x100px]] | Colin Tincknell | MLC for South West Region | ||||||||||
| (2017–2021) | 9 January 2017 – | ||||||||||||
| 2023 | Later President of One Nation Western Australia Division | ||||||||||||
| [[File:Rod_Caddies.png | 100x100px]] | Rod Caddies | MLC | ||||||||||
| (2025–present) | 2023 – | ||||||||||||
| present |
South Australia
| No. | Image | Leader | Electorate | Term | Notes | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 1 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Rodney Spencer | — | 21 May 1998 – | |||||
| 13 June 1998 | Wife is former One Nation Victoria leader Robyn Spencer. Also the leader of AAFI between 1989 and 2008 | ||||||||
| [[File:JenniferGame.jpg | 100x100px]] | Jennifer Game | — | 16 September 2021 – | |||||
| 17 May 2025 | Daughter is former One Nation MLC Sarah Game. Resigned from party |
Queensland
| No. | Image | Leader | Electorate | Term | Notes | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 1 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 2 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 3 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 4 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 5 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Heather Hill | Senator for Queensland | ||||||||||||||
| (1998–1999) | 21 May 1998 – | ||||||||||||||||
| 13 June 1998 | Disqualified from Senate in 1999 | ||||||||||||||||
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Bill Feldman | MLA for Caboolture | ||||||||||||||
| (1998–2001) | 23 June 1998 – | ||||||||||||||||
| 14 December 1999 | Inaugural Qld. parliamentary leader, resigned from party, leader of breakaway party, City Country Alliance (1999–2001) | ||||||||||||||||
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Bill Flynn | MLA for Lockyer | ||||||||||||||
| (2001–2004) | 6 March 2001 – | ||||||||||||||||
| 7 February 2004 | Defeated at election | ||||||||||||||||
| [[File:RosalieLong.jpg | 100x100px]] | Rosa Lee Long | MLA for Tablelands | ||||||||||||||
| (2001–2009) | 1 June 2004 – | ||||||||||||||||
| 20 March 2009 | Only One Nation MP from 2004 until defeat in 2009 | ||||||||||||||||
| [[File:Steve Dickson 2014 (cropped).jpg | 100x100px]] | Steve Dickson | MLA for Buderim | ||||||||||||||
| (2009–2017) | 23 January 2017 – | ||||||||||||||||
| 30 April 2019 | Resigned after scandal | ||||||||||||||||
| [[File:JamesAshby.png | 100x100px]] | James Ashby | — | 20 September 2024 – | |||||||||||||
| present | Chief of Staff to Pauline Hanson |
Australian Capital Territory
| No. | Image | Leader | Electorate | Term | Notes | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 1 | One Nation}}; color:white;" | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Shaun Nelson | MLA for Tablelands | ||||||
| (1998–2001) | June 1997 – | ||||||||
| December 1997 | |||||||||
| [[File:PHON Placeholder.png | 100x100px]] | Chris Spence | MLA for The Entrance | ||||||
| (2011–2015) | December 1997 – | ||||||||
| January 1998 | Later a Liberal MP |
Members of parliament
Current MPs
Federal
File:Pauline Hanson 2017 01 (cropped).jpg|Senator Pauline Hanson (Qld.), 2016–present, MP for Oxley (1997–98) File:Malcolm Roberts 2020.jpg|Senator Malcolm Roberts (Qld.), 2016–2017, 2019–present File:PHON Placeholder.png|Senator Sean Bell (NSW), 2025–present File:Tyron Whitten.png|Senator Tyron Whitten (WA), 2025–present File:Barnaby Joyce portrait.jpg|Barnaby Joyce MP (New England), 2025–present
Victoria
- Rikkie-Lee Tyrrell MLC (Northern Victoria, 2022–present)
Western Australia
- Rod Caddies MLC (2025–present)
- Phil Scott MLC (2025–present)
Former MPs
Main article: List of Pauline Hanson's One Nation elected representatives
Donors
A 2019 report found that Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party had received over $6,000 in disclosed donations from pro-gun groups during the 2011–2018 period, with concerns these donations threatened to compromise Australia's safety by undermining gun control laws. The Queensland branch of the party received $17,000 from the agriculture sector (meat and sugar industry) between 2016 and 2021, totaling less than one percent of all publicly declared political donations during that period; the state's two major parties (Labor, Liberal National) made up 85% of total publicly declared political donations, receiving $358,270 and $1,451,991, respectively. The North Queensland-based Katter's Australian Party received over $280,000.
Notes
References
References
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- (8 March 2011). "I'm not a racist, says Pauline Hanson".
- (1999). "AUSTRALIA'S ELECTION YEAR: Hansonism and the Asian Financial Crisis". Southeast Asian Affairs.
- (July 2001). "One Nation and the Australian far right". Patterns of Prejudice.
- (20 June 2019). "Australia's Own Brand of Radical Populism".
- (2016). "One Nation's Shan Ju Lin defends Pauline Hanson, says she fears Chinese Government will 'take over'".
- (2017). "Pauline Hanson is not racist, says Asian-Australian One Nation candidate".
- (2020). "One Nation fields former Indian international student Nik Reddy in Queensland elections".
- (2022). "Surprise twist at Pauline Hanson's One Nation event in Brisbane".
- (26 March 2017). "Looking back, and angry: what drives Pauline Hanson's voters". The Guardian Australia.
- (4 July 2016). "Australian firebrand Pauline Hanson marks political return with anti-Muslim speech". The Financial Times.
- (5 July 2016). "Election 2016: Pauline Hanson's comments could lead to violence, Tim Soutphommasane warns". ABC News.
- Casey Briggs. (9 January 2017). "Dumped One Nation candidate won't apologise for anti-gay comments". ABC News.
- Robertson, Joshua. (20 December 2016). "One Nation candidate quits after two days over 'inappropriate' tweet". The Guardian.
- Duffy, Nick. (26 April 2019). "'The only thing worse than a gay person with power is a woman,' candidate says". [[PinkNews]].
- (15 January 2021). "One Nation responds to Pauline Hanson website redirecting to refugee charity".
- (4 July 2016). "Australian firebrand Pauline Hanson marks political return with anti-Muslim speech". The Financial Times.
- (5 July 2016). "Election 2016: Pauline Hanson's comments could lead to violence, Tim Soutphommasane warns". ABC News.
- "Immigration".
- (10 May 2018). "Annual immigration intake should be capped at 75,000: Hanson".
- (19 November 2025). "Bring immigration down to 130,000 a year': Pauline Hanson".
- "United Nations and Trade Agreements". Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party.
- "World Organisations and Trade Agreements".
- "Bringing Back Australian Values". Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party.
- "Australian Jobs and Infrastructure".
- (22 March 2018). "One Nation to back company tax cuts in exchange for funding for 1,000 apprentices". Abc.net.au.
- "Pauline Hanson backs corporate tax cuts".
- (22 March 2018). "Pauline Hanson's One Nation says it will back Coalition's corporate tax cuts – as it happened". The Guardian.
- "Tax – Foreign Owned Multinationals". Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party.
- (22 June 2021). "The Senate has voted to reject critical race theory from the national curriculum. What is it, and why does it matter?".
- (13 September 2018). "Pauline Hanson Moves to Ban Burqa – Voted Down by Out of Touch Politicians".
- "Citizen Initiated Referenda".
- (23 April 2019). "Pauline's bizarre climate change theory".
- (5 August 2016). "New Australia senator claims UN conspiracy".
- "Pauline Hanson links same-sex marriage to polygamy".
- (27 November 2017). "Hanson's weird claim on gay families". news.com.au.
- "Pro-Life".
- "Stop the Rorts".
- "Slash Government Waste".
- "Pauline Archives".
- "Pensioners".
- Phillip Coorey. (26 October 2016). "Scott Morrison wins One Nation backing for $6b in welfare cuts". [[Australian Financial Review]].
- "Pensioners".
- "Pauline Hanson joins with government to push NDIS reform".
- (14 June 2021). "Hanson's vaccine view roasted on-air".
- (14 October 2021). "A One Nation senator has grown his Instagram audience from zero to almost 30,000 by hosting livestreams with anti-vax and wellness influencers".
- (21 July 2021). "Mark Latham wants the vaccinated exempt from Sydney's lockdown".
- (22 November 2021). "One Nation anti-vaccine mandate bill rejected despite support from five Coalition senators". The Guardian.
- (14 September 2016). "Debunking Malcolm Roberts: the case against a climate science denier".
- (13 September 2016). "One Nation senator Malcolm Roberts calls for 'Aus-Exit' from 'monster' United Nations in first speech".
- "Climate".
- "Embracing Australian coal".
- "Embracing Australian gas".
- "One Nation calls to abolish preferences".
- "Victorian Campaign Fighting Fund – Pauline Hanson's One Nation".
- (4 April 2017). "'My hand on their electoral throat': Druery on One Nation vendetta". ABC News.
- Wong, Kat. (20 March 2025). "One Nation: Pauline Hanson eyes cuts on alcohol tax, climate spending as she sharpens her election policies". [[The Nightly]].
- Watson, Ian. (2001). "One Nation's Electoral Support: Where Does It Come From, What Makes It Different and How Does It Fit?". Australian Journal of Politics & History.
- (13 May 2018). "Pauline Hanson written into One Nation constitution as effective president for life". The Guardian.
- (8 June 2017). "Pauline Hanson secures gag order to stop release of secret One Nation recordings". The Guardian.
- "'Total lack of respect': Former One Nation president to run against his old party in their heartland". Gatton Star.
- "How we beat Pauline Hanson in the 1990s | Red Flag".
- (8 March 2017). "Sacked One Nation couple claim Ron McLean was removed from ticket because of age". ABC News.
- (20 September 2024). "Pauline Hanson has announced James Ashby as QLD leader".
- (27 March 2019). "Gun lobby's 'concerted and secretive' bid to undermine Australian laws".
- (July 2023). "Who is donating to political parties in Queensland, Australia? An analysis of political donations from the food industry". [[Cambridge University Press]].
- (4 May 2019). "banned from Facebook after posting Islamophobic messages in the wake of the Christchurch massacre.". Nine.
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