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Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Poll Surge Shakes Australian Politics

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Australia’s right-wing populist party One Nation has recorded a significant electoral breakthrough, highlighting growing voter frustration with the country’s dominant political parties.

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The party led by Pauline Hanson secured more than 20% of votes in a recent state election in South Australia, its strongest showing outside Hanson’s home state of Queensland. The result will deliver at least three seats for the party and marks the first time it has reached such levels of support in a state long dominated by the two major parties.

Breakthrough vote signals shifting political mood

Although Peter Malinauskas led the Labor Party to a decisive victory and increased his parliamentary majority, One Nation’s gains came largely at the expense of the conservative Liberal Party of Australia.

Analysts say the result reflects broader shifts in Australian politics as voters increasingly turn to minor parties and independents.

Kos Samaras, a former Labor strategist and co-director of the Redbridge polling firm, described the outcome as a troubling sign for the country’s established political forces.

Cost-of-living pressures fuel support

Economic concerns have played a central role in One Nation’s renewed momentum.

The party has long campaigned on strict immigration policies, but rising housing costs and broader cost-of-living pressures have pushed many voters toward alternatives to the major parties.

In South Australia, some voters said economic pressures drove their decision to abandon traditional political loyalties. Rising property prices and rental costs have become major concerns for households across the country.

One Nation campaigned on increasing housing supply and limiting immigration levels, although immigration policy is set at the federal rather than state level.

The party also broadened its campaign effort, fielding candidates across every electorate and recruiting high-profile figures such as former senator Cory Bernardi to lead its ticket.

The result comes amid declining support for the Liberal-National Coalition and growing dissatisfaction with mainstream parties.

A polarising figure in Australian politics

Hanson has remained one of the most controversial figures in Australia’s political landscape for decades.

She first entered parliament in 1996 after winning a Queensland seat in a dramatic upset, shortly after being disendorsed by the Liberal Party. Her maiden speech drew widespread attention for comments warning Australia risked being “swamped by Asians”.

Her party, the One Nation, achieved rapid early success but soon struggled to maintain support. Hanson lost her parliamentary seat in 1998 and spent years outside federal politics before returning to the Senate in 2016.

During that period she remained a high-profile and often divisive figure. In 2003 she was briefly jailed on electoral fraud charges before the conviction was later overturned on appeal. She has also faced legal action over remarks judged to have racially vilified another senator.

Despite repeated controversies, supporters view Hanson as an outsider who challenges political elites and speaks for voters who feel ignored by mainstream parties.

Limits to a populist breakthrough

While One Nation’s recent performance has drawn attention, experts say structural barriers remain.

Australia’s preferential voting system requires voters to rank candidates in order of preference, a process that tends to favour established parties. Voting is also compulsory, which analysts say reduces the likelihood of sudden political swings.

Scholars argue that while populist parties can gain influence, replacing the long-standing dominance of Labor and the conservative Coalition remains difficult.

Nevertheless, analysts warn that growing support for minor parties signals deepening dissatisfaction among voters who believe traditional parties no longer address economic concerns or social change.

For Hanson, the South Australia result marks an opportunity to expand the party’s reach. She has already pointed to upcoming elections in other states and federal contests as potential next steps in building support.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now. Source 28 March 2026


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3 minutes ago, webfact said:

Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Poll Surge Shakes Australian Politics

Great news 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺

Looks like I'm far right, oh well 😜

And this is the result of the progressive left. It's happening elsewhere. What use to be centre or centre left is now way too left for many. What happens is the void is filled from the "far" right (and I'm not talking the far right God loving white supremecists nutters) with populists policies. The US election was a prime example of this as is the 3 or 4 lower house seats and a seat in the senate in the South Australian Parliament for One Nation.

One of the world's bravest women. Hope she has top flight body guards to protect her from the deluded msm consumers, who, in Oz are particularly self loathing and delulu.

Go Pauline. Save Australia from the usual suspects.

Just now, SAFETY FIRST said:

Great news 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺

14 hours ago, SAFETY FIRST said:

Great news 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺

Looks like I'm far right, oh well 😜

How did this guy get there?

Screenshot_20260329_080545_20260329_080618.jpg

Guns or butter ?

Hmm? No mention that Labor won the recent S Australia state election in a landslide? Hanson may have decimated the Liberal vote, but her chance of achieving power is remote, much like Farage in the UK.

Hanson has a long, well‑documented history of targeting minorities, stoking fear, and pushing rhetoric that many Australians have condemned as openly racist.

Supporting a platform built on exclusions rather than solutions should raise serious questions about where Australia wants to head next!

Oh horrendous woman wanting to stop immigration

Her and Tommy should marry each other

She was trying to stop transexuals from reading library books to children, shocking lady

Like most politicians, half of her policies resonate while the other half leave something to be desired. In all my years, I have yet to come across a politician who truly deserves my vote.

Always nice to see a Tom forging ahead career wise .!

Much like Reform at the last uk election. The Aussies are always a few years behind the UK.

Good to see the right rising over there. The UK will get a right wing government before 2029 so maybe the aussies will get one by 2035?

Lets hope the Libs haven't done irreparable damage to Australia by then. They're well on the way.

On 3/29/2026 at 2:43 PM, georgegeorgia said:

Oh horrendous woman wanting to stop immigration

Her and Tommy should marry each other

She was trying to stop transexuals from reading library books to children, shocking lady

In the 1990's we had a famous Neo Nazi in my area. He was a terrible Nazi. The Kosher bagel factory ADL used to consider him one of most dangerous man alive. So this guy decided to commit some act of terror against the local police sheriff. So one day at a very early morning when the sheriff was leaving his house, this guy dressed in his Nazi regalia hiding behind some bushes at front of the sheriff's house, started to scream "Sieg bagel! Sieg Bagel!" and shake the bushes very hard trying to scare the sheriff and then he threw at the sheriff ( not a grenade) a rubber snake. He got ten years in prison and since then I have never heard anything about him again.

6 hours ago, JonnyF said:

Much like Reform at the last uk election. The Aussies are always a few years behind the UK.

Good to see the right rising over there. The UK will get a right wing government before 2029 so maybe the aussies will get one by 2035?

Lets hope the Libs haven't done irreparable damage to Australia by then. They're well on the way.

Libs ? It's Labor in power and they are wonderful

16 minutes ago, georgegeorgia said:

Libs ? It's Labor in power and they are wonderful

I think in Usofa 'liberal' means 'Lefty'.

It has to be said that the English language has not travelled well in Nth America.

20% is a surge? Not very good at math down there, are they?

2 minutes ago, gargamon said:

20% is a surge? Not very good at math down there, are they?

Oh exactly!

What a horrid horrid woman this Pauline Hanson is , trying to stop diversity, multi culturalism , and harmony

Trying to bring chaos to a beautiful society that thrives on difference such as transexualism and gender choosing

10 minutes ago, gargamon said:

20% is a surge? Not very good at math down there, are they?

It's a surge from what she has recorded over the past 20 years or so (usually around 3 or 4%).

Let's hope that hen it comes to voting, Australia will regain its senses.

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