One Nation is no stranger to the headlines, but it’s been a long time since the party has been talked about as a serious political force. Operating on the fringes of Australian political life for years, suddenly Pauline Hanson is in the news every day.
A significant part of this is the party’s well-documented meteoric rise in the polls. It’s prompted speculation about One Nation becoming Australia’s official opposition party, leaving the Liberals and Nationals in the dust.
But while politics is a fast-moving beast, you only need to look back a couple of years to be reminded of the long history of dysfunction that’s plagued the party.
So will this ascendancy amount to a lasting realignment of conservative politics in Australia? Can One Nation overcome its scandal-ridden past to emerge as the dominant force in Australian right-wing politics?
A tale of peaks and troughs
The 1998 Queensland state election remains One Nation’s electoral high point. It was the only time the party polled above 20%. The election saw the party pick up 11 of 89 seats, propelling it to the third largest party in the state parliament.
But One Nation’s stunning rise was over almost as soon as it started. The party was beset with internal disunity, political scandals and poor management. Most of the party’s Queensland parliamentarians abandoned it after demands to democratise the party organisation were ignored.
Hanson lost her seat in parliament soon after, narrowly failing to win the newly-formed Queensland seat of Blair at the 1998 federal election.
One Nation managed to gain the upper house balance of power in the 2001 Western Australian state election. However, Hanson’s resignation from the party in 2002 and conviction for electoral fraud in 2003 (later overturned) helped plunge the party into political irrelevance.
Returning to the party in 2014, and the leadership in 2015, Hanson led One Nation to its second breakthrough on the national stage at the 2016 double dissolution election. Four One Nation senators, including Hanson, were elected from just 4.29% of the first preference vote.
But the party was again wracked by defections and scandal. Rodney Culleton, Fraser Anning, and Brian Burston – all elected on the One Nation ticket – abandoned the party after falling out with Hanson.
One Nation was reduced to two Senate seats until the 2025 federal election, where it picked up a seat in New South Wales and WA, bringing the party back to four senators.
What’s driving this polling surge?
It’s useful to think of One Nation’s rising support as a combination of short-term factors and longer-term trends.
In the short term, dysfunction within the (former) Coalition parties and conservative voters’ dissatisfaction with moderate Liberal leader Sussan Ley have been a boon for One Nation.
As she did after the 2014 Lindt cafe siege, Hanson has connected the 2025 Bondi terror attack to immigration and multiculturalism, criticising the government for allowing “the wrong people” to migrate to Australia.
The party has also benefited from increased salience of immigration and national security, connecting housing and cost-of-living pressures to so-called “mass migration”.
Long-term, the party has been buoyed by the mainstreaming of far-right politics globally, profound shifts in media and communication landscapes, and the decline in support of the major political parties in Australia.
Succeeding in spite of itself
One Nation’s polling surge appears to defy conventional wisdom about the viability of a far-right party in Australia.
Parties like One Nation perform relatively poorly compared with their European counterparts. It’s typically assumed this reflects a lack of supply of effective leadership and strong party organisation, rather than a shortage of demand for a far-right party.
Of course the test for One Nation is translating their current polling boost into electoral success. If they succeed, it will challenge long-held ideas that features of our electoral system, such as compulsory voting, provide a bulwark against more extreme forms of politics.
One of the greatest barriers One Nation has faced to electoral success has been itself. Research has shown the party has a history of serious organisational dysfunction.
One Nation has struggled to properly vet candidates for election. Candidates have resigned or been disendorsed by the party for potential breaches of election law and making sexist and homophobic comments. One candidate made headlines for mowing a swastika into their lawn.
Issues of candidate quality have been exacerbated by the lack of on-the-ground support and campaign co-ordination. Recent claims about booming One Nation membership should be viewed sceptically, unless accompanied by actual membership numbers. But most parties, including Labor and the Liberals, rarely publish such figures.
Likewise, claims the party has branches in all 151 federal electorates require qualification. Though a significant milestone for the party, the existence of a branch doesn’t automatically mean there is an active grassroots body able to knock on doors and hand out how-to-vote cards. One Nation has historically struggled with these things, outside of a handful of seats.
On top of this, while the defections of former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce and former Liberal Senator Cory Bernardi have kept One Nation in the spotlight, Hanson’s history of falling out bitterly with elected representatives (think Mark Latham) raises questions about whether such partnerships can last.
Crucially, this kind of polling – with One Nation well ahead of the Coalition –should bring greater scrutiny from media and voters alike. The problem One Nation faces as it tries to reposition itself from a party of protest to a potential party of government is that people will rightly expect policy detail and costings.
One Nation’s strength is the politics of identity and grievance, not policy substance.
Proceeding with caution
There are many reasons to treat One Nation’s surge with caution. We should be circumspect about prematurely declaring the death of the Coalition parties or a realignment of Australian conservative politics. Infighting and dysfunction have been constant features of One Nation since its inception. There is little evidence to expect this will change.
Yet the scale of One Nation’s support in the polls and the collapse of the Coalition’s primary vote is uncharted territory. Despite its many challenges, the next federal election may for the first time see a well-funded One Nation pose a serious threat to the Coalition’s dominance of the Australian right. If their polling remains above 20%, it’s entirely possible there will be serious pressure to include Hanson in televised leaders’ debates.
Essential questions remain about One Nation’s electoral viability on polling day. The party’s success will rely on its ability to run a disciplined campaign, endorse quality candidates, and manage intra-party conflicts – all of which the party has previously struggled with.
The first test of whether One Nation can translate polling support into electoral success will come at the upcoming South Australian election, where the party plans to field candidates in every seat.
Kurt Sengul, Research fellow, Far-Right Communication, Macquarie University and Jordan McSwiney, Senior research fellow, University of Canberra
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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It would never be undermining by the main parties …
What do you think of the chances that Pauline will eye a lower house seat – even New England – at the next election? Or will she be a puppeteer pulling strings from the Senate?
I still remember the last time ON had a surge. It failed to deliver anything other than Mark Latham to NSW Senate, where he abandoned the party after being too far right even for them.
Shane McGee they are mistaking a pending loose bowel motion for a political movement 😂🥂
One seat Nation.
Very interesting read… thank you!!
New England is ripe for a good intelligent independent
Andrew Gannon Barnaby is going for the Senate next time. He’s only interested in the money and a lazy $200k plus expenses for six years, not to mention any sidelines
Bruce Tindale so that rules out One Neuron then 🤦♀️😂🥂
Both too gutless to test One Nation in the lower house
Haha no, they couldn’t buy a seat if Amart was selling them for $1 😂
Struggle? Struggle? One Nation gaining seats in parliament is a fantasy. To get seats in parliament you have to have a bulk of first preference votes which One Nation has never had. All the hype is just that, one seat in the House and that of a National Party deserter. One Nation is a whingers and bigots party, not the sort of thing we want leading our country. Again, One Nation as a serious political party is a fantasy which will evaporate well before the votes are counted at the next election.
Two years to screw whatever momentum they have up. If Barnaby had faith he would have stood for New England
Andrew Fenwick 2 years away he still might and I think he should.
Dale I would be surprised, the senate spot is a safe bet for 6 years income and spotlight opportunity. If he lost the NE seat he would be done.
Owain Price some one who absolutely knows bugger all about Barnaby, he is our member for New England and has delivered more for our electorate than any member before him. He would drop into our Men’s Shed for a yarn. Didn’t talk politics, just a chat. One of our members asked him a question. Our doctor was from England, a doctor well respected in our community, he wanted to bring his family to Australia but was unable to because he had a special needs son. Barnaby asked his aide to take a note, said he’d ring Greg Hunt that evening. The next morning our doctor received a phone call from Greg Hunt’s office, he was asked questions and received word that afternoon his family was cleared to come to Australia. That’s the type of politician Barnaby is, that’s the type of politician we need. He made so many things happen for his electorate just by talking to people, listening to them and delivering.
James Constable and great bring in disabled family members of migrants to go on the NIDS taxpayer tab
– didnt know that was one nation/nats policy
Owain Price we needed a doctor in our town, without him the community wouldn’t have had a doctor and it’s an hour by car to the nearest town. We don’t have the same services in the country that the city folk enjoy.
How ridiculous, racism isn’t popular anymore Pauline and heading further to the right wing just leads down the yellow brick road to political obscurity.
Joyce should resign. He was not elected for one Nation. He has only one interest – himself.
They are only looking at upper house seats to make a stand
Dear god I hope not. There’s enough incompetence and malice already without adding her brand to the mix 🙄
It’s easy to criticise, but hard to govern.
Looking forward to Joyce losing his seat.
Tracey-Lee Sellers indie hopefully, apart from that I guess it’ll go back to the NATs.
A few and that’s it. No one with a brain and an education, will vote for them
New England Times Now Angus Taylor has been installed as leader of the Liberal Party of Australia News Corp will promptly drop Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party and stop boosting it on all outlets, especially Sky News Australia. This is because PHON was only ever a scare tactic to move the LNP back to the fringe right, with culture wars, grievance politics and general stupidity… Basically cancel culture on the LNP until they did Rupert’s bidding. Now it will be all hotsy totsy with lots of Angus we love you puff pieces (we will, no doubt, see photos of Angus without a shirt riding a horse) and general, “it’s all good you can return to voting LNP stuff…
One nation has not produced a single difference to the lives of any Australians. Prove me wrong
ON is unable to hold on to any elected positions as people always fall out with the Dear Leader. While people can see what’s happening in Trump’s America, while Poorleen is parroting their policies.
Now let’s talk about Pauline Hanson the politician, because this is where the grift really shows.
She’s been in politics for decades. Decades.
Name one policy she’s implemented that helped:
impoverished children
battered women
the unemployed
pensioners
working Australians
You can’t. Because there isn’t one.
Go look at HowTheyVote.org. It’s public. It’s boring. It’s damning.
She votes with the Liberal Party almost every single time.
Against workers.
Against welfare.
Against social services.
Against anything that would materially help struggling Australians.
She’s never fought for wages.
Never fought for housing.
Never fought for healthcare.
Nothing.
She’s not a champion of the battler. She’s a taxpayer-funded grifter who cosplays as an outsider while cashing a senator’s pay cheque.
And incidents like this?
She doesn’t fear them.
She feeds on them.
You can practically see her salivating, finally something she can use to rile up her base, because without fear, she has nothing. No policy. No vision. No solutions.
Just division.
Pauline Hanson doesn’t protect Australia.
She fractures it.
She doesn’t stand for victims.
She weaponises them.
She is a bigoted, racist, diversionary, twisted, wretched crab who survives by dragging society sideways while contributing absolutely nothing of value.
And the most offensive part?
She wraps all of that in the Australian flag and calls it patriotism.
It’s not.
It’s exploitation.
New England Times, lets do another poll…how many of the ON commentaters to this post actually read the attached article…?
Depends entirely on preference flow. If they’re ahead on primary it’ll take substantial preference leakage to drop down.
If the non-socialist minors organise themselves to harvest preferences the majors are in trouble- they’ve been gaming this undemocratic system for decades, about time they got some of their own back.
Wow – great piece – thanks 🙏
Peter Simpson No. The polls show nothing of the sort… a few FB and X profikes have made that claim…. They will join Gena and Clives money and take over a few of tge more feeble country electorites.
The rest will stay honest.
Monica Wilcox oh unlike the Labor party which will kick out any member who crosses the floor because u know democracy and representing the electorate who votes for you isn’t as important as the party
It will struggle because smart Australians aren’t conned by her.