As counting continues in the Queensland senate race,Pauline Hanson looks increasingly likely to be re-elected,but One Nation’s reduced showing could be a sign of an existential crisis.
The Legalise Cannabis Australia party is still within striking distance of snatching the sixth and final Queensland Senate vacancy from Pauline Hanson’s One Nation.
The Liberals have lost key conservative figures in the Senate including veteran Tasmanian Eric Abetz and junior minister Amanda Stoker.
The Queensland-based right-wing minor party’s $2.8 million payout was the largest of all except Labor,the Greens and Coalition after the 2019 federal election.
Analysis of the Liberal Nation Party’s Queensland lower house how-to-vote cards has revealed the scope of support for the right-wing minor party,after shunning it in 2019.
TikTok and Facebook removed the video,which is part of One Nation’s edgy but widely popular Please Explain series,for breaching their election misinformation policies.
The Liberal National Party will favour One Nation over other parties and independents in the Senate and key Queensland seats.
Pauline Hanson has claimed credit for a federal government grant to a drag racing venue in Queensland,sparking fury from Labor.
A month after the Queensland-based party named Rebecca Lloyd as its candidate for Brisbane,she has been unanimously dumped for allegedly refusing to follow directions.
A quarter-century since the launch of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party,its eponymous leader says she still has at least six years fight left. Maybe more.
Christensen was asked whether he was making the move for the $105,000 resettlement allowance given to politicians when they lose their seat.