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Pauline Hanson Condemns Senator’s Comments on Charlie Kirk Assassination
Posted by One Nation · September 19, 2025 10:48 AM
Pauline Hanson slammed independent Senator Fatima Payman over her remarks following Charlie Kirk’s assassination, calling them vile and disgraceful. Senator Hanson recalled past clashes with Payman in parliament, where she says she was smeared with slurs for questioning constitutional eligibility. Defending Kirk as a man who valued free speech and respectful debate, Senator Hanson vowed to campaign hard to ensure Payman is not re-elected, stressing the need to remove divisive figures from Australian politics.
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Rod Caddies Calls for Child Protection Reform
Posted by One Nation · September 19, 2025 10:47 AM
Honourable Rod Caddies drew on 15 years of experience in residential care to highlight the failures in Australia’s child protection system. Sharing the story of an Indigenous aunt forced to give up her two nieces after a $50 rent increase, he argued that simple preventative support could have kept the children in family care and saved taxpayers thousands in foster costs. Rod Caddies urged governments to focus on early intervention, prevention programs, and consultation with frontline workers to ensure child protection decisions truly reflect the best interests of children.
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Sean Frederick Bell Chosen to Fill Senate Vacancy
Posted by One Nation · September 19, 2025 9:45 AM
Sean Frederick Bell has been officially chosen to replace outgoing One Nation Senator Warwick Stacey in the Australian Senate. The appointment followed constitutional requirements under section 15, with Sean Bell endorsed as the valid candidate. The joint sitting declared the motion carried after no other valid nominations were received.
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Sean Bell to represent NSW for One Nation
Posted by One Nation · September 16, 2025 11:00 AM
Lowering immigration and the cost of living, improving housing affordability and bringing back common sense to debates on the issues that affect all Australians, will be the priorities for Sean Bell as he enters the Senate to represent New South Wales.
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Pauline Hanson Supports Jacinta Price on Migration Concerns
Posted by One Nation · September 15, 2025 2:46 PM
Pauline Hanson backed Senator Jacinta Price’s comments on migration, arguing that Labor has long used immigration for political advantage. She cited former Labor president Barry Jones’ 1997 admission that migrants from Greece and China were brought in for votes, accusing Labor of repeating the same tactic today. Senator Hanson said Jacinta Price was “spot on” and urged Australians to recognise that high migration levels are being used to secure Labor’s electoral future at the expense of national interest.
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Lee Hanson Talks Common Sense: From Flags to The Future of One Nation
Posted by One Nation · September 12, 2025 4:49 PM
Tasmanian One Nation figure Lee Hanson tells Hoodies Magazine why Australians shouldn’t be smeared for attending pro-Australia rallies and backs criminalising flag-burning, arguing the issue has been politicised by major parties and media. She outlines One Nation’s grassroots push—registering the party in Tasmania and launching local branches—while calling for common-sense population planning and debate without labels. Lee Hanson also questions a $900m AFL stadium amid housing, health, and cost-of-living pressures, urging priority for essential services before big projects.
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This week marks 29 years since Pauline Hanson delivered her maiden speech as the Member for Oxley in 1996
Posted by One Nation · September 12, 2025 11:50 AM
It was a speech that shook the political establishment to its core, not because it was fashionable, but because it was fearless. Pauline spoke the truth as she saw it, without apology, and warned Australians about challenges that too many in politics chose to ignore.
Looking back nearly three decades on, it’s striking just how much she got right. Issues that were dismissed or mocked at the time are now front and centre in national debate. That first speech was a warning, a call to action, and a moment that gave ordinary Australians a voice.
As we celebrate 29 years since that powerful beginning, let’s remind ourselves why Pauline Hanson’s words still resonate today. They weren’t just about 1996, they’re about the Australia we live in now, and the future we want to protect.
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Pauline Hanson Slams Labor’s Mass Migration Plans
Posted by One Nation · September 11, 2025 12:43 PM
One Nation Leader Senator Pauline Hanson, speaking from Scenic Rim, Queensland, argued that Labor has long used mass migration to secure votes, citing historical admissions by Labor figures and linking current high immigration levels to cost-of-living pressures and infrastructure strain. While stressing respect for hardworking migrant communities, Hanson called for an honest debate on population planning and criticised both major parties for failing to deliver a sustainable immigration policy. She reiterated her push for a population plan capped at 130,000 migrants per year until services and infrastructure catch up.
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Defending the Australian Flag in Parliament
Posted by One Nation · September 10, 2025 4:37 PM
A powerful speech in Parliament defended the Australian flag as a unifying symbol of all Australians, reminding senators of their duty to represent the nation, not foreign interests or divisive ideologies. The address condemned those who advocate flag burning and praised the Southern Cross as a shared emblem for Indigenous heritage, migrants, and all who cherish Australia’s freedoms. It called for social cohesion, national pride, and a united stand against attempts to divide the country.
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James Ashby Calls Out Migration Debate Avoidance
Posted by One Nation · September 10, 2025 1:45 PM
One Nation Chief of Staff James Ashby argued that both Labor and the Liberals have avoided an honest debate on Australia’s migration crisis, saying they have historically brought in communities for political advantage. He defended the right to question migration levels without being branded racist, pointing to housing shortages, cost-of-living pressures, and mass rallies where everyday Australians voiced their concerns. James Ashby insisted the issue is about numbers and infrastructure strain, not race or multiculturalism.