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Here is the latest news and updates from Pauline Hanson and the One Nation team. Check back for new content or just sign up to get updates from One Nation sent directly to your email.
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Financial collapse of worldwide economies including the debt bubble of Australia, America, China and Africa. One Nation is vocalising their concerns on the financial instability in current markets.
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Hydroelectricity schemes are not green. One Nation points out the holes in Queensland labour's plans for renewable energy.
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Australians should be able to keep physical evidence of their property deeds as the theft of personal customer information at Optus further demonstrates the vulnerability of electronic records to hacking. One Nation leader Senator Pauline Hanson said property was the biggest investment most Australians ever made and called for deeds to be issued to owners on paper so they can be kept safe. “Cyber-attacks are becoming more frequent and more brazen,” Senator Hanson said. “Whether it’s activist and terrorist ‘hackers’ or the cyber-warfare being waged by China’s communist regime, the security of our personal records and details are under constant threat. “Governments and businesses are being forced to invest more and more money into cyber-security and for individual Australians, hardly a week goes by when we don’t have to upgrade the security of our smartphones and computers. “Few Australians these days have physical evidence of the deeds to their property. They’re kept in electronic form at title offices, which in some cases have been sold or leased to private operators. What’s preventing some hacker from removing or changing these records? “Deeds on paper really mean something. They’re physical evidence of the sacrifices you’ve made, and the economic security and family stability that home ownership represents. It’s tangible evidence of something you’ve worked hard to earn and be proud of. “While title offices are the responsibility of states and territories, carriage services and their security are a Federal matter. It’s time for the Australian government to work with the states and territories and introduce practical measures which improve the security of our records. Physical property deeds kept safely at home cannot be hacked.”
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The Greens’ terrible economic illiteracy was skewered this week after their call for a national freeze on rents. It sounds like a great idea on the surface. There is no more pressing problem in Australia than our rental crisis. Every day it seems there’s a media story about an Australian family facing homelessness. However like all ideas from the Greens, a national rent freeze will only make this crisis worse. Seventy percent of Australian landlords own only a single investment property. Most of them have worked hard and sacrificed much to invest in a rental property to supplement their income into retirement. While Labor and the Greens view them as greedy property tycoons, they are anything but. Rents are certainly going up, but then so are the costs on landlords like insurance, council rates and state government taxes. Property investors are also facing increasing costly regulation that effectively takes away their rights. The Palazsczuk government is even taxing Queensland investors on the value of property they might own in other states. This is driving people out of the market. There are many other ways to invest their money, for example entering the lucrative short-term holiday accommodation market. This means there are even less homes available for rent. Our rental crisis is primarily one of very short supply. Australia has the lowest proportion of dwellings per population in the developed world, because for at least a decade home construction has not kept pace with population growth. Demand is only going to intensify as the Albanese government floods Australia with more than 200,000 new immigrants every year. Increasing the supply of rental accommodation needs to be the priority, and one surefire way to do this is to ban foreign ownership of all residential property in Australia while putting in place policy settings which encourage, rather than discourage, property investment by Australian families. Agencies and vendors should be required to sight evidence of Australian citizenship or permanent residency for a sale to go ahead. Lowering immigration to more sustainable levels would also help reduce demand. Councils need to get their act together too, releasing land more quickly and reducing red and green tape. And we need to have a hard look at state and territory government fees and charges, particularly stamp duty. When the Goods and Services Tax (GST) was introduced, we were told the revenue would replace what the states and territories derived from such charges. That didn’t happen, and today those fees and charges can make up to 40% of the total costs of purchasing a property. As always, fixing our various crises – the rising cost of living, housing, health, energy, workers and skills – can be achieved by putting Australia and Australians first.
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All kinds of things are said about me in the media and on the floor of Parliament, but if there’s one thing I’m well known for it’s that I speak my mind. No-one is ever in any doubt about what I’m thinking. When I see politicians deliberately insult and run down the country and people they are elected to represent and serve, I am going to call it out. The Australian Greens love running down this country and the people who built it. It’s in every speech, every press release, and every social media post they make. And for the most part, they just get away with it. They’re rarely held accountable for the toxic hatred they spew at the Australian people who pay them huge salaries to represent their interests in the seat of our democracy. The Greens are the worst kind of hypocrites, and this is on full display on the rare occasions their appalling anti-Australian conduct is called out. They immediately play the victim card – usually on race or gender, or both – and claim they’re the ones being unfairly attacked. In a nutshell, that’s all that really happened this week. After Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi called Queen Elizabeth II the head of a racist empire within only a few hours of her death, I told her to piss off back to Pakistan since she was so obviously unhappy with being in this particular part of that former ‘racist’ empire. I didn’t say she was inferior because she came from Pakistan, or attribute stereotypical traits to her based on her skin colour. Criticism is not racism, but that’s the card Faruqi played. The Greens threatened to censure me in Parliament, haul me before the Australian Human Rights Commission, and complained Parliament wasn’t a ‘safe and and respectful’ workplace. The Greens themselves don’t make Parliament a respectful workplace – quite the opposite, in fact. They have no respect for the institution of Parliament itself (they actually call it illegitimate), and the disgraceful behaviour of the entitled Lidia Thorpe is all anyone needs to know the Greens are anything but respectful. Their hypocrisy has been breathtaking. Ultimately, the Greens’ censure motion this week came to nothing. Their threats are as empty as their heads, and as meaningless as their hateful rhetoric. It would be laughable if their outrageous policies were not so dangerous and destructive to our way of life. In any case, their threats will not silence me. I will speak my mind. I will speak the truth. I have always fought for equality among Australians regardless of race or country of origin, which is something to which the Greens cannot ever lay claim. I will always speak on behalf of the Australian people the Greens so obviously loathe and despise. I will always express my pride and love for this country and its accomplishments. I’m very grateful for the many thousands of Australians who have supported me in this. We’re all sick and tired of privileged and entitled Greens running us down as racist occupiers of our own home and destroyers of our own planet. I will never stop calling them out, and if they can’t handle it, my offer to take them to the airport is still there.
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Snowy hydro 3.0 is a bad idea. One Nation calls out green ideas from Queensland labour that aren't viable. One Nation talks about snowy hydro.
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Australians have been left confused about the scope of the proposed Federal anti-corruption body with Labor constantly shifting the goalposts. One Nation leader Senator Pauline Hanson said she was also seeking clarification about the proposed body’s scope to investigate matters retrospectively. “Labor now wants this proposed body to be able to hold public hearings in ‘exceptional circumstances and where it is in the public interest to do so’, but we need some stricter definitions of these terms – this body must not be used for partisan political witch-hunts,” Senator Hanson said. “Labor has also shifted from the proposed body being able to investigate allegations of ‘serious and systemic’ corruption to ‘serious or systemic’ corruption. This has the potential to significantly expand the proposed body’s scope, and these terms also need stricter definition. “One Nation also questions the government about what will be investigated retrospectively, and has a few suggestions: former Senator Sam Dastyari’s links with Chinese donors; the Coalition’s Community Sports Infrastructure Program; legal support provided to former speaker Peter Slipper by the Gillard government; and payments by the government-owned Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) to Al Jazeera for secret footage of the meeting between One Nation officials and the National Rifle Association in the United States. “The matter which is most frequently raised with my office is the politicians and judges linked to the so-called Bill Heffernan files – this should be a priority too. “It will be very interesting to see what past wrongs Labor expects will be investigated, but if this body is to be effective in investigating and preventing corruption it must be strictly apolitical and not subject to the partisan whims of Labor.”
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Agenda 2030 in the Torres Strait islands and pacific. One Nation Queensland state member, Stephen Andrew calls out the the elitists plans.
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The major parties have blown yet another chance for Australians to get a fair return for the exploitation of their sovereignly-owned natural resources. One Nation leader Senator Pauline Hanson said Australia received the lowest return in exchange for its resources of any country in the world. “Australia is the laughing stock of the world because of the failure of successive Labor and Coalition governments to put in place a system which ensures Australians reap the benefits of the country’s enormous wealth of mineral and energy resources,” Senator Hanson said. “My bill to broaden the object of the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 to ensure our resources were exploited for the benefit of the Australian community was firmly rejected by the major parties in the Senate today. “They can’t bring themselves to fight for the interests of the Australians people. Instead they’ve fought for the interests of the foreign-owned multinationals which are ripping off the Australian people. “Norway has a sovereign wealth fund approaching $2 trillion from the exploitation of Norwegian resources. Qatar gets $26 billion a year just from its LNG exports. “Australia by comparison gets very little from its vast reserves of natural gas. “Exports from the North-West shelf are valued at more than $80 billion, but we are lucky to receive $2-300 million in revenue from it. “In the meantime, our gas is exported to our competitors at prices lower than our domestic prices while vast reserves are banked for future exports, leaving Australians with a shortage of domestic gas. “My legislation was aimed at increasing the domestic supply of gas for the benefit of the Australian people, but the major parties can’t bring themselves to actually benefit the Australian people. “Contributions to the debate by Coalition senators were probably written by the foreign-owned multinationals themselves, who always use the ‘sovereign risk’ threat to cow the major parties. “They’ve used the excuse my amendment would allow climate activists to conduct lawfare against developments. They’re already doing this, so that excuse simply doesn’t wash. “I acknowledge and thank the few senators who understood their job is to always benefit Australians and supported my bill. I will never stop fighting to ensure Australians get a fair return for their resources.”
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