One Nation To Win Next Federal Election After The Equivalent Of Toowoomba's Population Votes For Them In SA
CLANCY OVERELL | Editor | CONTACT Nearly a week after the voters of South Australia sent a clear message to the major
CLANCY OVERELL | Editor | CONTACT
Nearly a week after the voters of South Australia sent a clear message to the major parties at the ballot box, and the nation's political class are still shaking.
But it's not just the professional politicians and pollsters that are in shock, the media is too.
From the stunned ABC pundits, to the horrified talking heads on social media, to the ecstatic shock jocks at Sky News.
Things will never be the same again.
And this is just the beginning.
One Nation, the once overlooked and disregarded far-right minor party, have planted a bright blue Aussie flag in the soil of outer-metropolitan and rural South Australia.
After 30 years of rises and falls, Pauline Hanson is now a formidable threat to the both the State and Federal Parliaments.
The Liberal Party has been crushed. Never to be seen again. And Labor is next.
This conservative revolution will spare nobody. Australians are ready to shatter the the status quo and usher through a new era of politics. It's time for the real issues to be tackled by the only people who are willing to do it.
Immigration, the social welfare safety net, medicare, and taxes for multinational fossil fuels giants will be slashed.
TV presenters will become blonde again. No more Mardi Gras, NAIDOC week or Chinese New Year. Just Australia Day and Christmas.
No more curry, dumplings or even pasta. We are going back to corned beef and boiled veggies.
The future of Aussie politics is here, and it looks exactly like how we imagined the post-war years when we look back at them through rose-coloured glasses.
Real Australia. Just without the pedophile priests and kids getting belted with the cane for being gay. Or maybe with that too. It's all for the greater good if it reverses what we have become!
Because on Saturday night, One Nation tore home with 20% of the primary vote in the South Australian election.
That's 20% of 1.1 million people in that state over the age of 18.
And even after you remove the informal votes, it's still an enormous number of voters. Roughly the same as the regional Queensland town of Toowoomba's population.
This highly localised and cultural specific population of disenfranchised rural voters, who were on the coalface of the decommissioning of our domestic automotive manufacturing sector and still preferenced Labor at number 2 on the ballot, have given Australia a taste of what's to come.
Prime Minister Pauline Hanson. 2028.