
Pauline Hanson makes explosive claim about Anthony Albanese's election win - as she warns her prediction about Australia has come true
In a fiery exchange with 10 News political reporter Ashleigh Raper, the One Nation leader dismissed the government's legitimacy on climate reform, arguing: that '65 per cent of Australians didn't give Labor their first preference'.
'Doesn't the science and the election results tell us that people don't want us to have this debate anymore,' Raper asked, suggesting Hanson's motion to scrap net zero was not supported by the majority.
But Hanson hit back.
'No, you're wrong. When I put up the notice motion on my Facebook page, in less than a day it got 90,000 likes, 9,000 comments and 9,000 shares - and people are interested in it.'
Raper then said: 'But does not the election result suggest something different? Labor were put in place with an overwhelming mandate - it was very clear what they would put in force.'
But Hanson questioned this.
'Sorry, a mandate - of what? 35 per cent? 65 per cent of Australians did not vote their number one vote to Labor. Are you saying Labor has a mandate? No, they have not.'
Labor received 34.56 per cent of first-preference votes in the House of Representatives.
However, Australia uses preferential voting, not first-past-the-post, meaning a party can win government even without a majority of first-choice votes, as long as they win enough seats through preferences.
In the May 2025 election, Labor achieved a landslide victory, winning 94 of 150 seats in the House of Representatives - far surpassing the 76‑seat threshold needed for majority control.
For nearly 30 years, Hanson has built her political brand on a tough stance against immigration.
Now, as Australia faces a worsening housing crisis amid record-high migration, she says the nation is finally realising she was right all along.
Fresh from doubling One Nation's Senate numbers at the May election, Hanson claims more Australians are aligning with her long-held views.
In an interview with 10 News First, the One Nation leader said she feels vindicated in her warnings about the impacts of mass migration, arguing the system is now clearly broken and hurting everyday Australians.
'A lot of people say we should've listened to her years ago,' she said.
'But Australians have now come on board, because now it's impacting them.
'They know the generations coming through possibly will never own their own home.'
Ms Hanson said she isn't against immigration, but it has to be done in 'managed way.'
'If we don't wake up to ourselves, we're going to be a third world country, and that's exactly where we're going,' she said.
In her controversial 1996 maiden speech to Parliament, Pauline Hanson warned that Australia was in 'danger of being swamped by Asians,' and claimed most Australians wanted the nation's immigration policy radically reviewed.
Two decades later, in her first Senate speech in 2016, she argued the country was now at risk of being 'swamped by Muslims who bear a culture and ideology that is incompatible with our own.'
The latest federal data shows net overseas migration reached historic highs in 2024, with more than 500,000 arrivals - numbers economists say have intensified pressure on rental markets and home prices.
Next year, Australia will increase its near-record number of international student places by 25,000 to 295,000, despite a Reserve Bank report finding that the soaring number of international students is putting pressure on the housing market during a time of high construction costs.
In cities absorbing the bulk of new arrivals, such as Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, and increasingly Brisbane, competition for rentals is fierce, sending rents and house prices soaring.
While the Albanese government defends migration as critical to economic growth and filling workforce gaps, Hanson argues it's creating deeper divides and resentment.
But it's unlikely Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will listen, with Hanson stating her relationship with him is non-existent.
She argued policies like Net Zero and high immigration don't reflect the will of the majority.
'I'm not anti-renewables. I put some solar panels on my roof at home this year,' she said.
But what she is opposed to is putting 'millions' of solar panels on agricultural land. She has also been vocal in her support of keeping coal-fired power stations open and is pro-nuclear.
While critics say Hanson's rhetoric remains inflammatory, she said her party has evolved past being anti-immigration - despite calls to cut immigration by more than 570,000 people from current Labor levels to ease pressure on housing.
She credits her expanding reach with younger voters to her animated video series Please Explain, which, among other things, satirises what Hanson portrays as Australia's 'addiction' to rising migration, linking it to housing stress.
Many episodes underscore Hanson's core message that unchecked immigration is incompatible with social cohesion and national values.
But Hanson said she won't back down, and believes her legacy lies in her conviction to stand up without fear or favour in her quest to deliver a fair go for all Australians.
'People want that from their politicians,' she said.
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In recent weeks the US president has started answering their calls, first by imposing 50% tariffs on Brazilian imports in retaliation against a supposed anti-Bolsonaro 'witch-hunt', then by stripping eight supreme court judges of their US visas, and finally by hitting Moraes with sanctions and accusing him of turning South America's biggest democracy into 'a judicial dictatorship'. At the centre of Trump's pressure campaign is Bolsonaro's third son, Eduardo Bolsonaro, a congressman who has close ties to the Maga movement. Eduardo, 41, moved to the US in February claiming he was a victim of political persecution and has busied himself trying to persuade Trump officials to target Brazil. '[I visit the White House] almost every week,' he told the Brazilian newspaper O Globo this week, admitting he was lobbying the Trump administration to impose further sanctions after his father was placed under house arrest on Monday. He said he hoped for a reaction from the US. 'What they'll do, I don't know,' added the hard-right politician, who named some of his US contacts as the Republican congresspeople María Elvira Salazar, Richard McCormick and Chris Smith, and Trump's former strategist Steve Bannon. With Bolsonaro's day of judgment expected in September, his disciples are urging Trump's administration to impose sanctions on other members of the 11-member supreme court in order to secure an acquittal. Last Sunday, Carvalho joined thousands of protesters outside Brasília's central bank, carrying a banner urging Trump to make Brazil great again. Many marchers carried US flags or wore red Maga caps stamped with Trump's name. Carvalho voiced confidence that the court would buckle under US pressure and drop the case. Experts disagree. They believe Trump's sanctions and tariffs do not have a prayer of swaying the five judges who will decide Bolsonaro's fate. What could Trump do to save Bolsonaro's skin? 'Invade Brazil,' quipped Thomas Traumann, a political pundit and the author of a book about his politically divided country called Biography of the Abyss. 'There's no chance at all of it happening.' Traumann said Trump's pressure campaign had been Bolsonaro's 'last card' but it had failed, serving only to turn many of Brazil's conservative elites against the ex-president for putting his own personal interests above those of his country. This week one industry federation warned that Trump's tariffs could cost Brazil's economy £3.5bn over the next two years. Traumann believed the chances of another member of the Bolsonaro clan winning next year's presidential election and offering their patriarch a get-out-of-jail-free card had also taken a hit. Boulos also thought Trump's ploy – which he called 'a shameful, arrogant, imperialist affront' – had backfired on Bolsonarismo. 'Even people on the right are looking at this and saying this can't be possible … Brazil isn't the US's back yard, it isn't a little banana republic where he can intervene and do whatever he wants.' Bolsonaro and his politician sons have long portrayed themselves as flag-waving patriots, encouraging followers to wear Brazil's yellow-and-green football jersey and adopt the national anthem as their song. 'But they have revealed themselves to be traitors to the nation who are being used by Trump to attack Brazilian sovereignty, Brazilian jobs and the Brazilian economy,' Boulos claimed. 'If the objective was to save Bolsonaro, they've completely shot themselves in the foot.' Yet the Bolsonaristas have vowed to fight on. This week after Bolsonaro was confined to his mansion, fleets of cars and motorbikes honked their way through the streets of the capital in protest at his treatment. Pro-Bolsonaro congresspeople staged a 30-hour occupation of the lower house to demand an amnesty for the former president and for the rightwing activists who ransacked the same building during their 8 January 2023 rampage through Brasília. At one street protest, Costa, who admitted climbing on to the roof of congress during those pro-Bolsonaro riots, hoisted her stars-and-stripes flag into an azure sky and begged the US president to act. 'Trumpy! Trumpy! Trumpy! Trumpy!' the throng around her chanted joyfully, using the Brazilian pronunciation of his name. 'Trumpy! Come here to Brazil, Trumpy!' Costa bellowed back in English, imploring him to encircle Brazil with US military bases and colonise her homeland. 'We love you!'