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Australian right-wing leader Pauline Hanson says multiculturalism has failed

Pauline Hanson, leader of Australia's One Nation party, claimed that multiculturalism has failed and that immigration policies have caused a national crisis. She criticized the current Labor government for an 'immigration catastrophe,' arguing that increased migration has driven up housing costs and made homes unaffordable for families. Hanson emphasized that Australia should be a monocultural rather than a multicultural society and expressed concerns about 'radical Islam.' She also avoided acknowledging Australia's Indigenous communities during her speech, calling such acknowledgments 'divis[

Australia cannot be a multicultural society and immigration policies have put the country in crisis, Pauline Hanson said on Wednesday, ‌as the right-wing leader enjoys a surge in support for her One Nation party.

Hanson, whose policies have drawn comparisons to those of U.S. President Donald Trump, blamed the center-left Labor government for "this immigration catastrophe", saying ‌a recent influx of migrants had pushed up house prices, ⁠making it unaffordable for families.

"Undeniably, immigration or migration policy has ⁠our country in the ⁠state of crisis. At the centre of this crisis is the utterly flawed ‌policy of multiculturalism," Hanson told the National Press Club in Canberra, in one of the ⁠veteran lawmaker's highest-profile speeches to date.

"We ⁠cannot be a multicultural society. We are a multiracial society. But we must be monocultural," she said, adding that she was gravely concerned about "radical Islam".

Almost one-third of Australia's 28 million population was born overseas, according to the Bureau of ⁠Statistics, double the proportion of the United States or France.

Hanson refused to start ⁠her speech with a customary acknowledgment of ‌Australia's Indigenous communities, a practice she called "divisive".

A banner highlighting Hanson's opposition to pay rises for workers was unfurled behind her as she was speaking and was quickly removed by organizers, while protesters gathered outside.

One Nation, which wants to emulate President Trump's aggressive ‌deportations in the U.S., proposes mandatory visa cancelation for criminal offenders, withdrawal from the U.N. Refugee Convention, tighter visa rules and a longer wait for Australian citizenship.

An opinion poll conducted for the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper on Monday showed Hanson had overtaken Prime Minister Anthony Albanese as Australians' first choice for the top role.

Founded in 1997, the party was long seen as fringe but Hanson's headline-grabbing comments and hard line ​on immigration have drawn more support, recent polls show.

Australian media have also compared One Nation's rise with Nigel Farage's Reform UK amid gains for right-wing parties ‌globally. One Nation has polled ahead of both Labor and the conservative coalition opposition in some recent surveys, a sharp shift in a system long dominated by the two major parties.

Despite the gains, Australia's ‌preferential voting still favors Labor, and some data suggest it would likely retain ⁠power if an election were ⁠held now. Under the system, votes are distributed ​until a winner is declared.

One Nation currently holds only one lower house ⁠seat, which it secured ‌in a May by-election in the rural New South Wales seat ​of Farrer, defeating a conservative Liberal Party candidate in a historical stronghold for the coalition. The party has four of the 76 seats in the upper house Senate.

© Thomson Reuters 2026.

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Source document: Bureau of Statistics

2 reports

Japan TodayIndependentRight4 days ago
Australian right-wing leader Pauline Hanson says multiculturalism has failed

Pauline Hanson, leader of Australia's One Nation party, claimed that multiculturalism has failed and that immigration policies have caused a national crisis. She criticized the current Labor government for an 'immigration catastrophe,' arguing that increased migration has driven up housing costs and made homes unaffordable for families. Hanson emphasized that Australia should be a monocultural rather than a multicultural society and expressed concerns about 'radical Islam.' She also avoided acknowledging Australia's Indigenous communities during her speech, calling such acknowledgments 'divis[

Bias read (Right): The article presents Pauline Hanson's views, which frame multiculturalism as a failure and advocate for a monocultural society. The framing emphasizes her criticism of immigration policies and multiculturalism, aligning with right-wing rhetoric. The article does not balance these claims with counter

Official sources cited

The Japan TimesIndependentRight4 days ago
Australia must be ‘monocultural,’ One Nation’s Hanson Says

Australian Senator Pauline Hanson stated that the housing shortage and rising property prices and rents in Australia are attributed to the growing migrant population.

Bias read (Right): The statement by Pauline Hanson, a prominent figure associated with the far-right One Nation party, frames migration as a cause of economic issues, which aligns with right-leaning narratives that often emphasize cultural and national identity concerns over immigration.

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The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.