Australia's Trump-aligned populists vow to fight mass migration after winning first lower house seat

Saturday's by-election win by farmer David Farley in ‌the rural seat of Farrer, some 550 km (340 miles) south of Sydney, does not affect the majority of centre-left Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, as the seat was previously held by a member ‌of the Liberals, the biggest conservative group. But it is a significant advance for One ‌Nation, which has four Senate seats.


Reuters | Sydney | Updated: 10-05-2026 08:01 IST | Created: 10-05-2026 08:01 IST
Australia's Trump-aligned populists vow to fight mass migration after winning first lower house seat
  • Country:
  • Australia

Australia's right-wing populist One Nation party, which ​wants to emulate U.S. President Donald Trump's ​aggressive deportations, vowed to ‌focus on ​ending mass migration, after winning its first seat in the country's lower house. Saturday's by-election win by farmer David Farley in ‌the rural seat of Farrer, some 550 km (340 miles) south of Sydney, does not affect the majority of centre-left Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, as the seat was previously held by a member ‌of the Liberals, the biggest conservative group.

But it is a significant advance for One ‌Nation, which has four Senate seats. The party is polling second this year to Albanese's Labor Party in opinion surveys, ahead of the mainstream conservative coalition. One Nation's leader, Senator Pauline Hanson, has higher approval ratings ⁠than Albanese ​or the Liberal leader. "The ⁠people of Australia will not be forgotten. One Nation will fight for you on the floor of ⁠Parliament," Hanson posted on X late on Saturday. "We will fight to lower cost of living, end net-zero and ​stop mass migration."

Immigration is a growing issue in Australia, where half the country's ⁠27 million people were either born overseas or have a parent who was. Thousands attended anti-immigration marches in major ⁠Australian ​cities last year. Liberal shadow treasurer Tim Wilson said One Nation's victory "showed there's a lot of work we've got to do". In televised remarks on Sunday, he said: "We ⁠need to outline very clearly a bold and confident vision for the country about where we want ⁠to take it."

Albanese's ⁠Labor, which has never held the Farrer seat and did not run a candidate in the by-election, has said One Nation is ‌damaging to ‌Australia's social fabric.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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