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

By Thomson Reuters May 9, 2026 | 9:34 PM

SYDNEY, May 10 (Reuters) – 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.

(Reporting by Sam McKeith in Sydney; Editing ​by William Mallard)