One Nation will continue to gain momentum unless the Liberal Party shifts further to the right, veteran radio host Ray Hadley has claimed.
Liberal Party must shift further to the right to halt One Nation surge, says veteran radio host Ray Hadley Veteran radio host Ray Hadley has claimed One Nation will continue to gain momentum unless the Liberal Party shifts further to the right.
One Nation will continue to gain momentum unless the Liberal Party shifts further to the right, veteran radio host Ray Hadley has claimed. Pauline Hanson’s party stormed to victory in the Farrer by-election, winning the two-candidate preferred vote 57.4 per cent to 42.6 per cent over independent Michelle Milthorpe.
The Liberal and National parties achieved a combined primary vote of just 22.1 per cent in the seat previously held by former Liberal leader Sussan Ley - almost half One Nation’s 39.5 per cent. Speaking to Sky News host Sharri Markson, Mr Hadley argued the Liberals' poor performance was the result of party leaders moving away from their traditional values.
"If those in the Liberal Party want to know why they did so poorly and Pauline did so well, not since Tony Abbott, with all due respect to Scott Morrison, and not since John Howard, have we had a Liberal leader espousing Liberal views," he said. One Nation will continue to gain momentum unless the Liberal Party shifts further to the right, veteran radio host Ray Hadley has claimed.
Picture: Sky News "What the Liberal party need to do, Pauline Hanson is doing it - she's responding to what most Australians from the right think.
"They need to provide an opposition to the Labor Party, not be centrist and not just say: 'Climate change is a real thing, so we've got to really observe it'. " Following its success in Farrer, One Nation MP Barnaby Joyce said the party would be setting its sights on Western Sydney seats at the next election. When asked what his message was for Prime Minister Albanese, Mr Joyce declared:"Western Sydney, here we come - believe you me".
Pauline Hanson’s party stormed to victory in the Farrer by-election, winning the two-candidate preferred vote 57.4 per cent over 42.6 per cent for independent Michelle Milthorpe. Picture: Richard Dobson/News Corp Australia "I don't know whether Barnaby is right about Western Sydney, but I am convinced that in rural Queensland and New South Wales, One Nation is going to do very, very well," Mr Hadley said.
"They can't govern, but they'll do very well. The sooner we find a Liberal leader who leans a bit further to the right than the current mob, the better off we're going to be.
" When asked if the Farrer by-election was a"one-off protest vote", One Nation MP David Farley contested the term and said he was going to deliver for the electorate and represent One Nation at the next federal election in 2028. "The reality is, the campaign will roll on. We'll keep our communication strong.
"I'm sure the competing parties will still be alive, but if we're there with quality communications and quality results, we'll be ready for 2028. "
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