Hanson Responds After Taylor Warns One Nation Would Bring ‘Eternity of Pain’ to Australians

Liberal and National MPs are attempting to clawback ground lost to One Nation in recent months.
Hanson Responds After Taylor Warns One Nation Would Bring ‘Eternity of Pain’ to Australians
One Nation leader Pauline Hanson speaks at the National Press Club in Canberra, Australia on June 17, 2026. Hilary Wardhaugh/Getty Images
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One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has responded to Opposition leader Angus Taylor’s claims that an “eternity of pain” will follow if her party is elected to government.

Across several polls, the conservative-leaning One Nation has experienced a surge of support from the Australian public, largely at the expense of the centre-right Liberal-National Coalition.

In response, Liberal Party and National MPs have attempted to claw back support as voters shift away amid frustrations with the party’s long-standing attempt to balance its right and moderate wings.

“One Nation claims to offer a way out of our national malaise,” Taylor said in an address to the Sydney Institute on July 9 that strongly criticised One Nation’s offering.

“In reality, they would only make things worse.”

Taylor went on to claim that One Nation’s policies have no substance, that the party’s team is “insufficient” for governance and that the country would go “broke”.

“Deep down, their true instincts are toward big government interventionism,” he claimed.

“But with even less of a concern than Labor about how to make the numbers add up.”

Taylor also claimed One Nation’s policies, which include raising defence spending, scrutinising welfare systems, and cutting the Climate Change Department, would contribute to “deeper cuts” to essential services, like Medicare.

“If unfunded, these promises would generate a surge in inflation requiring the RBA to raise interest rates by around 3 percentage points to neutralise their effect.

“That would add around $20,000 a year in interest to the average new mortgage, and that’s on top of the $30,000 a year Labor has already lumped mortgages holders with.

“Our national debt, already nearing $1 trillion, would be on track to nearly triple.”

In a response on July 10, Hanson said the Coalition had been copying One Nation’s ideas.

“Now they’re claiming those same policies would cause an ‘eternity of pain,’” she said on X.

Hanson said One Nation would scrap net zero and pull out of the Paris Agreement on One Nation’s very first day in office, if elected.

“Angus Taylor doesn’t have the conviction or courage—or the support in his own party—to get out of Paris,” she said.

Hanson called on Taylor to focus on competing with Labor and the Greens.

“That’s the real fight before us, booting Anthony Albanese. Angus Taylor should sign up to that fight.”

The latest Roy Morgan poll found support for Labor at 28 percent with One Nation falling 3.5 points to 22.5 percent, while the Coalition remained on 21.5 percent of the primary vote.

The research, based off the opinions of 1,584 potential voters, found that if an election were held now Labor would win a clear majority.

“The complicated nature of the next federal election means there will be contests between the ALP [Labor] and One Nation, the ALP and LNP [Liberal National Party] Coalition, One Nation and the LNP Coalition, and any three of these parties against the Greens, Teal independents, and other minor parties such as Katter’s Australian Party (KAP),” the research noted.

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Crystal-Rose Jones
Crystal-Rose Jones
Author
Crystal-Rose Jones is a reporter based in Australia. She previously worked at News Corp for 16 years as a senior journalist and editor.