Nearly two weeks on, One Nation is confident it has won seven seats at the South Australian state election including four lower house and three upper house seats.
One Nation’s Chantelle Thomas leads by just 77 votes, holding 50.2 percent of the vote compared to the centre-right Liberal Party’s Tania Stock on 49.8 percent after preferences.
Which Seats Did One Nation Win?
One Nation’s 20 percent swing saw it make substantial gains across most seats, but after the distribution of preference votes, the party managed to take the regional electorates of Hammond, MacKillop, and Ngadjuri off the Liberals.Hammond is located to the south-east of Adelaide and includes the farming areas and the city of Murray Bridge.
Mackillop is also in the south-east but closer to the Victorian border, including regional towns like Bordertown, Keith, Naracoorte, Millicent and Robe.
While Ngadjuri is in South Australia’s mid north and covers the wine region of the Clare Valley and regional towns including Auburn, Two Wells, Saddleworth, and Eudunda.
Overall the Pauline Hanson-led party secured 22.5 percent of the primary vote compared to 37.6 percent for Labor and 19.4 percent for the Liberals.
One Nation praised South Australia leader Cory Bernardi.
Hanson Promises to Go Hard for Farrer By-election and Victoria
Hanson said there was a mood for change.“People want change. They are sick and tired of these political parties. They don’t have vision for the future, they don’t have answers, we are in the dire mess that we are in this country because of their policies under both of them,” the senator told Sky News Australia.
What About Liberal and Labor?
The Liberal Party has won just five seats in the lower house and two in the upper house—along with four existing members—and will likely retain opposition status.Leader Ashton Hurn also intends to stay on.
Hurn only took over as leader three months before the election after polls showed former leader Vincent Tarzia was not gaining traction in metropolitan Adelaide seats.
The Labor Party holds 34 seats in the lower house.







