What are One Nation's policies as the party surges in the polls?
Listen to ABC News interviews and commentary and analysis from radio programs like AM, PM and The World Today.
www.abc.net.auHere’s a concise roundup of the latest publicly reported coverage on One Nation policies and activity, based on recent reputable outlets.
Illustration: One Nation’s policy messaging often blends immigration controls with housing affordability promises, creating a narrative that population growth drives housing constraints and that policy reforms can simultaneously reduce costs and bureaucratic waste. This framing appears across party materials and major coverage.[6][3]
If you’d like, I can pull more detailed summaries from specific sources or recent statements, and I can format a side-by-side comparison of positions on immigration, housing, climate, and social policy with direct quotes. I can also generate a brief timeline of notable policy announcements and poll milestones.
Citations:
Listen to ABC News interviews and commentary and analysis from radio programs like AM, PM and The World Today.
www.abc.net.auOne Nation Policies on Issues Affecting Australia and Australians today.
www.onenation.org.auA list of 251 political views and policies made by One Nation’s in 2026.
australia.isidewith.comOne Nation questions if man-made climate change is real, wants to wind back access to abortion care, and plans to pay the HECS debts of doctors working in the regions.
www.abc.net.auOne Nation’s comprehensive housing policy focuses on substantially lowering immigration (capping net overseas migration at 130,000) to reduce housing demand, permanently banning foreign ownership of residential property to increase housing supply (a policy now partially copied by the major parties), improving affordability by enabling superannuation funds to invest some of an individual’s super in the individual’s primary residence, and improving affordability by reducing the government taxes,...
australiavotes.org.auOne Nation’s rise sparks scrutiny, as Pauline Hanson’s party faces pressure to deliver clear, credible policies for voters
womensagenda.com.auPauline Hanson's One Nation political party started in Ipswich, Queensland in 1997. It quickly shot to success to the horror of the political establishment. The party and its leader, Pauline Hanson, were then subject to political, legal and media campaigns against them. With the rise of the left, One Nation is almost a lone conservative voice today. Join us to stand up for the fundamental rights and freedoms that we expect from our democracy. We've got the guts to say what many Australians are...
www.onenation.org.auSee how we assessed One Nation on the policy statements included in the Build a Ballot tool at the 2025 Federal Election
www.buildaballot.org.au