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As the sole Australian invited to speak at the Mar-a-Lago event, Hanson used her platform to escalate warnings about Australia’s political direction.
One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has sharpened her attack on Australia’s political direction after delivering her address at CPAC 2025 at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort.
Hanson, who has spent the past week at Mar-a-Lago as the only Australian invited to the Florida event, said online that “It was an honour to speak at CPAC 2025 at Mar-a-Lago and I want to thank the incredible organisers and the American people for such a warm welcome.”
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Hanson also repeated earlier warnings about “radical migrants,” stating: “Australia is taking in the same hateful, radical migrants from countries that are having an enormous impact on the UK and so many European nations right now,” citing what she described as “daily machete attacks, violent home invasions and weekly pro-Palestine protests across our major cities.” She added: “It didn’t happen by accident, and if you speak out about it, you’re branded Islamophobic, racist, or even a nazi.”
Hanson said One Nation was gaining momentum because “we speak the truth” and Australians were “fed up” and “ready to turn this country around.”
One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has sharpened her attack on Australia’s political direction after delivering her address at CPAC 2025 at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort.
Hanson, who has spent the past week at Mar-a-Lago as the only Australian invited to the Florida event, said online that “It was an honour to speak at CPAC 2025 at Mar-a-Lago and I want to thank the incredible organisers and the American people for such a warm welcome.”
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Hanson also repeated earlier warnings about “radical migrants,” stating: “Australia is taking in the same hateful, radical migrants from countries that are having an enormous impact on the UK and so many European nations right now,” citing what she described as “daily machete attacks, violent home invasions and weekly pro-Palestine protests across our major cities.” She added: “It didn’t happen by accident, and if you speak out about it, you’re branded Islamophobic, racist, or even a nazi.”
Hanson said One Nation was gaining momentum because “we speak the truth” and Australians were “fed up” and “ready to turn this country around.”