With wind in its sails, One Nation looks to replicate Farrer success in Victoria – and federally
- Written by Josh Sunman, Associate Lecturer in Public Policy, Flinders University
One Nation’s surge can no longer be seen as a blip or an aberration. As the results in the Farrer byelection showed, the right-wing populist party – which has been hovering on the fringes of Australian politics for 30 years – is now a serious electoral force.
While the byelection was considered likely to be a close contest between One Nation’s David Farley and independent Michelle Milthorpe, in the end voters delivered an easy win[1] to Farley. His is the first One Nation victory in a federal House of Representatives seat.
Results[2] on Sunday morning showed Farley attained 57.3% of the two-candidate preferred vote against Milthorpe’s 42.7%. Primary votes for One Nation surged from 6.6% in the 2025 election, to 39.4% as of Sunday morning. Milthorpe’s primary increased 20% to 28.4%, likely benefitting from Labor’s decision not to contest the byelection.
The increased support for One Nation was largely drawn from the previous Liberal vote. One Nation was also helped considerably by the Liberals opting to preference Farley over Milthorpe. Farley received approximately 60%[3] of Coalition preferences. The Liberal total declined from the 43.4% primary achieved by Sussan Ley in 2025, to an anaemic 12.4% for new Liberal candidate Raissa Butkowski.
This outcome represents a dramatic collapse in Coalition support. But it also shows a huge surge in support for One Nation, which is now eyeing November’s Victorian state election and the next federal poll in 2028.
One Nation’s trajectory
This is a landmark result for One Nation. However, the party has had difficulty maintaining the loyalty of its elected members, both in the 1990s, and since 2016. For example, after its breakthrough in the Queensland 1998 state election, none of the 11 members the party elected remained in the organisation throughout the parliamentary term.
Throughout the Farrer campaign there were questions around Farley’s party loyalties[12]. With a background in agribusiness, Farley had been affiliated with the Nationals. More contentious, however, was his involvement with the Labor party as recently as 2023, his consideration of an independent candidacy, and his endorsement of Milthorpe in 2025.
Farley also contradicted One Nation’s immigration policy[13] on the campaign trail, stating net annual migration of approximately 306,000 per year was “probably not” too high. This is far beyond One Nation’s position of capping net migration at 130,000.
The Farrer result helps to solidify One Nation as a political force in rural and regional Australia. It may encourage Pauline Hanson and Barnaby Joyce to contest lower house electorates[14] rather than the Senate in the 2028 federal election. This could see One Nation become a party with explicit coalition bargaining power.
This exacerbates the Coalition’s dilemma in handling One Nation, with it seeming to open the door to potential future cooperation in government.
However, Labor also faces a challenge – with Joyce signalling its Western Sydney[15] heartland as an electoral target and the beleaguered Allan government in Victoria facing an election in November.
References
- ^ delivered an easy win (theconversation.com)
- ^ Results (results.aec.gov.au)
- ^ approximately 60% (www.pollbludger.net)
- ^ Apple (podcasts.apple.com)
- ^ Spotify (open.spotify.com)
- ^ South Australian state election (theconversation.com)
- ^ high polling results (www.theaustralian.com.au)
- ^ Local issues (theconversation.com)
- ^ against sitting governments (antonygreen.com.au)
- ^ Aston (results.aec.gov.au)
- ^ Wentworth (results.aec.gov.au)
- ^ party loyalties (www.theguardian.com)
- ^ immigration policy (www.abc.net.au)
- ^ contest lower house electorates (theconversation.com)
- ^ Western Sydney (www.afr.com)













