Multiple outlets review the political context around Pauline Hanson’s public messaging and how it aligns with positions associated with John Howard’s Coalition government. The pieces describe Hanson as giving clearer voice to ideas that they say the Coalition had been advancing in a more limited or indirect way for about 25 years. All three summaries focus on the same theme: a sustained campaign against multiculturalism that they attribute to features of Howard’s premiership. The articles frame Hanson’s emergence as part of a longer-running debate about multicultural policies rather than an entirely new development. They do not present additional, outlet-specific details in the provided text beyond this broad characterization. Overall, the sources portray a continuity between Hanson’s rhetoric and the Coalition’s earlier approach, particularly regarding multiculturalism. The reporting emphasizes the historical linkage and the idea of shifting from “nudged and winked” messaging to more explicit statements, while keeping the central focus on multiculturalism as the key policy area.