Multiple outlets report that support for Pauline Hanson’s One Nation has risen this year, but there are indications that some of her key messages are beginning to turn off segments of voters. The articles describe a shift from earlier momentum toward signs of weakening engagement with certain themes associated with Hanson. While the reporting differs in how it frames voter sentiment, all accounts point to the same overall pattern: growing interest in One Nation overall, alongside emerging reservations among parts of the electorate.
The coverage characterises the change as a potential early signal rather than a confirmed collapse in support. It suggests that, even as One Nation gains traction, some voters are becoming less receptive to specific messaging used in the party’s political communication. The combined reports do not identify a single event as the cause, instead presenting the development as a broader trend in voter attitudes.
Taken together, the outlets indicate that One Nation’s rise continues, but that its political approach may be producing mixed reactions, with some messages increasingly less persuasive to certain voters.