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The rise and decline of Pauline Hanson's One Nation
By Linda Tenenbaum
9 March 1999
In the middle of last year, Pauline Hanson's One Nation was
scaling the heights of electoral success, attracting nearly 25
percent of the vote and winning 11 seats in the Queensland state
elections. Just nine months later, this extreme right-wing outfit
is mired in an internal war, amid a welter of accusations and
counter-accusations, resignations, suspensions and expulsions.
Two weeks ago, two of the remaining seven Queensland MPs quit--whether
by expulsion or resignation is not entirely clear--leaving One
Nation with five representatives in the state parliament. It will
soon be stripped of its formal party status, including its Parliament
House headquarters, secretarial, research and advisory staff,
and funding.
The party's internal conflicts erupted to the surface within
a month of the Queensland elections. In July 1998, Hanson's private
secretary resigned, accusing David Oldfield, Hanson's political
advisor and self-styled "national socialist," of running
the show. A series of bitter public recriminations followed, with
revelations of party functionaries being sacked, finances being
corralled by the top leadership and a growing revolt of party
branches against the organisation's undemocratic structure.
While the federal elections in October saw One Nation poll
around 8 percent of the vote nationally, because of the system
of preferential voting, it won only one seat in the Senate, and
none in the House of Representatives. Hanson herself was not re-elected
as an MP. The election results fuelled mounting internal dissent.
In December, One Nation lost one of its Queensland state seats--Mulgrave--to
Labor, in a by-election called after its MP Charles Rappolt resigned.
Rappolt had been embroiled in a sordid domestic conflict. He attempted
suicide, then, after recovering, cited the pressures of office
and blamed One Nation for failing to support him.
In early February this year, three Queensland state MPs, including
deputy leader Dorothy Pratt quit the party, accusing the leadership
"troika"--Pauline Hanson, David Oldfield and marketing
strategist David Ettridge--of anti-democratic procedures. One
of the three told the media he was appalled at Hanson's dismissal
of democracy as "mob rule". At the same time a revolt
erupted in the party's South Australian branch, with its members
voting a motion of no-confidence in the state director, who had
been hand-picked by the national leadership. Soon after, most
of the South Australian executive resigned, complaining that the
party's finances had not been properly audited and attacking the
party's proposed constitution.
The two most recent departures of Queensland MPs came as opposition
within the organisation to the draft constitution snowballed.
The constitution confers absolute powers on the National Executive,
which can appoint its own members irrespective of the wishes of
the membership. It entrenches Hanson, Oldfield and Ettridge in
their current positions for 4, 3 and 2 years respectively.
Dissenters at the party's recent annual general meeting complained
that they were shouted down and forced out. One told reporters
outside that he received a karate blow to the back of his head.
Others accused the leadership of "locking up" the votes
in advance, via thousands of proxy votes. Only 35 minutes were
allowed for discussion on the constitution, with a three-minute
limit per speaker. The vote on the constitution was deferred for
at least six months.
After the conference several more Queensland members resigned.
The social background to One Nation
As with far right tendencies in Europe and the United States,
One Nation's meteoric rise has been associated with the development
of a deepgoing hostility and resentment, among broad masses of
the population, with the official political establishment. The
failure of the major parties to offer any solution to mass unemployment,
growing poverty and the social crisis in regional and rural areas,
has shattered the old political loyalties.
One Nation's populist and xenophobic slogans--its railing against
globalisation, demands for renewed tariff protection, attacks
on governments and politicians and appeals to "ordinary Australians"--initially
drew into its ranks disparate social layers. From the neo-fascist
far-right to disgruntled ex-Labor party members, they joined the
organisation seeking some easy, ready-made answer to their problems.
But the Achilles heel of One Nation, like its counterparts
internationally, is the social question. It has no program to
address any of the needs and concerns of ordinary people. It is
totally committed to the maintenance of the private profit system,
which is the source of the social crisis. And its nationalist
and anti-working class orientation is organically incompatible
with democratic rights. Hence the dictatorial regime. No genuine
discussion can be held on policy, because, with such a heterogeneous
membership, it would immediately threaten party unity. Policy
is decided from above and imposed on the various branches. Any
dissent is met with swift retribution by the leadership troika,
who control everything with an iron grip.
But this is not the only reason for the internal revolt. The
part played by the media in fuelling opposition has also been
a significant factor. Its role in One Nation's current crisis
is worth reviewing.
Pauline Hanson first came to prominence after being disendorsed
by the Liberal Party in the 1996 federal elections for airing
her grievances about welfare payments to Aborigines. Standing
as an Independent, she won the formerly safe Labor seat of Ipswich
in Queensland. In her maiden speech to parliament later that year,
she attacked Aborigines and immigrants, the most oppressed sections
of the working class, blaming them for the social crisis.
From the outset, the media latched on to Hanson, providing
her with an almost daily platform for her backward and bigoted
views. But her parliamentary speech marked the turning point.
From then on, she was propelled into stardom--dominating the airwaves
from talkback radio to television news, and the print media from
women's magazines to the national dailies.
For the ruling elite and media barons, Hanson and her One Nation
party, which was formed in early 1997, became convenient and timely
vehicles for shifting the whole spectrum of official politics
to the right. Popular disenchantment with the old parties and
growing opposition to the impact of the "free market"
on daily life, particularly in rural areas, was channelled in
their direction.
Fearing the rapid erosion of support, and with their own primary
votes at record lows, politicians from all the major parties--Labor,
Liberal and National--began adopting One Nation's agenda. Many
attempted to shore up their disintegrating electoral base by trying
to appeal to Hanson's constituency--advocating further cuts to
immigration, forcing welfare recipients into low-paid work, and
boosting police powers.
Having raised Hanson and her party to such prominence, sections
of the bourgeoisie began to take fright when confronted with the
political consequences. In the aftermath of the Queensland election
result, where One Nation attracted nearly one quarter of the vote,
they calculated that a similar outcome in the upcoming federal
elections would severely jeopardise parliamentary stability at
the national level. The conclusion was drawn that One Nation had
become dangerous to the "national interest".
Accordingly, a tactical turn was effected--universally and
simultaneously--throughout the media. Journalists began to probe
and expose One Nation's seamier side: its connections with ultra-right
wing and neo-Nazi outfits, its organisational structure, its finances,
leadership and procedures. They located party dissidents and splashed
their gripes and grievances across the tabloid front pages. Hanson
herself was ridiculed.
This was, it must be stressed, only a tactical turn.
The media and the major parties have continued to pursue One Nation's
reactionary social agenda.
In the three years since she was elected federal MP for Ipswich,
most of her positions on social policy have been implemented:
immigration intakes have been drastically cut and welfare programs
slashed while increasingly repressive measures have been instituted
against youth and democratic rights in general.
According to the mainstream media One Nation is now in terminal
crisis--consigned to the fringes as an "irrelevance".
The most recent polls indicate its support has dropped to around
2 percent. But the social processes that gave rise to it have
not only not disappeared, they are intensifying. Every social
statistic points to deepening social inequality. In rural and
regional towns conditions are becoming desperate, while poverty
is on the increase throughout the working class.
The danger is ever-present that unless and until the working
class begins to consciously advance its own, socially-progressive
alternative to the present social order, then extreme right wing
movements--whether in the form of One Nation or some other--will
continue to exploit the social crisis for their own ends.
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