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BackOne Nation surges to third in Tasmania, EMRS poll shows
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ABC Top Stories5/18/2026Politics2 min readAustralia

One Nation surges to third in Tasmania, EMRS poll shows

Quick Look

  • One Nation has become Tasmania's third-most popular party in a new EMRS poll, garnering 19% of voting intentions.
  • The right-wing populist party, not yet registered for state elections, saw its support rise 5% since February, with most votes shifting from the Liberals (25%) and Labor (24%).

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

A recent EMRS poll in Tasmania shows the right-wing populist party One Nation surging to become the third-most popular party, with 19% of voter intentions. This represents a 5% increase since February. The Liberals are polling at 25% and Labor at 24%. One Nation is not yet registered to run candidates in Tasmanian state elections.

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One Nation's rise in Tasmania has surged to become the third-most popular party after the Liberals and Labor, according to a recent state poll of voting intentions.

The right-wing populist party, which is not yet registered to run candidates in Tasmanian state elections, was the first choice for 19 per cent of voters in the latest EMRS poll, up 5 per cent on its February result.

Most of those votes flowed from the Liberals, which recorded a vote of 25 per cent, just ahead of Labor on 24 per cent.

Of the poll's 1,000 respondents, 16 per cent said they planned to vote for an independent and 14 per cent for the Greens.

At last year's state election held in July, the Liberals won 40 per cent of the vote and Labor 25 per cent.

Jeremy Rockliff remained the preferred premier with 44 per cent, compared with 25 per cent for Labor Leader Josh Willie.

The survey, taken from May 11—13, has a maximum margin of error of 3.10 per cent.

The poll was taken before the government announced a $506 million bailout for state ferry operator TT-Line, and a change to the structure of its planned insurance agency, TasInsure.

Predictions of One Nation decline 'misguided'

One Nation's Lee Hanson, daughter of the party's founder Pauline Hanson, was contacted for comment but did not respond.

EMRS managing director Brad Stansfield said the One Nation's support was "consolidating, not softening" and called it a "fundamental shift in the state's political landscape".

Mr Stansfield, who was chief of staff to former Liberal premier Will Hodgman and who ran several state and federal campaigns for the party, said the result "put to bed any suggestion that the Tasmanian Liberal government was immune to the nationwide rise of One Nation".

"Labor's difficulty is that its own vote share remains stagnant, even as the right re-aligns."

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Mr Stansfield told 936 ABC Hobart that on the current numbers, One Nation would win a "number of seats" at an election.

"There's been a misguided view in some circles that the One Nation campaign bus would run off the road at some point and everything would be back to situation normal," he said.

"Federally, we're seeing that's not the case; certainly wasn't the case in Farrer."

One Nation's win in the Farrer by-election in May marked the first time the party has won a lower house seat in federal parliament.

One Nation rise a 'worrying trend'

This poll was the first time the major parties combined were tipped to secure fewer than half the votes.

State Health Minister Bridget Archer said she would "leave commentating to commentators" when responding to questions about the poll.

"I'm really focused with getting on with the job of governing," she said.

Labor's Ella Haddad said the rise of One Nation was a "worrying trend" that presented "a real problem for the Liberal party".

Asked if it was problem for Tasmanian Labor that voters were not turning to the opposition, she said "we've been very up-front that we're in a period of rebuilding".

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • One Nation will win a number of seats at an election.

    Likely · Medium term

Open Questions

  • Will One Nation register to run candidates in Tasmanian state elections?
  • How will the major parties respond to this shift in voter intention?
  • What specific policies or factors are driving One Nation's surge in Tasmania?
  • Will this trend continue in future polls and actual elections?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by ABC Top Stories.

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