Breaking
DEPakistanisches Frachtflugzeug vor Karachi vermisstCN林楚茵批國民黨縱容暴力 籲強化入境風險評估ARسويسرا تتأهل لربع نهائي كأس العالم لأول مرة منذ 1954 بفوزها على كولومبيا بركلات الترجيحINTLCalifornia Drivers Face License Suspension Over Written Test AnomaliesAUBushwalkers 'Getting Unstuck' in Adelaide's Peri-Urban ParksRUБолее 50 тысяч жителей Приднестровья подали заявки на российское гражданствоINMessi admits guilt after penalty miss in Argentina's World Cup comebackCN農業部水試所澎湖海域放流5萬顆象牙鳳螺種苗 強化漁業資源CN詭異!黑名單雜貨船隆安號現身澎湖七美海域,疑與破壞海纜事件有關KR경남 스마트제조 AI 전환 민관협의체 출범…노동계 "노동자 대표 빠졌다"DEPakistanisches Frachtflugzeug vor Karachi vermisstCN林楚茵批國民黨縱容暴力 籲強化入境風險評估ARسويسرا تتأهل لربع نهائي كأس العالم لأول مرة منذ 1954 بفوزها على كولومبيا بركلات الترجيحINTLCalifornia Drivers Face License Suspension Over Written Test AnomaliesAUBushwalkers 'Getting Unstuck' in Adelaide's Peri-Urban ParksRUБолее 50 тысяч жителей Приднестровья подали заявки на российское гражданствоINMessi admits guilt after penalty miss in Argentina's World Cup comebackCN農業部水試所澎湖海域放流5萬顆象牙鳳螺種苗 強化漁業資源CN詭異!黑名單雜貨船隆安號現身澎湖七美海域,疑與破壞海纜事件有關KR경남 스마트제조 AI 전환 민관협의체 출범…노동계 "노동자 대표 빠졌다"
Newsgather
BackVictorian opposition leader distances party from One Nation after Hanson's Coalition offer
Developing
ABC Top Stories6/13/2026Politics2 min readAustralia

Victorian opposition leader distances party from One Nation after Hanson's Coalition offer

Quick Look

  • Victorian opposition leader Jess Wilson stated Pauline Hanson has not approached her, following Hanson's declaration to work with the Coalition to remove Labor.
  • Wilson emphasized the preferential voting system and deferred preference discussions closer to the election.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Victorian opposition leader Jess Wilson has responded to One Nation leader Pauline Hanson's statement that she would work with the Coalition to oust Labor. Hanson made the comments at a political fundraiser in South Melbourne.

Font size

Victorian opposition leader Jess Wilson says Pauline Hanson has not approached her, after the One Nation leader last night told a political fundraiser she would work with the Coalition to oust Labor.

Senator Hanson, speaking at the fundraiser in South Melbourne, told her supporters she would give them the opportunity to vote for someone other than the major political parties.

"I will work with the Coalition government, because who needs to go is the toxic Labor government," she said.

"That's my aim. I will work with anyone who is prepared to get rid of them."

Addressing media this morning, Ms Wilson did not provide a clear answer when asked if her party would consider working with One Nation.

"As I've said many times before, and I'll say again many times before the election, preferences exist at every election," she said.

"We have a preferential system of voting and those conversations will all happen much closer to the time when we have a sense of what the parties are, who the candidates are, and what the policies are."

When asked if Senator Hanson had approached her, Ms Wilson answered: "No."

Before last night's political fundraiser, which was moved at the last minute and attracted about 30 protesters, Senator Hanson described Victoria as "a state that needs change".

"We've had our biggest membership coming out of Victoria, we've had the interest coming out of Victoria.

"People just want change in the state and they're screaming out for it, for change."

As Senator Hanson arrived, protesters targeting the gathering chanted "shame" and "die Nazi scum".

Also present outside the venue was neo-Nazi Michael Nelson, who told reporters he had attended in support of Senator Hanson, who he called "the great white hope".

Victoria Police said a 22-year-old man was detained and moved on by officers outside the event for breach of the peace.

"As a matter of course, police will review any vision or CCTV from the evening," a police spokesperson said.

Mr Nelson was convicted and fined after booing during an Anzac Day dawn service in Melbourne last year.

Ms Wilson said there was no place for white supremacy in Victoria or Australia.

She said protesters — and political parties — had the right to have their say.

"We never want to see any violence or any extremism at any event," Ms Wilson said.

"Events should be able to be held here for any political purposes legitimately and with peaceful protest if that's the case. We do not want to see violence on our streets."

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Preference discussions will intensify closer to the election.

    Very likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • Will the Coalition accept One Nation's offer?
  • What are the specific policies Hanson would align with?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by ABC Top Stories.

Related Stories

More on this topicPauline Hanson