Pauline Hanson’s One Nation has emerged as the party most trusted by voters to handle immigration, which has become one of the most important issues for Australians.
Pauline Hanson’s One Nation has emerged as the party most trusted by voters to handle immigration, which has become one of the most important issues for Australians.
Immigration was ranked the equal second most important political issue for voters, behind cost of living and equal with the housing crisis.
According to the latest Sky News Pulse / YouGov poll, conducted from February 17-24, 29 per cent of voters selected One Nation as the best party to handle immigration.
That was ahead of the Labor Party with 20 per cent support, Coalition on 19 per cent and the Greens at 8 per cent. Twenty-four per cent of voters were unsure.
It comes after the previous Sky News Pulse showed that the majority of voters wanted cuts to the level of immigration.
The issue of immigration resonated most strongly with older voters, regional and working class voters, who also said One Nation was better placed to manage it.
One Nation’s popularity has continued to grow in recent months off the back of its hardline stance on immigration.
The party’s policy includes cutting annual immigration by more than 570,000 to a cap of 130,000 across all visas – effectively a policy of net zero immigration.
Senator Hanson has also pledged to deport 75,000 illegal immigrants, refuse migrants from countries linked to extremism and adopt an eight-year waiting period for citizenship.
She has also called for withdrawing from the UN Refugee Convention to retain full control over humanitarian intake.
Meanwhile, One Nation MP Barnaby Joyce accused the Coalition of “mimicry” after Sky News revealed a leaked Liberal Party policy aligned closely with One Nation’s approach.
“Before they’ve been chasing the polls, now they’re chasing One Nation policies,” Mr Joyce told Sky News.
He said the priority for immigration should be conducting a “stock take” of what Australia can absorb, taking into account housing, hospitals and school capacities.



