âLegitimising themâ: Hanson slams ABC host Patricia Karvelas for One Nation election night comment
ABC host Patricia Karvelas has come under fire after suggesting One Nationâs win in Farrer would be âlegitimising themâ in the eyes of voters.
ABC host Patricia Karvelas has come under fire from One Nation leader Pauline Hanson after suggesting Saturdayâs win in Farrer would be âlegitimisingâ the party in the eyes of voters.
Speaking on the national broadcasterâs election night coverage as polls closed and the right-wing party appeared on the cusp of a historic win in the NSW seat, the veteran journalist was discussing the Coalitionâs âcontentiousâ decision to preference One Nation over independent Michelle Milthorpe.
âIt was actually people like Ron Boswell who was a vey well known National who campaigned to put One Nation last, so thatâs the history, that youâve got the most conservative people who believed it was a big and dangerous mistake to legitimise One Nation and to embolden One Nation,â Karvelas told co-host David Speers.
âHere weâve had (Opposition Leader) Angus Taylor make a deliberate decision to preference One Nation above the independent, which tonight could really be one of the reasons they get across the line.
âWeâll see how the votes come through but that will be key, and that will legitimise them. I used the term earlier on in the broadcast the permission structure â if they are able to win their first lower house seat, that begins the process of legitimising them, and in other electorates where they may run, voters thinking well itâs happened before, itâs normal now, you start normalising something and in fact the decision itself might put them further away from power so they actually could have just shot themselves in the foot by making this decision.â
David Speers and Patricia Karvelas. Picture: ABC
One Nationâs David Farley defeated fellow frontrunner Ms Milthorpe and Coalition candidates Raissa Butkowski and Brad Robertson to clinch the seat in Saturdayâs by-election, triggered by the exit of former opposition leader and long-time Farrer MP Sussan Ley.
Mr Farley held a double-digit lead within two hours of polls closing.
One Nationâs win breaks the Coalitionâs 77-year hold on Farrer, a sprawling rural seat which stretches along the Victorian border in southwestern NSW, taking in Albury, Griffith, Leeton, Deniliquin and Wentworth.
The commanding win gives the rising populist party its first federal lower house seat, and comes after a similar outperformance in the South Australia state election in March saw One Nation pick up four lower house and three upper house seats.
Senator Hanson blasted Karvelasâ comments.
âOne Nation won the seat of Farrer with close to 60 per cent of the two-party-preferred vote in a democratic election,â she wrote on X on Sunday.
Pauline Hanson and David Farley. Picture: Jesse Thompson/Getty Images
âLast night the ABC, our $1 billion-a-year taxpayer-funded national broadcaster, implied that One Nation was an illegitimate political party.
âThis morning on Insiders the ABC allowed commentators to declare One Nation was âat its coreâ âa racist and bigotedâ party.
âThe âimpartialâ ABC failed to challenge or even debate the claim.
âOther supposedly âimpartialâ media outlets have published similar articles, dismissing and demonising the millions of Australians who have said they would vote for One Nation.
âThese people donât get it. We live in a democracy.
âLabor, Liberal, the media, the academics and the lobbyists donât get to decide who represents Australian people.
âNo one except the people of Australia get to decide who is âlegitimateâ and worthy of representing them in Parliament.
âOn Saturday, the people of Farrer chose One Nation.â
One Nation supporters celebrate. Picture: Jesse Thompson/Getty Images
Speaking to Sky News, Ms Hanson said she âcanât believe itâ.
âThis is what Iâm saying, itâs the sheer arrogance,â she said.
âLike we donât have any right to be on the political scene. Well, what the hell? Isnât this a democracy? Donât you put your policies forward and what you want to do for the country?
âIsnât it up to the people or are we a third-world country, we have no right to go out there and express what we want to do for the country?
âThis way theyâll lose. Iâm telling you, this sheer arrogance from both sides, thatâs why theyâll lose. People want down-to-earth, commonsense people who are really there to fight for them. Thatâs what itâs about.â
An ABC spokeswoman said Karvelasâ quote âwas edited and misrepresented the point she was makingâ. âPatricia Karvelasâ comments in full were referring to the historical debate inside the Liberal and National parties about preferencing One Nation,â she said.
âThese were not Patricia Karvelasâ own views.â
Karvelas, in an op-ed on the ABC website on Monday, argued One Nationâs win âcould not have come with more ominous timingâ.
âWhile One Nation was humiliating the Liberal and National parties, back in the mother country, Nigel Farageâs Reform UK was smashing the Labour Party,â she wrote.
âFor years, Pauline Hanson has had her eyes on the prize of a lower house seat in the federal parliament.
âWhen she recruited former Nationals leader and deputy PM Barnaby Joyce to her ranks, it gave her a psychological edge that has proved to be a political game-changer.
âDrafting Joyce created a permission structure that has allowed conservative or swing voters to support and, it turns out, vote for One Nation.â
Opposition leader Angus Taylor. Picture: Simon Dallinger/NewsWire
Speaking to supporters at the official watch party in Albury after claiming victory, Mr Farley said One Nation had âreached the end of its beginningâ.
âWeâre going through the ceiling,â he said, calling the win his âbiggest achievementâ and the âmost euphoric experienceâ he has had.
He went on to name water, health and immigration as his other key concerns.
âWeâre not going to implode any of our industries that are reliant on good quality, assimilating migrants into the country,â he said.
âBut weâre not going to entertain people to come here and live off our balance sheet, our purse and give us nothing.â
Ms Ley, who held the seat for 25 years and quit after being rolled as Liberal Party leader earlier this year, urged the party she used to lead to âaccept this result with humilityâ.
She hastily left federal politics after her ousting and has kept out of the public eye, despite pumping $250,000 into the Liberal candidateâs campaign.
âThe seat of Farrer was created in 1949,â Ms Ley said in a statement.
Liberal candidate Raissa Butkowski casts her ballot. Picture: Simon Dallinger/NewsWire
âUntil tonight, at every one of the 30 elections since, through different and challenging circumstances, it has been held without exception by the Liberal and National parties.
âIt would be an error to reduce both the scale and significance of tonightâs defeat to a Coalition split which occurred months ago, or to misattribute it to the date the vote was held.
âI urge the Liberal leadership to accept this result with humility because the voters never get it wrong.
âOn the day the leadership spilled in February, the new leader said the Liberal Party needed to âchange or dieâ.
âThree months later, the result in Farrer demonstrates that statement to be far truer today than it ever was then.â
Her successor conceded âthis is toughâ but refused to say One Nation posed a threat to the Coalition.
Mr Taylor told Sky News the Coalition had focused too much on the âpolitics of convenienceâ rather than âconvictionâ.
âAnd weâve got to get that trust back,â he said.
âAnd that means ⌠being honest with the Australian people that mass migration has not worked for this country.
âBeing honest that the net zero ideology is driving up energy bills and sending industry offshore.
âBeing honest that big government and too much spending is driving up inflation and interest rates and making Australian poorer.â
Labor responded to Saturdayâs result by declaring it âcatastrophicâ for Mr Taylorâs leadership.
âAfter knifing their first ever female leader in Sussan Ley, voters in her old seat have sent a clear message to Angus Taylor that under him, the Liberals are no better,â Cabinet minister Murray Watt said in a statement.
âThe Liberal Party has held Farrer for around 60 of the 86 years that the seat has existed. Tonight they look like finishing a distant third, or even fourth.
âEven worse, by directing preferences to One Nation, they have delivered this extreme, chaotic party its first ever win for a lower house seat.â
â with NewsWire
Source: https://www.news.com.au/entertainment/tv/current-affairs/legitimising-them-hanson-slams-abc-host-patricia-karvelas-for-one-nation-election-night-comment/news-story/1ff8d1097bc83d7e0ee8d27212e78fc2


