For those voters who are not afraid of the threat posed by Islam, the Chinese or the commies under the bed, the re-election of Pauline Hanson is unfathomable. She is the target of relentless mockery, a cartoonish figure who has run for election eleventeen times since becoming the Member for Oxley in 1998, and been elected in none of those contests...until now.
Ms Hanson has been elected as a Senator to sit in the 45th Parliament, along with another one or two members of her One Nation team. Her divisive politics has resonated with so many people, her party has earned the third highest number of primary votes in the country, behind the Big Two but ahead of the Greens and all other comers.
Veteran journalist-turned-activist Margo Kingston makes the valid point that rather than continuing to treat Ms Hanson as an on object of derision, we should be listening to her. While her perspective and subsequent policies are little changed in the 20 years since she was first elected to Federal Parliament, her popularity is no longer confined to a single patch of redneckery in Queensland. There are One Nation candidates in contention in three states.
Some 339,005 voters – or 4.12 per cent of the Australian electorate – put One Nation first on the Senate ballot. In Queensland, the party got 9.16 per cent of Senate first preferences, doing particularly well in regional areas. Those voters, those attitudes must be taken seriously.
I'm not so sure that Ms Hanson should be taken seriously.
What this flurry of One Nation voting has done is shine a light on the prevalence of certain attitudes in Australia. Her marquee policies include multiple measure to curb the presence and influence of Islam in Australia, stifle immigration and the science of both climate change and vaccination.
So let's just fast forward to a point in time where we have listened to Senator Hanson and her 4+% of the voting population. We have heard their calls to curb elements of Islam, immigration, refugees, climate change, Agenda 21 and probably takeaway curries.
What does the One Nation voting bloc propose to do about these elements of modern Australian society? The legislation suggested by Ms Hanson's policy documents won't be passed - it's simply too divisive. Furthermore, while just over 4% of the vote is a lot for a fringe party, it doesn't compare to the 95+% who did not give their primary vote to One Nation. That's 20 people in a room, and only one supports Ms Hanson's policies.
The thing about One Nation's policies is that while claiming to protect traditional Australian values, her proposed legislation seeks to alter the fundamental values on which Australia is based: freedom, generosity, mateship, the famous Aussie "fair go". Are these qualities still valuable, still valued in Australian society?
If we're going to consider making changes to the laws that define who we are, based on what one vocal minority believes Australia should look like, we need more than just their word for it. Of course the views of One Nation supporters matter, but they are a minority.
We need to listen to 100% of voters, and we need to ask the right questions: What is important to us? Who do we want to be, and how are we going to get there.
The answer will not be that Australians want to be a xenophobic society that closes its borders to people who follow a religion that less than 5% of us hate. And it won't be that we want to be a nation known for failing to meet our global responsibilities towards refugees. One Nation voters, and those who placed their votes with other, less successful candidates from the far right will have been heard, via their duly elected representatives in Canberra.
And when Senator Hanson introduces her bills to push for a Royal Commission into Islam, a ban on Halal Certification and an amendment to Section 116 of the Australian Constitution, she will be defeated.
Of course we have a problem in Australia; we have racism, Islamophobia, and widespread misunderstanding of what it means to be a Muslim, we have ignorance, prejudice, and twisted values. Watch the news. The existence of Reclaim Australia, Rise Up and similar groups is evidence of that. We still have a debate on climate change, and another on vaccination. Now that we've quantified the problem via some voting stats, can we please get on with solving the problem?
One Nation has no interest in addressing these problems; their policy "solutions" are all about maintaining the divisions, spreading misinformation, feeding fear, because if we close those divisions by educating communities and addressing fears, One Nation will have no reason to exist.
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem. Pauline Hanson is not part of the solution; she has a vested interest in perpetuating the problem.