Close Menu
  • US
  • World
    • Canada
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • Australia
    • South America
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Finance
    • Investing
    • Markets
    • Economy
    • Small Business
    • Crypto
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Videos
  • Topics
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Tech
    • Travel
  • More Articles
Trending Now
Dog Owners Are Switching to This Personalized Meal Service — And the Results Are Impressive

Dog Owners Are Switching to This Personalized Meal Service — And the Results Are Impressive

May 14, 2026
Prosecutors say Luigi Mangione defense team’s juror questions are too ‘intrusive’ in federal case

Prosecutors say Luigi Mangione defense team’s juror questions are too ‘intrusive’ in federal case

May 14, 2026
China rolls out red carpet for Trump as Xi meeting tests trade, Taiwan tensions

China rolls out red carpet for Trump as Xi meeting tests trade, Taiwan tensions

May 14, 2026
Pulisic. Donovan. No Dempsey Or Howard? Making USA’s World Cup All-Time Lineup

Pulisic. Donovan. No Dempsey Or Howard? Making USA’s World Cup All-Time Lineup

May 14, 2026
Tourist arrested after viral video caught him hurling rock at endangered seal in Hawaii

Tourist arrested after viral video caught him hurling rock at endangered seal in Hawaii

May 14, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Just In
  • Dog Owners Are Switching to This Personalized Meal Service — And the Results Are Impressive
  • Prosecutors say Luigi Mangione defense team’s juror questions are too ‘intrusive’ in federal case
  • China rolls out red carpet for Trump as Xi meeting tests trade, Taiwan tensions
  • Pulisic. Donovan. No Dempsey Or Howard? Making USA’s World Cup All-Time Lineup
  • Tourist arrested after viral video caught him hurling rock at endangered seal in Hawaii
  • ‘Porn is warping our lives,’ admit Gen Z men, who reveal their addictions got ‘totally out of control’ 
  • Quebec tables bill allowing people to obtain domestic violence history of partners
  • Public transport, road closures, entertainment and what’s on in Brisbane
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Pure Info NewsPure Info News
Newsletter
  • US
  • World
    • Canada
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • Australia
    • South America
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Finance
    • Investing
    • Markets
    • Economy
    • Small Business
    • Crypto
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Videos
  • Topics
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Tech
    • Travel
  • More Articles
 Markets Login
Pure Info NewsPure Info News
Home » How country people turned to One Nation
Australia

How country people turned to One Nation

News RoomNews RoomMay 14, 2026No Comments
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Pinterest Email
How country people turned to One Nation

You have reached your maximum number of saved items.

Remove items from your saved list to add more.

We never thought much about city people when I was a child, unless it was to feel a bit sorry for them.

We lived on the land.

Pauline Hanson embraces a supporter at the One Nation HQ party in Albury on Saturday.Janie Barrett

Yes, we powered up the lights at night by kicking to life a diesel generator in the shed, and we had to turn off a light in the kitchen if we wanted to turn one on in the lounge.

Did we envy city people enjoying reliable power and luxuries such as sewerage?

Perhaps. But there was an absence of resentment.

We could travel to the big city by a regular train if we wished, climbing aboard at our own local station.

If cattle and wool prices were up, we could fly aboard one of Reg Ansett’s Fokker Friendships, which took off every day from either one of two aerodromes in towns not far away.

We didn’t take the opportunity often.

Melbourne felt crowded. Everyone seemed in a hurry. All those houses side by side. The shops were amazing, but who could afford all that stuff?

Life in the country felt pretty good.

Politicians fell over themselves to make sure country people were content. In return, Bob Menzies’ Liberals and Black Jack McEwen’s Country Party received overwhelming support.

Former Country Party leader Sir John McEwen in 1952.Fairfax archives

Protectionism was the order of the day and Britain was our big reliable market for agricultural products such as beef, wool, wheat and butter, until the UK joined the European Community in 1973 and dumped Australian agriculture like a cast-off bride.

Every little place had a doctor and at least a bush nursing hospital.

You could tell when a farmer was in town to see the bank manager. He was wearing a tie. Most towns had two, three or even four bank managers.

The news and stock reports came from the wireless, almost universally tuned to the comforting tones of the ABC.

Teachers in our town’s growing primary school and at a brand-new secondary school ran book clubs and theatre groups for the citizenry. A play or a musical was always under way.

That was then. The ’50s and ’60s.

These decades later, there hasn’t been a doctor resident in the south-west Victorian town where I was born since the 1970s, or in any number of other such places across country Australia.

The big banks closed their branches and the managers moved away years ago until a group of locals, frustrated and alarmed, formed a consortium to set up their own branch of the Bendigo Bank.

There hasn’t been a passenger train to Melbourne on the local line since 1981.

Heywood railway station, which hasn’t seen a regular passenger train since 1981, is a symbol of loss in country districts.Tony Wright

Instead, you can ride a bus for more than an hour before boarding a crowded train on the only passenger line still running between the south-west and the Victorian capital.

Many locals with serious medical problems, including cancer, must do that trip to get specialist treatment in Geelong or Melbourne. Some with dry senses of humour call the bus-train service the Big-C Express.

You can’t fly because airlines dumped services from every airport in the south-west – Hamilton, Portland and Warrnambool – years ago.

There was a time when airlines flew from all three airports in south-west Victoria to Melbourne. Now there are no regular air services.Peter Rae

You could drive the four or five hours if you could afford the fuel, but the roads are so damaged by big log trucks that plenty of locals are dissuaded.

Country people everywhere see the vast billions of dollars lavished on new tunnels, roads, railway systems and airports in big cities and simmer, wondering aloud in the pubs that are still open why their district doesn’t get a slice of that munificence.

Step into farmhouses or homes in country towns, and the TV in the corner these days is likely to be tuned to Sky.

Sky News, the voice of garrulous conservatives and right-wing ranters after dark, has been broadcast free-to-air in regional and rural Australia since 2018.

Related Article

The ABC, Sky’s commentators warn their audiences, is a taxpayer-funded mouthpiece for “woke” elites talking down to ordinary people doing it tough.

Immigrants, supported by the elites, have flooded in and caused a housing crisis while foisting suspect foreign ideologies on our nation, the Sky mouths insist.

These messages, repeated endlessly across the land, are designed to resonate with audiences that feel locked out of the main game, whatever that might be.

They are the sort of messages that worked successfully for Rupert Murdoch’s Fox network in the US to ensure Donald Trump won the presidency with his Make America Great Again hogwash.

They help explain the rise of the UK’s voluble empty vessel, Nigel Farage.

Should anyone be awfully surprised that Pauline Hanson is now ascendant in country Australia?

Sky News commentator Andrew Bolt and Pauline Hanson.Sky News

Hanson may have spent 30 years getting just about nowhere in the national political firmament because her messages and behaviour were so extreme that she drove even her most prized recruits away.

But gradually, her nationalistic, vacuous call to “take back our country”, amplified by conservative commentators, has been mainstreamed among the disappointed and the confused.

Related Article

One Nation leader Senator Pauline Hanson and incoming Member for Farrer David Farley.

If nature abhors a vacuum, so too do angry or disillusioned voters who refuse to be patronised.

The Liberal and Country (National) parties that once gave many country people reason to consider themselves at least equal with city dwellers, if not superior – why, the Victorian country electorate where I grew up produced a prime minister, Malcolm Fraser – have lately done their best to destroy each other.

After the Peter Dutton experiment went south last year, the so-called Coalition blew itself to smithereens when the Nationals’ David Littleproud declared his party couldn’t work with then Liberal leader, Sussan Ley.

Now both leaders are gone, and so too is the Coalition’s old Farrer electorate. The place where Ley had been comfortably re-elected nine times since 2001 is now One Nation country.

You’d have to be as flexible as Houdini to figure out how the conservative parties might undo the knots into which they have tied themselves.

More pointedly, how might they begin to recapture those country people who have abandoned their belief in the old parties, choosing ballot-box protest at the bewilderment that time and tide has caused them?

Get the day’s breaking news, entertainment ideas and a long read to enjoy. Sign up to receive our Evening Edition newsletter.

You have reached your maximum number of saved items.

Remove items from your saved list to add more.

Tony WrightTony Wright is an associate editor and special writer for The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald.Connect via email.

From our partners

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram WhatsApp Email

Related News

Public transport, road closures, entertainment and what’s on in Brisbane

Public transport, road closures, entertainment and what’s on in Brisbane

Brookfield homeowner ordered to remove patio, pool tiling, cubby house on neighbour’s land

Brookfield homeowner ordered to remove patio, pool tiling, cubby house on neighbour’s land

The story behind Melbourne’s iconic Italian cafe

The story behind Melbourne’s iconic Italian cafe

Final day of sitting week, anti-discrimination and biofuel minimum requirement bills introduced

Final day of sitting week, anti-discrimination and biofuel minimum requirement bills introduced

Partner of former Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk, Reza Adib has matter heard in court for first time

Partner of former Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk, Reza Adib has matter heard in court for first time

Footscray businesses fear new cafe will worsen crisis

Footscray businesses fear new cafe will worsen crisis

Coalition says it would repeal changes to negative gearing and CGT if elected; Chalmers insists government will deliver budget savings; Trump touches down in China for meeting with Xi

Coalition says it would repeal changes to negative gearing and CGT if elected; Chalmers insists government will deliver budget savings; Trump touches down in China for meeting with Xi

Labor MPs join call for Allan government to tackle shortfall

Labor MPs join call for Allan government to tackle shortfall

Royal treatment for Westpac’s Anthony Miller at Jim Chalmers’ post-budget address

Royal treatment for Westpac’s Anthony Miller at Jim Chalmers’ post-budget address

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Prosecutors say Luigi Mangione defense team’s juror questions are too ‘intrusive’ in federal case

Prosecutors say Luigi Mangione defense team’s juror questions are too ‘intrusive’ in federal case

May 14, 2026
China rolls out red carpet for Trump as Xi meeting tests trade, Taiwan tensions

China rolls out red carpet for Trump as Xi meeting tests trade, Taiwan tensions

May 14, 2026
Pulisic. Donovan. No Dempsey Or Howard? Making USA’s World Cup All-Time Lineup

Pulisic. Donovan. No Dempsey Or Howard? Making USA’s World Cup All-Time Lineup

May 14, 2026
Tourist arrested after viral video caught him hurling rock at endangered seal in Hawaii

Tourist arrested after viral video caught him hurling rock at endangered seal in Hawaii

May 14, 2026
‘Porn is warping our lives,’ admit Gen Z men, who reveal their addictions got ‘totally out of control’ 

‘Porn is warping our lives,’ admit Gen Z men, who reveal their addictions got ‘totally out of control’ 

May 14, 2026

Latest News

Quebec tables bill allowing people to obtain domestic violence history of partners

Quebec tables bill allowing people to obtain domestic violence history of partners

May 14, 2026
Public transport, road closures, entertainment and what’s on in Brisbane

Public transport, road closures, entertainment and what’s on in Brisbane

May 14, 2026
Stars You Didn’t Know Were Related: Alix Earle and Dylan Dreyer, Eva Longoria and Meryl Streep, More

Stars You Didn’t Know Were Related: Alix Earle and Dylan Dreyer, Eva Longoria and Meryl Streep, More

May 14, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest US news and updates directly to your inbox.

Advertisement
Demo
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Press Release
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?