Open accessibility guideSkip to sections navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerThe Sydney Morning Herald logoThe Sydney Morning Herald logoAdvertisementNationalAngry protestors have forced Pauline Hanson and Barnaby Joyce to make a back-door exit from One Nation fundraising event.Updated June 13, 2026 — 7:56am,first published 7:53amLoadingLatest in VideosVideo icon1:39Two officers attacked during separate pursuits across SydneyVideo icon1:34Canadian fans roar for home team historic pointVideo icon2:12Smith's jab at old team after big winVideo icon12:32NRL Highlights: Dolphins v Roosters - Round 15AdvertisementThe Sydney Morning Herald logoTwitterFacebookInstagramRSSOur SitesThe Sydney Morning HeraldThe AgeBrisbane TimesWAtodayThe Australian Financial Reviewnine.com.auDriveClassifiedsTributesPlace your adThe Sydney Morning HeraldContact & supportAdvertise with usNewslettersAccessibility guideSitemapPhoto salesPurchase front pagesContent licensingWork with usTerms of usePrivacy policyPress CouncilCharter of Editorial IndependenceAI Editorial GuidelinesProducts & ServicesSubscription packagesMy accountSubscriber FAQsDelivery statusToday’s PaperGood Food GuideDaily PuzzlesCopyright © 2026Subscribe
Protesters crash heavily guarded One Nation event
Angry protestors have forced Pauline Hanson and Barnaby Joyce to make a back-door exit from One Nation fundraising event.
Protesters disrupted a One Nation fundraising event, forcing party leaders Pauline Hanson and Barnaby Joyce to exit via a back door. The security breach underscores vulnerability in event protection protocols for high-profile gatherings—relevant to enterprises managing sensitive stakeholder events.






