For 30 years, the party was written off as a home for “cookers”. Now Pauline Hanson’s moment has come. But is she, and Australia, ready for what lies ahead?

Australians’ pessimism about the future is fuelling support for One Nation

Hanson says women are voting for her in greater numbers because “women voters are seeing what I’ve warned about when it comes to these woke ideologies”.

The 72-year-old Pauline Hanson, whose rise in the polls has sent shudders through Canberra, sat down for a wide-ranging interview with this masthead’s Inside Politics podcast.

The One Nation leader is riding the wave of voters’ discontent. What happens next in this revised political drama?

Pauline Hanson’s insurgent populist movement says it now has more signed up, fully paid members than either Labor or the Coalition.

Pauline Hanson’s decision to speak at the National Press Club this month shows the political landscape in Australia has changed. Has Hanson changed with it?

For 30 years, the party was written off as a home for “cookers”. Now Pauline Hanson’s moment has come. But is she, and Australia, ready for what lies ahead?