One Nation wins Farrer by-election with 40% of the vote. By Noah Yim, in The Australian.
One Nation candidate David Farley won the 2026 Farrer by-election, marking the first time One Nation has won a seat in the House of Representatives.
Two-Party Preferred: One Nation 57.3% vs. Independent 42.7%
One Nation: David Farley 39.4%
Independent: Michelle Milthorpe 28.4%
Liberal Party: Raissa Butkowski 12.4%
Nationals: Brad Robertson 9.7%

Some say it was because of the economy, which is safer moral ground because it is what the uniparty would prefer you focus on. But the main issue was immigration, though many are still too shy to say so.
Tenneal Hutchesson, a daycare educator, said she had voted all her life for Labor but chose to vote One Nation in the by-election.
“I like what Pauline Hanson says on TV, her opinions, how strong she is about it,” she said.
She said she had not ordinarily cared about politics but she was very interested in this by-election.
And the issue that resolved her?
“Immigration,” her partner offered.
“It’s the ridiculous amount of immigrants in every town,” he said.
“I left Queensland, Moorooka, the whole street got bought up by African stores. Just completely changed in 12 months.”
It wasn’t the local One Nation candidate David Farley that convinced her to vote for the party but rather, Pauline Hanson, Ms Hutchesson said.
The couple said they had seen a lot more of Senator Hanson in the past year since her hijab stunt on the floor of the Senate, they said.
“Yeah – that’s stupid,” they said. “But it got everyone’s attention”.
“Even if she knows she’s going to get backlash, she stands for what she believes in.”
And down the road, a group of family and friends was enjoying lunch by a playground and said they had mostly voted for One Nation.
The clincher for them, they said, was the immigration issue and that Barnaby Joyce had joined One Nation.
“Immigration — only because of the work and the housing,” one said.
The lifelong Liberal voter said he had voted One Nation this time around.
And the group began talking about Barnaby Joyce’s defection to One Nation.
“I haven’t got much time for Pauline, but Barnaby Joyce … he’s caring, the way he’s approaching, he cares about everything he’s talking about,” he said.
“And he’s got a brain in his head,” Jenny offered.
Liberals bomb. By Kos Samaras in The Australian.
The Liberals’ campaign in Farrer was almost perfectly designed to remind voters why they should not vote for them.
Rather than offering anyone in Deniliquin, Hay or Tocumwal a reason to believe their economic future would be different, the campaign was built on culture-war cosplay, attack ads branding Michelle Milthorpe a “teal, not a real independent”, and a sustained barrage designed to delegitimise the One Nation candidate over old Labor links, migrant comments and party infighting.
The strategic premise was that voters in inland NSW would be moved by who the Liberals’ opponents were rather than by what the Liberals themselves stood for.
Then Angus Taylor took the stage on Saturday night and once again managed to talk about regional Australia without mentioning what was actually happening to its economy. Nothing about wage stagnation, the hollowing out of main streets, the leakage of young people, the cost-of-living pressure on the families he still presumes to represent. It was a speech the perfectly summed up the demise of his party.
The Liberal Party, in government, contributed to both the poor economy for inland NSW (ever-increasing government money is lavished on the cities, where the immigrants are) and mass immigration. The Liberals cannot really talk credibly about either issue without a mea culpa.











