âPauline says what most of us thinkâ â Pauline Hansonâs tough message to immigrants: âIâll be the first one to take you to the airport andâŠâ
Pauline Hanson said new immigrants must pledge âundivided loyaltyâ to Australia or risk being marched to the airport.
The One Nation leaderâs fiery speech at an anti-immigration rally in Melbourne on Sunday drew thunderous cheers from supporters, while chaos erupted outside as rival groups clashed in the streets.
Defiant crowds waving Australian flags and boxing kangaroo banners marched from Flinders Street to Flagstaff Gardens for the âPut Australia Firstâ event.
The protest, led by Reignite Democracy Australia founder Monica Smit, was met by hundreds of anti-racism activists determined to shut it down, igniting tense standoffs and violent scuffles that forced riot police to intervene.
âThe biggest issue facing this nation at the moment is immigration,â Hanson said, before blasting the Albanese government.
âUnder this government, we brought in over 1.5 million people into the country. Thatâs why your housing has increased. Thatâs why your health services have slackened. Thatâs why youâre having trouble finding jobs.â
Hanson branded the immigration system ânothing but a Ponzi schemeâ, accusing the government of bringing in more migrants to prop up tax revenue while ordinary Australians suffer.

Pauline Hanson (pictured) said she would drive disloyal migrants to the airport personally
âIâm not doing my job as a member of parliament if I see people living in tents, under bridges, in parks, couch surfing, or families living in cars,â she said.
âThat is not the country that I want.â
But it was her ultimatum to new Australians that drew the loudest applause.
âI welcome you to this country as long as you give this country your undivided loyalty,â Hanson said.
âIf you donât, Iâll be the first one to take you to the airport and put you on a plane.â
The crowd roared as Hanson doubled down.
âI am not anti-migrant. I am not against anyone who wants to come here and give this country their undivided loyalty.â
The rally ended with Hanson urging voters to âtake back the country the right way, at the ballot boxâ.

Pauline Hanson (pictured) revealed she would be running candidates across Victoria next year
Hanson also vowed to run One Nation candidates in Victoria at the coming state election in 2026, but said she wouldnât want to live there.
âIâm not from Victoria and, to tell you the truth, I wouldnât move to Victoria,â Hanson said. âIâll stay in Queensland, thank you very much.
âWe have our problems there, but when I see what the Labor Party has done to this state⊠and the Liberals havenât been much better. They donât fight. I see it all the time.â
Rikkie-Lee Tyrrell, One Nationâs first elected representative in the Victorian Parliament, told Daily Mail that rally attendees were âover the moonâ to hear Senator Hanson speak as the party gears up for the election.
During Hansonâs speech, a heckler used a megaphone with blaring sirens in an attempt to drown her out, repeatedly shouting âracistsâ and âGo home Paulineâ before being removed by police.
Riot squad officers were forced to form a barrier to separate the opposing groups after scuffles broke out.
Tyrrell, who witnessed the brawl, said the scuffle lasted barely a minute, with the protesters swiftly escorted from the rally.
Hansonâs supporters shoved aside counter-protesters, with several men becoming embroiled in a fist fight until police intervened.

Pauline Hanson (pictured) greeted supporters between a caged fence following her speech

Riot police were sent out into Melbourneâs CBD to seperate the rally and the counter protesters
Hanson later interacted with supporters separated by a fence barrier and was escorted by police to her vehicle amid fears of another confrontation.
The speech comes as Hanson surges in popularity, with the party polling at an all-time high of between 15 and 18 per cent, surpassing the Greens as the third-most popular party in Australia.
Her comments come just days after Hanson was suspended from the Senate for seven days, following a dramatic protest in which she entered Parliament wearing a full black burqa.
The stunt, staged on 24 November, was Hansonâs response to being blocked from introducing a bill to ban full-face coverings in public spaces, similar to existing restrictions on motorcycle helmets in banks and other institutions.


