Hanson says Albanese driving One Nation staff to ‘collapse’

1 hour ago 1

Brittany Busch

Updated May 19, 2026 — 4:42pm,first published 3:43pm

Pauline Hanson has accused the prime minister of driving her staff to the point of collapse by refusing to allocate One Nation extra resources as the minor party gains electoral ground and out-polls the official opposition.

Hanson on Tuesday said the prime minister was wielding his power to disadvantage his political opponents at the expense of the health of her staff, who were so stressed they were close to physical collapse.

Pauline Hanson said her “begging and pleading” had gone nowhere with the prime minister.Dominic Lorrimer

“The Australian people’s personal struggles are worse than ever – my staff have had to talk people down from the edge of taking their own lives,” she said in a post on social media.

Anthony Albanese has slashed staffing allocations for opponents since taking office, breaking decades of precedent for standardised resourcing in the parliament.

This spurred a cross-party push to strip the prime minister of his discretionary powers last year, but the Greens backed down from launching an inquiry, saying they would wait for the outcome of an independent review by the Parliamentary Workplace Support Service.

That review has since found that security in electoral offices was a major concern and staff faced increasing threats.

“Staffing levels overall are not adequate to meet all the parliamentary and electorate work demands placed on staff in some offices,” the review released in August said.

“Workload in parliamentarian offices remains consistently high throughout the year, driven by constituent expectations and the demands of a 24-hour news cycle. Constituent engagement and advocacy are major workload drivers, with offices handling a high volume of complex queries related to government services.”

Hanson said on Tuesday she was making her appeal public because behind-the-scenes negotiating had failed. She had said in February she had a “very good” meeting with the prime minister after One Nation recruited Barnaby Joyce and, with five MPs, qualified for minor party status.

The party grew again this month, adding David Farley after he seized the seat of Farrer from the Coalition in a historic byelection.

“I am the leader of a political party that is polling more than major political parties. The government has failed to staff One Nation anywhere close to a functional level. This is pure, bloody-minded politics by the Labor Party,” Hanson said.

“I have been going to both the prime minister and special minister of state Don Farrell since the staff cuts. I have been begging and pleading with them to give us more staff to deal with the heavy workload.”

Hanson said a staff member under “extreme stress” had written to the prime minister directly, but had been ignored.

“Labor hasn’t even responded and couldn’t care less,” she said.

The One Nation leader said she had five electorate officers – the standard number of staff assigned to each MP, who typically handle constituency matters, media and stakeholders rather than legislation.

More senior, higher paid staff are allocated at the prime minister’s discretion.

Hanson said she had two parliamentary advisers, compared to Greens leader Larissa Waters’ 15, and the prime minister’s 59.

The Coalition joined the outcry last year over staffing allocation – joining the protests already issued by crossbenchers Lidia Thorpe, David Pocock and Jacqui Lambie.

Independent senator Fatima Payman has accused the prime minister of withholding staff to punish her for defecting from Labor. The Western Australian representative is the only senator with no personal staff despite lobbying for greater resources.

Liberal Senator Andrew Bragg claims Albanese has tried to leverage the staffing allocations for political favours, offering former opposition leader Sussan Ley extra resources in exchange for her support for the since-abandoned Freedom of Information restrictions.

The prime minister’s office has been contacted for comment. A government spokesperson has previously said Labor has also had its staff reduced this term, though they did not say by how many.

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Brittany BuschBrittany Busch is a federal politics reporter for The Age and Sydney Morning Herald.Connect via email.

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