Hanson supporters, and even Hanson herself, are claiming Angus Taylor is “stealing” One Nation policies. No, he isn’t. This is a misplaced argument. He is expanding on policy positions the Coalition has been developing and taking to elections well before this budget reply.
Yes, Pauline Hanson and One Nation have been talking for years about immigration placing pressure on housing demand. That is true. But they did not invent the argument, nor do they own it.
The Liberal Party and the broader conservative movement have long argued for:
- managed migration in the national interest
- linking population growth to infrastructure capacity
- reliable and affordable energy
- support for mining, gas and resource development
- lower regulation and opposition to expanding climate bureaucracy
- housing supply reform and infrastructure-led growth
These positions reflect longstanding policy debates shaped by common pressures that confront all governments: cost-of-living pressures, housing affordability, population growth, infrastructure constraints, fiscal limits, demographic change, and global economic conditions. These pressures inevitably force all major parties to grapple with similar issues, even if they frame or prioritise them differently.
John Howard regularly spoke about immigration needing to match Australia’s capacity to absorb population growth while maintaining infrastructure standards and social cohesion. Tony Abbott repeatedly argued energy policy had to prioritise affordability and reliability over ideology.
Peter Dutton took the migration-and-housing issue directly to the 2025 election campaign, proposing lower permanent migration and arguing Australia should not bring in more people than it can house. Angus Taylor is now expanding on that framework with additional focus on housing supply and economic capacity.
And the numbers explain why this debate has become mainstream.
In 2024–25 Australia recorded net overseas migration of around 306,000 people while only about 175,000 homes were completed. The year before, migration was about 429,000 against roughly 178,000 homes built.
That gap places pressure on rents, housing prices, infrastructure and services. Recognising supply and demand realities is not uniquely “One Nation policy.” It is basic economics.
One Nation supporters may argue the Liberals are “copying Hanson,” but acknowledging these pressures does not make the underlying policy direction exclusive to any one party. The real distinction lies in how each party chooses to respond, what they are prepared to fund, and who ultimately bears the cost.
And “commonsense” is not, and never has been, the exclusive property of Pauline Hanson or One Nation.