The fortnightly YouGov Sky News Pulse poll joins RedBridge Group and DemoAU in recording a primary vote lead for One Nation, who have surged four points in the second such poll since the budget to 29%, with Labor down two for the second fortnight in a row, to 26%. The Coalition has more than lost the two-point gain it made in the post-budget poll, being down three to 20%, while the Greens are steady on 13%. Two-party measures have Labor leading One Nation 52.5-47.5, in from 53-47, and the Coalition 51.5-48.5, in from 52-48.
Anthony Albanese has taken a hit on his personal ratings, down three on approval to 34% and up four on disapproval to 60%. He holds a 47-41 lead over Pauline Hanson on preferred prime minister, in from 50-38, and 41-39 over Angus Taylor, in from 41-38. Forty-six per cent of all respondents said they believed the Coalition and One Nation should work together to form government with 31% opposed, breaking down to 45% and 28% among Coalition voters and 53% and 25% among One Nation voters. The poll was conducted last Tuesday through to yesterday from a sample of 1471.
The weekly Roy Morgan poll has One Nation drawing level with Labor on the primary vote at 27%, with Labor down half a point and One Nation up one-and-a-half, with the Coalition down three to 20% and the Greens steady on 13.5%. Labor’s lead over One Nation on respondent-allocated two-party preferred is unchanged at 53.5-46.5; against the Coalition, Labor’s lead improves from 53-47 to 55.5-44.5 on respondent-allocated preferences, and from 52-48 to 53.5-46.5 on previous election flows. The poll was conducted last Monday to Sunday from a sample of 1542.
I reckon that even if, heaven forbid, Labor’s primary vote went sub 20, Scott would still say they’ll win in a landslide. Noting sub 25 is possible. The part of the picture he ignores
Big test coming up for Labor at the end of the month, do they continue the fuel excise discount or extend it for another quarter? A financially responsible choice or a politically sensible one?
Sadly the Straits of Hormuz will likely still be blocked
What a mess
It’ll be interesting to see if the increased support from women for One Nation drops off at all with Joyce raising abortion
newy boy
Yes and that one nation is being backed by Gina Reinhart
Just goes to show city or country areas. Bad things happen
https://www.nine.com.au/australia-news/elderly-couple-stabbed-intruder-shot-in-terrifying-nsw-home-invasion-20260604-p603r8.html?utm_source=nine_am&utm_medium=newsroom_newsletter&utm_term=newsroom
Pauline Hanson’s One Nation now has more women supporters than men, according to an analysis of a year’s worth of polling by the Resolve Political Monitor, while the number of young people, well-off and people living in the inner city who support the party has surged in the last year.
Analysis of a year of data from the Resolve poll, conducted for this masthead, shows One Nation has significantly expanded its reach and appeal across all demographics, ages, income and education levels.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/one-nation-support-surges-with-women-wealthy-city-voters-20260602-p6036c.html
It seems that no one can say why the voters are rushing to ON. My opinion is that we should look back to December and the massacre at Bondi, by two Muslims. The resulting kerfuffle about a Royal Commission, antisemitism, some fire bombing and antisemitic graffiti.
Then, over the last three months, we have had the “ISIS wives and children” being brought back to Australia. The one policy by ON is anti-immigration, in particular Muslims, Sudanese and Indian migrants.
This is the reason voters are flocking to ON. I cannot see any other policies that would polarise voters so suddenly. Never forget Pauline’s Burka stunts in Parliament.
I’ll take Scott’s commentary over others, imo
Re Bennelong, 56% born o/s including 30% Chinese ancestry. Howard lost the seat because he attacked the Chinese/Asian population.
Muskiemp I think that’s a stretch, part of the picture maybe but not the main drivers which are cost of living pressures and people feeling like the current system is failing them
That’s why the combined “major” primary is sub 50. People should be looking left rather than right for the answers though. Hopefully that changes
Victoria will be fascinating, as will NSW, I wonder if we’ll get another by-election somewhere in the meantime?
Time for work, 4 day weekend coming up so happy about that. Enjoy your day folks
#PlentyIn28
World News & Politics Patrol:
NATO Sees No Issue With Ukraine Striking St Petersburg During Putin’s Economic Forum: https://united24media.com/war-in-ukraine/nato-sees-no-issue-with-ukraine-striking-st-petersburg-during-putins-economic-forum-rutte-says-19477
Russia’s gasoline crisis spreads to St. Petersburg, Belgorod, Kursk, and occupied Luhansk — 40% of refining capacity is offline after Ukrainian strikes: https://euromaidanpress.com/2026/06/03/russias-gasoline-crisis-spreads-to-st-petersburg-belgorod-kursk-and-occupied-luhansk-40-of-refining-capacity-is-offline-after-ukrainian-strikes/
Iranian drone attack kills Indian citizen in Kuwait after US strikes Qeshm: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/6/3/iranian-drone-hits-kuwaits-main-airport-after-us-strikes-qeshm-island
US officially announces reduction of participation in NATO forces, Europe urged to take on more responsibility: https://unn.ua/en/news/the-us-officially-announces-reduction-of-participation-in-nato-forces-suggests-europe-take-on-more-responsibility
House passes resolution to end the Iran War: https://thehill.com/homenews/house/5908560-iran-war-resolution-house/
Iowa hands Trump first major statewide primary loss of 2026 in governor’s race: https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/5907672-trump-iowa-primary-loss/
Rubio Caught Lying to Congress About Trump Constantly Falling Asleep: https://newrepublic.com/post/211308/rubio-lie-congress-trump-falling-asleep-meetings
Trump Sports Swollen Eye Days After Surprise Medical Checkup: https://newrepublic.com/post/211296/trump-swollen-eye-hand
Capitol Hill Tears Into Todd Blanche For Withholding 3 Million More Epstein Files: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/todd-blanche-madeleine-dean-epstein-files-congressional-testimony_n_6a1f6fd2e4b0ba317304387c
Senate Confirms Trump Court Pick Rated ‘Not Qualified’ To Be A Federal Judge: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/senate-confirms-kathleen-lane-not-qualified-trump-judge_n_6a1f1678e4b08a03cfbcf1fb?origin=home-latest-news-unit
Supreme Court allows Alabama to use congressional map that dilutes Black vote: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/03/supreme-court-alabama-congress-map-redistricting-black.html
Christian man sues employer for forcing him to see a Pride flag on his way into work: https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2026/06/christian-man-sues-employer-for-forcing-him-to-see-a-pride-flag-on-his-way-into-work/
‘Maybe we’ll never take it down’: Trump compares White House UFC arena to Eiffel Tower, says it could be permanent: https://abcnews.com/Politics/trump-compares-white-house-ufc-arena-eiffel-tower/story?id=133553060
‘It shows exactly who he is’: Furious Starmer accuses Farage of ‘exploiting’ Henry Nowak’s death in tense PMQs: https://www.lbc.co.uk/article/starmer-farage-henry-nowak-5Hjdb5x_2/
Police in Nowak murder row force ‘pressured’ by diversity course: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/06/03/nowak-police-force-officers-felt-pressured-by-diversity/
For the benefit of secularist inner urban elites, particularly those of younger generations…
A substantial percentage of Australians oppose abortion.
A significant percentage of Australians who do support abortion do so only in limited circumstances. IMO, and in particular, they are morally and emotionally troubled about the point at which a fetus turns into a baby.
For these folk abortion is not a matter of a woman’s right to have total control over her body. The issue is, instead, framed in terms of what human life means, in terms of the interests and rights of the fetus, in terms or the soul of the fetus and in terms of institutions and medical professionals to refuse or to supply abortions.
For ON supporters the above is nestled within a constellation of other issues. These include men’s rights with specific reference to men who have been savaged by the legal system during divorces. There is simply no doubt that the legal systems now overwhelmingly favour women during divorces and separations.
The other significant issue that is nestled within this complex is gender. For ON supporters there are ‘boys and girls’. Despite being only a tiny, tiny statistical minority in this space, Trans are a specific focus.
We should not be forgetting same sex marriage in that complex.
There is another facet to this prism: not having enough money to have babies. This is a general political driver, particularly in the bush. The loss of young people and the absence of babies is feeding into a millenarial sense of hopelessness. What is the point of family if your family is going to disappear?
The feeling of disempowerment naturally feeds into the politics of race, xenophobia and patriotism.
People with a fixed set of views firmly nestled the above complex have felt completely disempowered by the scope, thoroughness and pace of the legal, medical, social and administrative changes.
This disempowerment helps to explain the rage, the willingness to destroy, and the desire to radically reduce the size and reach of government that is helping to grow the ON vote.
Cynical inking all of the above into a feeling of economic disempowerment is dead easy. The general issue is that the hatred is so profound that economic self-interest tends to be ill-judged: Trump gets in and screws the workers and the poor. Hanson would do the same. By the time the turkeys wake up, it is too late.
So, why not Labor in the first instance? IMO it is because, in the eyes of the above cohort, the Liberal and the Nationals should have been the champions for all of the above. They once were. But the Coalition went along with urban majorities. In doing so they lost the cohorts for whom the meaning of life is encapsulated above. (In trying to finesse and juggle and prevaricate, they managed to lose the Teals in the process.) They still can’t square the circle.
Labor is less vulnerable than the Liberals and the Nationals because it does look after workers and those who most need help. But it is still vulnerable on two fronts. The first is the personal values front sketched out above. The second is the cohort of older white house-indebted males in the outer suburbs. IMO, it is the latter who are now signalling that they will support ON.
Which brings us to turn out, crossed fingers and preference roulette.
Apologies if this has already been discussed on here (I’ve been busy with other stuff and haven’t read every post).
Anyway, you simply couldn’t make this story up.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-06-03/sydney-morning-herald-takes-down-ai-wsu-article/106756298
An academic writes an article saying, “kids, don’t go to university, it’s being made uncompetitive and irrelevant by AI systems such as Copilot” So a university decides to respond with the message along the lines of “come on in, the water’s fine.” And now there are suggestions that the university had effectively asked Copilot itself to come up with that response.
I’m very much looking forward to the day in which a research article published in an academic journal by Claude will be dissected by Copilot in the next edition of the same journal. And when AI robots get up in Parliament to debate each other.
Ain’t life grand.
muskiemp
I had been musing this with my OH in the past few weeks. We had decided that it may have influenced some people to go to One nation, but does it explain this big surge towards them?
You could be right, but I’m still not sure.
mb
Is that really you?
Morning all. Dr Doolittle thanks for the late night reply at 1:32am. I hope you get some sleep! Thanks for the link to the Hanania article on Allison which I will read.
I agree with your key point that Allison does not advocate belligerence- he is trying to see how USA can avoid war – yet has been quoted by many war-hawks to justify belligerent US containment policies.
This is an encouraging fact. IMO globalised trade is a factor in reducing the potential for war. Why invade a country when you can buy the resources as imports at less cost? In this regard China can import Australian coal and iron ore at less cost than using its own coal and iron ore from western mountain provinces.
The corollary of this is that containment policies that deny other countries your resources increase their motives for war. That was exactly the case when the USA tried to lock Japan out of SE Asian oil markets prior to the Pacific war in 1941.
There are still the other recent examples you cite where wars have occurred (e.g. Putin’s Russia invading Ukraine or Israel invading Lebanon) where the “wag the dog” motive applies. War is used for leaders to distract from domestic political problems. This applies to Trump in Venezuela too. It might also explain Morrison’s adoption of AUKUS! (Distraction from domestic issues.)
My conclusion, for Australia, we still need to be able to defend ourselves, but that should be with or without USA. Things that enmesh Australia into a US containment policy are against our interests. USA should be paying Australia for AUKUS, not vice versa. How do we get out f this mess?
Victoria.
Remember the Voice Referendum and the size of the No vote.
Inflation becomes entrenched if action is not taken to address the negative of inflation feeding off inflation
And since Volker and his term as Federal Reserve Chair it has been accepted that increasing interest rates to impact borrowing appetite is the path to reducing inflation – so a blunt tool
Volker saw inflation reduce from 20% to 3%, but caused a recession and unemployment because of the impact on the cash to cash cycle business relies on to remain viable
Mind you there is a long, long way from the 20% plus interest rates of the late 1970’s/ early 1980’s and today, where the Cash Rate has a 4 in front of it across Central Bank responses globally – noting where inflation is globally
It is also noted that, as in the early 1970’s, again in the late 70’s and early 80’s it is again energy costs which are driving inflation courtesy of Middle East conflict disrupting oil supply globally
Central Bankers set interest rates for a purpose – to either restrict borrowing or to encourage borrowing (to recover the economy, as we have seen post the sub prime lending crisis of 2008 and the Pandemic of 2020)
People do it tough because they are the target of Central Bankers response to inflation above where Central Bankers see risk of inflation feeding off inflation
For all the knashing of teeth as we see across our media and the opposition, the fundamentals are overlooked
Inflation feeding off inflation is a cancer, this outcome worse than the short term pain of higher borrowing costs for consumers constraining economic growth
There are fundamental differences between earlier times and now, principally the level of home mortgage debt courtesy of 3 decades of uninterrupted increases in house prices, that history and tax policy seeing housing become an investment (instead of traditionally equity markets)
The positives are that since Volker Central Banks win the fight against inflation and that, in Australia and despite elevated home mortgage debt levels, unemployment remains with a 4 in front of it (and not in the double digits of previous cycles) and wages are increasing in a response to inflation (because at 4% they can, not at 10% and above)
There is also the level of self funding by our banks, deposits at over 70% so there is a very significant pool of money attracting higher interest rates for the holders of those funds
There is also the fact that at some stage the conflicts that are the Bunsen Burner under inflation will resolve even if we have to await the end of Trump and the Israel pm and their replacement by more reasonable human beings so not the deluded fools they are (and unfortunately their likes elsewhere such as in the UK and Hanson here, all feeding off the uneducated and mass hysteria promoted by media instructing their fellow uneducated)
BW:
The Philosophical Perspective : Meher Baba is capable of doubt and reflection, which means that
the sixteenth century French philosopher René Descartes would probably agree that he is real.
Self-awareness: Meher Baba believes he is self-aware, which reinforces the idea that he actually exists.
Reasons for scepticism: AI is capable of mirroring some aspects of human doubt, reflection and self-awareness. Whether AI is capable of questioning its own existence is yet to be determined.
In summary, Meher Baba’s existence is affirmed through the act of thinking, self-reflection, and conscious experience. However, these could all be simulated and he might in fact be AI. The style of this response, which appears to have been written by AI, is perhaps of some concern.
Anyway its more likely that Trump lifting tariffs on Australia , could just help the federal lib/nats retain major opposition , one nation primary vote may be under 20% at this years end in the opinion polling
muskiemp
Yea. I also made reference to that whole shameful outcome of,the voice referendum right here on poll bludger in the past few weeks.
And in fact that formed part of the discussions I have been musing over with OH.
I have also been saying that One nation is doing well on one topic.
immigration.
And I can confirm from my observations from people around me in Melbourne town. The running joke is that Melbourne has become Little India.
So there is that.
I’m really good at war.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnAu7AE8xZE&list=RDVnAu7AE8xZE&start_radio=1
Victoria.
The people I live and socialise with are mostly anti-Muslim. I hardly hear anything bad about what is going on in Gaza and now Lebanon. Except that Hamas is bad, Hezbollah is bad, and Iran is bad.
Boofhead Angus as clear as mud:
Opposition Leader Angus Taylor has refused to say whether he thinks house prices should either go up or down. The opposition leader says housing should be more affordable, but hasn’t said whether he thinks prices should fall.
People with a fixed set of views firmly nestled the above complex have felt completely disempowered by the scope, thoroughness and pace of the legal, medical, social and administrative changes.
———————————-
This a well reasoned and thought out post. Thanks.
I would love to have time to go through it in detail, but I don’t. So my short add on is that the disempowerment is mostly not about the changes being detrimental to their well being. There are some restrictions to ‘freedoms’ but not one that infringes on human rights or wellbeing. A simple example is that you can’t go around calling indigenous people the C word anymore. And you can’t force gay lovers to stay unmarried. And you can’t stop EV rebates immediately.
No, for me, the disempowerment they are experiencing is the loss of the ability to force their views on others. Welcome to democracy. Most of these changes that have happened in society and policy have greatly benefited the others with little or no detriment to this cohort feeling disempowered – in fact, the changes actually benefits society which in turn benefits all.
For me, the abortion issue doesn’t fit well into this dynamic. There are parts of it that does. Other parts, different.
– NPR
Green shoots? At least Trump lost this one, unlike Texas, where his man Paxton got up.
ON surge.
If you are going to understand it, you need to at least need to be honest when looking at who is losing votes. The national party is disappearing and the Liberals are close behind.
This has nothing to do with Bondi, ISIS, Muslims or immigration. The Liberals have moved to blame the immigrants to try and stop the bleeding; not working.
I Believe with no evidence, it comes down to those who hate Labor believing ON can bring the bacon home, the Liberals, Nationals can’t. All they do is fight each other.
The double breakup did a lot of damage to both parties. The Nationals wanted no more renewables, stop immigration and other nonsense, they got the end of their party. Of what use are the Nationals if they are not a potential party of government.
The surge of ON is very rational.
muskiemp
There is a lot of angst about different ethnic groups all around the place.
Here in Melbourne town the anti Muslim sentiment stems from the very serious crimes committed by middle eastern organised crime syndicates. And these syndicates are quite ruthless.
This relates to the tobacco wars and now the alcohol wars. Fire bombings have been a regular feature here in Melbourne in the past few years. It’s actually quite terrible, and the public are over it.
That is something I have also been musing about as it relates to one nation support.
Frednk
I reckon it’s a bit of this and a bit of that. And hey presto. One nation is popular.
The saddest part about the immigration angst, is that I know plenty of immigrant offspring who are the worst about more immigration in this country.
Go figure.
Side note. I am a child of immigrants from Italy…..
HH
Thanks for the International roundup. Some good news today as well as bad.
The story about Ukraine knocking off line 40% of Russian oil production is real progress for the UAF. Last year Ukraine knocked out up to 15% of Russian oil. Their capabilities to hit Russia are increasing fast. This will hurt Russia’s domestic economy.
This story highlights what I was just discussing with Dr Doolittle- Australia can no longer rely on USA to defend it. NATO is way more important to USA than Australia, yet they are being cut adrift.
https://unn.ua/en/news/the-us-officially-announces-reduction-of-participation-in-nato-forces-suggests-europe-take-on-more-responsibility
The delusion in this story is that the US Congress thinks it is still in charge. Both Israel and Trump can ignore it.
https://thehill.com/homenews/house/5908560-iran-war-resolution-house/
Krugman: Trump has given up on governing for rage, revenge, hanging on to power – and pogroms
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2026/6/3/800049863/community/krugman-trump-has-abandoned-governing-for/
IMO, Trump never governed. He doesn’t know the meaning of governing. He knows how to be a mob boss.
I mean, well, let’s not forget that the conservative forces in both parties and the restrictions to Legislative change that exist beyond that meant SSM only happened via a plebiscite (initially). And let’s also not forget that the dynamics or party politics meant that even though a majority of MPs were supportive of Rudds Carbon emissions reductions, the ultra conservative rump of the Coalition wagged the dog. Popular change doesnt always eventuate. In fact, it’s bloody hard.
There is no way Hanson can resolve all these grievances that have people flocking to her party; they are often contradictory. She leads a herd of cats. This is a reflection partly on the limits of our democracy that relies on political party loyalty. That reality will catch up with ON, its MPs and voters.
Or, we could make party whips illegal and let MPs represent and vote for their community rather than steadfastly loyal to their party at all times.
Mavis – Trump endorsement in Iowa came fairly late in the cycle. It may not have been noticed by many in the MAGA verse. The margin ended up about 1,500 votes.
Boerwar says:
Thursday, June 4, 2026 at 8:11 am
mb
Is that really you?
=============
No Grokwar, it’s actually Meher Braina which is filling in for a short time.
Newy Paper Boy.ai is online & functioning correctly.
VicchatGPtoria is not registering any faults either.
Gemini MP – no syntax errors either.
Claudesdarke is currently down for service.
Probably time for WB to press the reboot button and allow skynet to resume control of the site.
Re population and immigration, facts never hurt any honest discussion.
Here is Australia’s current population and growth from the ABS – the Population Clock:
https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/population/population-clock-pyramid
We’re estimated to have ticked over 28 million in the last few days. It is expected to pass 30 million during the second half of 2030.
Most of this is concentrated in the major cities, with most of the wide brown land and sweeping plains empty by world standards.
I suppose having an “online Parliament of bots” could possibly work.
The PM could become known as Deep Blue.
The Deputy PM = coPilot
They can always send gigachat out to do the media
… and if the public get tired of all this (such as a falling off the cliff 0.7% drop in support for Deep Blue), we can pull out the USB and plug in Siri (and give her a go)!
B. S. Fairman:
Thursday, June 4, 2026 at 8:59 am
Ta.
Thanks for the Resolve poll data earlier today too Fess/Vic & HH.
The female vote was also reflected in the YouGov on Tues.
Thinking of tactics, this is probably the time for the ALP to get the gloves off and start discussing abortion, although I accept it’s a state issue.
Nadia
Perhaps I should slip in some deliberate grammatical errors to prove I are not an AI bot?
Or post an essay on the intellectual appeal of Pauline Hanson to confirm it?
Voters should realize that when they talk about Hanson being PM they are just talking about the “monkey” and dont realize that the person with the real power behind Hanson is the “organ grinder” Gina Rhinhart.
HBG
You have to remember that lowering the fuel excise tax is sending the wrong market signal and could make fuel shortages worse. It’s good politics but good policy
David
The main issue is that the biggest drivers of inflation IMHO are global events, the wealthy still having money to spend and government spending. The government can’t change global events and increasing taxes and/or cutting services is something that is politically toxic
Really what’s seems to be going on is that politicians of all stripes have lost the ability to explain that trade offs are a thing and that the public thinks the PM has a lever that makes the economy good or bad.
On the topic of women going to PHON I would like to see the Crosstabs that show where Gen Z and Millennial women are. if they’re going to PHON it would be breaking the trend we’ve seen in past Australian elections and globally
SMH Letters today…
Since the AUKUS deal has changed, a more appropriate acronym should be applied. It would be apt to call it USUKA, pronounced “you sucker” (“Defence boss says Australia always wanted only second-hand US submarines”, June 3). Landon Watts, Narraweena
Trump’s latest rant and tariff threat against Australia based on the export of goods made with “modern slavery” is egregious. The USA’s widespread use of undocumented immigrants in highly exploitative ways is a far more pertinent example.
S777 says:
Thursday, June 4, 2026 at 9:09 am
Re population and immigration, facts never hurt any honest discussion.
Here is Australia’s current population and growth from the ABS – the Population Clock:…
===============
Speaking of population growth, we’re going to get the latest ABS figures in a couple of weeks on the size of the states & territories.
These figures will (should) be used by the Electoral Commissioner to determine the quota, and the carve up of divisions around the country. He’s required to do this in the 13th month after Parliament first sits.
I say “should”, because QLD is extremely close to gaining a 31st Division (currently sitting on 30.40 divisions). If QLD was to shoot up to say 30.44, 30.45 divisions, they may just adjourn for 3 months and wait to see what the Sept ABS stats show.
What he’s trying to avoid is starting the process based on 30 divisions, and then finding out halfway through that QLD is now entitled to a 31st division. Will be a time wasting exercise.
Anyway, we’ll see when the next ABS figures drop on 18-Jun.
Socrates says:
Thursday, June 4, 2026 at 9:15 am
Nadia
Perhaps I should slip in some deliberate grammatical errors to prove I are not an AI bot?
Or post an essay on the intellectual appeal of Pauline Hanson to confirm it?
============
LOL.
I agree. We may have to fill in one of those recaptcha things before we can drop a post.
I am not a robot!
Only one in five cigarettes is caught by excise. It could be said that, due to the loss of billions in revenue, the policy of pricing tobacco products exorbitantly high has not been a roaring success. The smokers in my circle all use illicit tobacco. They pay $10 for twenty, which would cost $50 from a legal supplier.
nadia, Thursday, June 4, 2026 at 9:05 am:
Cheers for this opportunity to ask you if you approve or disapprove of ON’s policy on wages and taxes for the lowest paid workers in Australia:
PAULINE HANSON OPPOSES YOUR PAY RISE.
PAULINE HANSON OPPOSES YOUR TAX CUT.
THANKYOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER.
Mavis
100 percent. I have been saying that for ages. The policy with respect to the excise has caused serious unintended consequences.
The damage done here in Melbourne town has been enormous
Omar Comin’, I see nadia is cutting your lunch.
Groundhog Day
In other news, Israel and Lebanon have announced another ceasefire, to which Hezbollah is not a party
https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2026/jun/03/us-israel-iran-war-lebanon-trump-khamenei-netanyahu-hormuz-latest-news-updates?page=with%3Ablock-6a20a0718f082fe260655aaf#block-6a20a0718f082fe260655aaf
Malcolm says:
Thursday, June 4, 2026 at 9:16 am
Voters should realize that when they talk about Hanson being PM they are just talking about the “monkey” and dont realize that the person with the real power behind Hanson is the “organ grinder” Gina Rhinhart.
=====================
Welcome to Australia 2030.
Prime Minister Pauline Pantsdown has appointed Gina Minehard as Governor General.