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ENT12
FRI · 2026-07-03 · 14:57 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0703-89773
News/One Nation is campaigning directly to Christians. But will p…
NSR-2026-0703-89773Analysis·EN·Political Strategy

One Nation is campaigning directly to Christians. But will party policies rub against worshippers’ conscience?

One Nation is actively campaigning to attract Christian voters in Australia, leveraging shared concerns like anti-abortion policies. However, the party's strong anti-immigration stance and Pauline Hanson's advocacy for a "monocultural" Australia may alienate a significant portion of the Christian community.

Jonathan BarrettThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-07-03 · 14:57 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 5 min
One Nation is campaigning directly to Christians. But will party policies rub against worshippers’ conscience?
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
5min
Word count
1 224words
Sources cited
1cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

One Nation is actively campaigning to attract Christian voters in Australia, leveraging shared concerns like anti-abortion policies. However, the party's strong anti-immigration stance and Pauline Hanson's advocacy for a "monocultural" Australia may alienate a significant portion of the Christian community. This is particularly relevant as over one-third of Australian churchgoers were born overseas and many attend services in languages other than English. While One Nation aims to draw evangelicals from the Coalition and Catholics from Labor, their message could conflict with Christian values of welcoming diversity and the stranger. The influence of the Christian vote is debated, but it could be decisive in marginal seats where religious voters are concentrated.

Confidence 0.90Sources 1Claims 5Entities 12
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Political Strategy
Social Justice
Tone
Measured
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
1
Limited
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Pauline Hanson has previously stated Australia must be 'monocultural'.

quotePauline Hanson
Confidence
0.95
02

Christianity is the largest religion in Australia, with about 44% of the population identifying as Christian.

statisticNational Church Life Survey (NCLS)
Confidence
0.95
03

One Nation's strong rhetoric against abortion may entice some Christians, but their anti-immigration stance could be a stumbling block.

quoteSimon Smart (Centre for Public Christianity)
Confidence
0.90
04

One Nation is campaigning directly to Christians in Australia.

factual
Confidence
0.90
05

Christians are known to abruptly shift their vote based on wide-ranging policy issues.

factual
Confidence
0.85
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Full report

5 min read · 1 224 words
One Nation leader Pauline Hanson and MP Barnaby Joyce speak at the Farrer byelection celebration. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP View image in fullscreen One Nation leader Pauline Hanson and MP Barnaby Joyce speak at the Farrer byelection celebration. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP Analysis One Nation is campaigning directly to Christians. But will party policies rub against worshippers’ conscience? Jonathan Barrett Anti-abortion policies may have appeal, but with one in three Australian churchgoers born overseas, talk of a monoculture may put them off Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast When One Nation recruit Barnaby Joyce addressed anti-abortion campaigners at a Sydney rally in early June, the former deputy prime minister told the audience he could see “about 1,500 people who can hand out how to vote cards”. Christian leaders spoke at the rally. The Lord’s Prayer was recited. Many there were active churchgoers. As Pauline Hanson’s popularity surges, her party has extended its hand to Australia’s Christian community, an elusive group of voters who can swing behind a party in the right conditions. Will Australian Christians take up Joyce’s instruction and support One Nation? 3:30 ‘I’m seeing what I saw in the US’: hundreds attend anti-abortion rally in Sydney – video ‘Reason to pause’ Christianity is the largest religion in Australia, with about 44% of the population identifying as Christian. Anglicanism and Catholicism are the two largest affiliations. About one in five Australians regularly attend church, according to the National Church Life Survey (NCLS). While voting patterns of churchgoers historically favour the Coalition, Christians are known to abruptly shift their vote based on wide-ranging policy issues affecting everything from abortion, marriage and religious schools to social services, immigration, climate and refugees. Kevin Rudd drew many conservative voters to Labor in 2007 by being a practising Christian who argued that a faithful ethos must care for the marginalised. In 2019, Scott Morrison won many Christian votes for the conservative side, helping him claim the “miracle” election result in a year when religious freedom policies were hotly debated. One Nation’s strong rhetoric against abortion may entice some Christians into the party fold, but believers may not like everything they hear given Hanson’s wider platform is constructed around her long-held, anti-immigration position. “The anti-immigration, anti-refugee stance of One Nation will be a stumbling block to people whose faith calls them to welcome the stranger and to view all people as precious because they’re made in the image of God,” the executive director of the Centre for Public Christianity, Simon Smart, says. “Those Christians who are drawn to the rhetoric of Pauline Hanson may have good reason to pause and reconsider.” 1:30 Pauline Hanson says Australia must be ‘monocultural’ in Press Club address – video One of the problems for One Nation in winning the religious vote is that a sizeable number of Christian migrant families attend church services conducted in their mother tongue, which will rub against Hanson’s quest for a “monocultural” Australia. She has warned against a “growing language problem which is a function of immigration”. Smart says talk of monoculture may rub against the Christian conscience. “The Christian vision is of communion and community between people of every tribe, nation and tongue; there’s a richness in the diversity of humanity that doesn’t seem to sit well with that monoculture idea,” he says. In Australia, the proportion of church attenders born overseas has risen to more than one in three, according to the NCLS. About a quarter of churchgoers speak a language other than English at home. Hanson is recording far higher net approval ratings than the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, or the opposition leader, Angus Taylor, with her party now drawing aspirational supporters away from the Coalition and Labor. Among Christians, One Nation threatens to take the Coalition’s evangelicals and Labor’s traditional working-class Catholics. Academics have mixed views on whether the Christian vote is influential enough to sway elections, given the diversity of views held by those in the pews. John Black, a former Labor senator and founder of demographic profiling company Australian Development Strategies, says if Australia does have a Bible belt, it is located on the suburban peripheries of major cities, which are densely populated areas often in marginal seats. He says while “mortgage belt” issues provide the foundation of political support in those seats, religious voters can influence a tight vote if Christians are convinced to vote as a bloc. View image in fullscreen Pauline Hanson and fellow senators Malcolm Roberts, Sean Bell, Tyron Whitten and the member for Farrer, David Farley. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP Part of Rudd’s appeal to Christians in 2007 was that he could articulate his faith and even reference the teachings of German theologian and anti-Nazi dissident Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Several prominent Coalition politicians have also expressed their Christian faith earnestly, which is a draw for churchgoers. John Warhurst, emeritus professor of political science at the Australian National University, says One Nation doesn’t have an obvious Christian voice who can appeal to the broader churchgoing population. “If One Nation is to have an impact among Christians, it would have to be through their policy program, and the general vibe that they’re representing believers. “It’s not impossible – Donald Trump does well among certain Christian groups and it’s not because of his persona.” One Nation’s vision for Australia includes returning it to what Hanson describes as its “Judeo-Christian” values, amid broad warnings that the western way of life is under siege from “those coming into this country and bringing with them the troubles they have left behind”. The party’s platform also includes a policy of refusing entry to migrants from nations known to foster ideas that are “incompatible with Australian values”. Hanson has questioned the existence of “good Muslims”; a remark she was censured for in the Senate. In explicitly excluding other religions from its vision of Australia, One Nation appeals directly to that radical minority and could entice more moderate Christian voters to adopt her extreme views. Mobilisation strategist at Christian humanitarian agency Act for Peace, Jarrod McKenna, says politicians rarely use the term “Judeo-Christian” to mean anything that Jesus actually taught. “They are never using it to refer to love of neighbour and very rarely refer to welcoming the stranger,” says McKenna, who is also a pastor. “If anything, the stranger is used as a scapegoat.” It’s no coincidence that the rise of One Nation has come during a period of relentless housing and cost of living pressures, leaving many Australians searching for political answers outside mainstream parties. Hanson concentrated her address at the National Press Club last month on attributing the housing crisis to demand caused by immigration, without noting the contribution of decades of chronic undersupply and investor-centric tax settings. McKenna says the antidote to divisive rhetoric is to prioritise kindness and practical values like a “fair go” by addressing policy settings in the economy. “The idea of a fair go, being kind and staying down to earth is a pretty good Aussie paraphrase of the biblical principle to act justly, love mercy and walk humbly with God,” he says. “All that One Nation’s scapegoating does is cause us to bleed the best of who we are rather than actually address the problems.” Explore more on these topics One Nation Australian politics Barnaby Joyce Pauline Hanson Abortion analysis Share Reuse this content
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Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

10 terms
christian voters
1.00
one nation
1.00
party policies
0.90
conscience
0.80
anti-abortion
0.80
immigration
0.70
religious freedom
0.60
pauline hanson
0.50
barnaby joyce
0.50
election
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

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