O le mau ua leva ona tuleia e le One Nation ma lona ta’ita’i, o le tete’e i tagata malaga mai e aumau poo migrants.
O se tasi o sui fou o le One Nation na avea ma ta’ita’i o le National Party i tausaga ua mavae ma ia umia le tofi sui palemia, o Barnaby Joyce.
I le su’esu’ega a le Redbridge Poll, na iloa ai o le tete’e o le One Nation i le aofa’i o tagata aumau e fa’atagaina ona ulufale mai le mafua’aga o le lagolagoina e le to’atele o tagata.
Na iloa i le poll le 26 pasene e lagolagoina le One Nation e avea ma mālō e faatusa i le 19 pasene a le so’ofaatasiga a le Liberals ma le Nationals.
O le alii o Simon Welsh e lava lona tomai i le fa’auigaina o le poll a Redbridge.
Na ia ta'ua itū'aiga tagata ua fulitua i vaega ‘upufai tetele ae aga'i i le One Nation.
Na ta'ua e Dr Benjamin Moffitt o le Univesitē o Monash, e foliga mai e leai se suiga tele i le mau o loo tuleia e Pauline Hanson.
Pau le suiga o le auala o loo tala'i ai le mau e fa’asuamalie ai i tagata palota:
"I think it's a demand side explanation. I think there's stuff going on contextually, in terms of Bondi, in terms of the Coalition, in terms of this broader sense of dissatisfaction about the current state of Australian politics, but also economic life, disquiet about housing, disquiet about the economy, disquiet dissatisfaction about immigration and blaming immigrants for a lot of those housing issues that Hanson has been able to capitalise on. So I think this is really a demand side explanation, rather than a supply side, one that antiestablishment vote is currently parking itself with One Nation. There's not really, I guess, a populist or antiestablishment messaging coming from the coalition."
Mo nisi talafou ma ripoti, fa'afofoga i le SBS Samoan i le 'upega tafa'ilagi poo le SBS Radio app, pe asiasi i le Facebook SBS Samoan.





