Pauline Hanson is defending her party's performance, claiming the media has misrepresented the outcome of the West Australian state election.
Senator Hanson insists One Nation could still pick up five seats and that her party has done well, given it was a new player in Western Australia.
"We had no structure in the state whatsoever, we've only just go our party registered. We got fifty candidates to stand and then, to get this kind of result, I think it's fantastic. I'm really thrilled about it."
It seems One Nation has failed to win any seats in the lower house of the state parliament.
Vote counting is ongoing for the upper house, where One Nation appears on track to pick up one or two seats.
Labor's convincing victory at the weekend has raised the question of whether a controversial preference deal between the West Australian Liberals and One Nation may have done damage to both parties.
Federal aged care minister Ken Wyatt says his party should learn from the result.
"We've got to carefully consider who it is that we enter into arrangements with, the preference flows and it being consistent with the Liberal principles. Because it is important that we ensure that the thinking and direction that we're taking as a government is not compromised by any other group."
The last few weeks of the West Australian election campaign were dominated by the row over preferences.
The Liberals preferenced One Nation over their traditional political allies, the Nationals, in some regional upper house seats.
Federal Treasurer Scott Morrison says local issues in the state, and voter fatigue after more than eight years of Colin Barnett's premiership, were to blame and not the deal with One Nation.
"Honestly, if people think that's the reason that the Western Australian Government lost the election on the weekend I think they're kidding themselves. We lost it, we'd been in there for some time and time, and those other issues locally took their toll."
Scott Morrison and the Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull have been keen to separate the state result from the performance of the federal Coalition government.
But opposition leader Bill Shorten says Colin Barnett was punished for echoing the Turnbull government's support for the Fair Work Commission's cuts to penalty rates.
"The federal government is saying it's got nothing to do with them. It was a great result for Western Australian Labor, and I unhesitatingly congratulate and give full credit to Mark McGowan. But I do note that Colin Barnett, along with Malcolm Turnbull, in the last two weeks of the West Australian election came out and supported the cut to penalty rates. I'm sure that did have some impact."
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