One Nation candidates angry at Libs deal

Pauline Hanson's preference deal with the Liberals has sparked anger from One Nation candidates including Margaret Dodd, the mother of murdered teenager Hayley.

High profile One Nation candidate Margaret Dodd, the mother of murdered teenage girl Hayley Dodd, has criticised the party over a preference deal with the Liberals and for bullying behaviour.

It emerged over the weekend that the WA Liberals will preference One Nation above the Nationals in the upper house in regional areas, with One Nation preferencing the Liberals in all lower house seats in return.

Speaking outside the Supreme Court, to watch her daughter's alleged murder Francis John Wark appear, Ms Dodd said she had "not been informed of any (preference) deal whatsoever, and I'm sure all the candidates haven't".

A key motivation for her standing for One Nation in Police Minister Liza Harvey's seat was because she has been a strong campaigner for "no body no parole" laws that compel convicted murderers to reveal the location of a victim's remains.

She says the Liberals had refused to introduce the laws.

"I will make my own choices on who I will give my preferences to, and it certainly will not be the Liberal party," she said.

"I have done no deal whatsoever. The Liberal policies are the complete opposite to One Nation, so why on Earth are we doing a deal if it's not just that somebody just wants to get into power?

"I'm not about power ... I'm about principles."

Another One Nation candidate Charles Smith also posted on social media telling voters they did not need to preference the Liberals.

"If you do not like the Liberals as I don't, mark them last!"

There were also reports on Monday that a letter was emailed to all WA candidates from One Nation's Queensland headquarters ordering them not to be in contact "under any circumstances" with former WA partybrokers Ron McLean and Marye Louise Daniels and disendorsed candidate Anthony Fells.

One Nation leader Pauline Hanson already sparked a backlash from candidates when she said that if they were elected but quit the party they must pay $250,000, but scrapped that demand.

Mr Fells, who was recently filmed confronting former senator Rod Culleton outside a Perth court, greeted Ms Dodd as a friend outside the Supreme Court on Monday.

"I live in a country with free speech. Nobody is going to tell me who I can speak to and who I cannot," Ms Dodd told reporters.

"Besides that I am not a person who will be bullied or dictated to by anybody. If anybody knows me over the years I've been fighting for Hayley they will know; don't this to me, it's not going to be good for you."


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Source: AAP



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