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She was a member of the Liberal Party of Australia, and from 1994 to 1996, was a local councillor in the City of Ipswich, Queensland. She was endorsed as the Liberal Party's candidate for the House of Representatives electorate of Oxley (based on Ipswich) for the March 1996 Federal election. After the 1993 Federal election, the electorate of Oxley was the safest one held by the Australian Labor Party in the entire State of Queensland. However, comments she made to The Queensland Times, a daily newspaper in Ipswich, advocating the abolition of special government assistance for Aboriginals above what was available for other Australians led to her disendorsement by the party during the campaign. With the Liberal Party's name still appearing on the ballot paper and nominations having been closed by the Australian Electoral Commission for the registration of candidates so no other Liberal Party candidate appeared on the ballot paper, Pauline Hanson won the election easily, with the largest swing away from the Labor Party in Australia.
In September 1996, Hanson made her maiden speechA maiden speech is the first speech given by a newly elected representative in such bodies as the House of Commons or the United States House of Representatives. Traditions surrounding maiden speeches vary from country to country. In many Westminster syst to the House of Representatives, which instantly made headlines and the television news bulletins right across Australia. She expressed her concern that Australia "will be swamped by Asians", suggested the withdrawal of Australia from the United NationsFlag of the United Nations The United Nations or UN is an international organization made up of states. Almost all countries are members. It was established in San Francisco on October 24, 1945, following the Dumbarton Oaks Conference in Washington, DC, b, advocated the return of high-tariff protectionismProtectionism is the economic policy of promoting favored domestic industries through the use of high tariffs and other regulations to discourage imports. Historical variants of this policy have included mercantilism, a trade policy aimed at maximizing cu and generally decried many other aspects of what she labeled as ' political correctnessPolitical correctness is the alteration of language said by proponents to redress real or alleged unjust discrimination or to avoid offense. The term most often appears in the predicate adjective form politically correct often abbreviated PC and is usuall' and free marketA free market economy is an idealized form of market economy in which buyers and sellers are permitted to carry out transactions based solely on mutual agreement without interventionism in the form of taxes, subsidies, regulation, or government provision economicsEconomics is the social science studying how society uses its limited resources to meet desires and wants. Put otherwise, economics studies what, how and for whom society produces. This involves analyzing the production, distribution and consumption of go.
As a result of her maiden speech, Hanson became a very controversial figure, with the Australian population divided on whether Hanson was speaking the plain truth (a view more likely to be held in regional areas), a dangerous racist, or a misinformed yokel. Hanson's critics derided what they saw as her inarticulate style; the very trait that her supporters took to be evidence of her credentials as a speaker 'for the people'. Her unaffected approach was parodied by satirists such as the TV show Full FrontalFull Frontal may refer to: Full Frontal (TV series) an Australian sketch comedy series which debuted in 1993. Full Frontal (movie) a film by Steven Soderbergh. Full Frontal (band)..