Home » politics » One Nation’s Mallee candidate standing, not running

One Nation’s Mallee candidate standing, not running

PAULINE Hanson appears to be running a Queensland-based “ghost” candidate in Mallee under her One Nation banner.

Vanessa Atkinson has formally nominated to contest Mallee in the federal election, but is not named in the list of federal election candidates on the party’s website, has made no campaign launch and released no policy statements. Neither did she attend this week’s public candidate forum in Mildura.

One Nation is the subject of an Australian Electoral Commission review over claims it has fielded so-called ghost candidates, many of whom live and work far from the electorates they are contesting in Victoria, NSW and the ACT.

There is no legal requirement that a candidate be based in the electorate they contest, or even the same state, but One Nation’s strategy is considered highly unusual. 

The Hanson party committed itself to fielding candidates in all 151 seats at the election and 90 of those were put forward just before the close of nominations.

Sunraysia Daily has so far been unsuccessful in attempts to contact Ms Atkinson, or verify her background, but she is said to be a massage therapist based near Bundaberg in Queensland, about 1500km from Mildura. It is known that a Queensland physiotherapist by that name received a number of media inquiries about the issue on Thursday, but she did not return calls to the Daily or respond to a request to clarify whether she was the Mallee candidate. 

Emails to One Nation’s national headquarters received no response.

At a national level, One Nation’s apparent ghost-candidate strategy has come under public scrutiny over the nomination of Narelle Seymour, the party’s candidate for the southern Sydney seat of Hughes.

She is one of seven candidates contesting the seat, held by the United Australia Party’s Craig Kelly, the controversial former Liberal MP who has teamed up politically with billionaire Clive Palmer.

Like the Mallee candidate, however, Ms Seymour has sought no public profile since her nomination and media attempts to interview her have been unsuccessful.

The UAP’s Mallee candidate, Stuart King, said One Nation was entitled to field a candidate in Mallee, but he didn’t expect someone who didn’t live here, and didn’t campaign, to win many votes.

He speculated that some One Nation candidates might only be running so that the party would have a polling-booth presence on election day, when it could hand out how-to-vote cards which would also promote its Senate candidates.

Mr King said One Nation would have a “small, core group” of voters in Mallee and he accepted that as the parties shared some similar platforms, a One Nation candidate could take some votes away from him.

“I would just ask that if they want to vote for One Nation, they consider putting me second (preference),” he said.

Anne Webster, the Nationals MP who now holds Mallee, said the nomination of an interstate candidate was “strange” and unlikely to appeal to local voters.

“The people of Mallee want strong, local representation. They’ve got to have confidence that their member is in their corner, fighting for them,” Dr Webster said.

“You can’t get a good understanding of local issues, and the lives of individuals and families in Mallee, by looking at a map.”

Dr Webster said she had no idea what One Nation hoped to achieve through a ghost-candidate strategy but, when asked if she thought her hold on the seat would be at all threatened by a candidate from another state, she said: “Not really.”

One Nation is believed to have fielded at least a dozen candidates who seem to have no connection to the seats they are contesting.

Australian electoral candidates and parties who earn at least 4 per cent of first-preference votes are eligible for taxpayer funding of about $2.90 per vote, plus an automatic payment of just over $10,000, paid after the election.

Digital Editions


  • Kids quit swim lessons

    Kids quit swim lessons

    CHILDREN are dropping out of swimming lessons far too early, leaving them at risk, according to new research from Life Saving Victoria. The study, published…

More News

  • Central Murray Round 1 Football Previews

    Central Murray Round 1 Football Previews

    Kerang v Wandella LOCAL rivals Kerang and Wandella will clash for the first time in the Central Murray at Riverside Park in what is expected to be one of the…

  • Eagles fly into new season

    Eagles fly into new season

    THE Mallee Eagles won’t be rolling out the red carpet for rivals Balranald when the two clubs meet at Lalbert, with former Eagles coach Brent Macleod coaching against his former…

  • Education partnership paves the way

    Education partnership paves the way

    SEED Ability has joined Country Universities Centre Mallee to strengthen pathways for students into allied health careers, becoming the centre’s first local platinum partner. With a contribution of $5000, Seed…

  • Lew prosecutes his case

    Lew prosecutes his case

    A FORMER Melbourne councillor with a history of political run-ins has thrown his hat into the ring to replace retiring Nationals heavyweight Peter Walsh, declaring he is the candidate to…

  • Truck collision closes highway

    Truck collision closes highway

    STURT Highway at Paringi has reopened following a two-truck truck crash on Wednesday. Emergency services responded to the collision about 5.20am and closed the NSW stretch of the highway between…

  • Speed, alcohol offences detected over Easter

    Speed, alcohol offences detected over Easter

    ANOTHER Easter long weekend has passed without a road fatality in Swan Hill, Buloke and Gannawarra shires, keeping a two-decade long streak of travellers returning home safe. However, not all…

  • Swans set to soar

    Swans set to soar

    It won’t just be our region’s footballers and netballers who will begin another campaign over the coming days, with the Swan Hill Soccer League’s senior squads also opening their 2026…

  • Renowned pianist brings joy

    Renowned pianist brings joy

    MUSIC has a way of connecting generations and nowhere was that clearer than when internationally acclaimed pianist Tom Williams sat down to play for the residents at Hope Aged Care.…

  • Shining a light on family violence

    Shining a light on family violence

    A STRIKING new feature will greet visitors at Swan Hill District Health’s 1860 Café this April, with the health service proudly hosting the Elephant in the Room installation. Delivered in…

  • Fuel thiefs strike

    Fuel thiefs strike

    SWAN HILL Arson: POLICE are investigating a suspicious fire involving building debris and household items at a property on Murray Valley Highway on 5 April. Police said they believed it…