The Australian Labor Party has ramped up its attack on One Nation and issued a direct call for donations, warning supporters not to let Pauline Hanson convert her party's 'momentum into seats'.
In paid social media advertisements, Labor pleaded for contributions to help fund its campaign, naming One Nation as its target.
'TO ALL LABOR SUPPORTERS,' the advertisement begins. 'Please don't scroll past this.'
'We are asking you to contribute any amount to Labor's campaign to take on One Nation today.'
'99% of people reading this won't contribute. We hope you'll be different.'
The campaign directly mentions recent coverage of opinion polls that showed One Nation ahead of the Labor Party on primary votes.
'If everyone seeing this contributed $27 we'd have the resources to prevent One Nation from turning polling momentum into seats.'
'If that's worth $27 to you, please chip in today.'
Labor has issued a direct plea on social media for supporters to contribute against One Nation
The attack ads come as new polling from RedBridge Group and Accent Research shows One Nation could win up to 59 lower house seats if a federal election were held today.
The result would leave Senator Hanson's anti-immigration party as the official opposition, reducing the coalition to a handful of seats and forcing Labor into minority government.
Asked if she would form a partnership with the coalition to form government, Senator Hanson said her message was 'let's just work together'.
'The problem with (Liberal leader) Angus Taylor, he's got a bunch of moderates, progressives in his own party,' she told Sky News on Sunday.
'I'm not going to tie myself to that dog that will not be able to follow through on his promises to the Australian people.'
Opposition housing spokesman Andrew Bragg said he believed voters wanted an 'economic revolution', but it wasn't the time to concede the coalition would have to partner with One Nation.
'What it shows is there's a huge amount of grievance in the Australian community and I think we have not done a good job in the last 10 years on economic policy,' he said.
'That's my main takeaway ... we should have done more on tax, more on industrial relations, more on super, more on budget stuff and we've just been too similar to Labor over a long period of time.'




















