Friday 29 November 2019

NOTES ASIO SATURDAY PAPER


While Australia’s domestic spy agency, the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, was running a foreign-intelligence operation early last year, its officers broke the law.

During what was described as a “multi-faceted, multi-agency” operation, they collected intelligence without a warrant, mistakenly believing they didn’t need one.

The agency’s lawyers weren’t told when the operation changed, meaning officers acted without proper legal advice and, at times, outside the complex web of laws governing their work.

Officers were also seconded to ASIO from other agencies for the operation without legal authorisation and were then inadequately managed and supervised. The required reports were not filed.

These were the findings of a 16-month investigation by the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security (IGIS), the security agencies’ watchdog, after ASIO discovered and reported its mistakes.

The IGIS found the breaches were inadvertent but ASIO’s procedures had not kept up with legislation and it had provided “little, if any” compliance training to ensure its officers actually understood the laws under which they worked.

It found the “significant problems” in planning and executing the operation had stemmed from “systemic weaknesses” in compliance.

“Whilst operational staff complied with ASIO’s operational planning procedures, these procedures were inconsistent with other ASIO policies and were insufficient to ensure that ASIO acted lawfully,” the IGIS said in its recently published annual report.

On Thursday, in response to written questions, ASIO’s director-general of security Mike Burgess told The Saturday Paper that his agency is “committed to operating legally and ethically and takes compliance seriously”.

“ASIO is also committed to a culture of transparency and robust independent oversight, and we continue to work with the IGIS to identify where processes can be further improved,” he said.

He said the Australian community rightly expected intelligence agencies to be subject to scrutiny and oversight.

“There is a high degree of compliance with formal and procedural requirements – from time to time there will be human administrative errors.”

Burgess said his predecessor, Duncan Lewis, had accepted the IGIS’s report and the implementation of her recommendations was under way. He said ASIO had upgraded its training and IGIS had acknowledged it had also improved its procedures for reporting breaches.

The ASIO breach highlights the pressure a huge volume of national security legislation is placing on those tasked with its execution. Those responsible for its drafting and scrutiny are also feeling the strain.

In some cases, national security legislation has been found to grant powers beyond the declared objectives – apparent unintended consequences, which are causing alarm for watchdogs both inside and outside of government.

Last week, the IGIS lodged a submission with another oversight body, the parliamentary joint committee on intelligence and security (PJCIS), which is investigating federal laws designed to force tech companies to grant security agencies access to encrypted communications.

Parliament passed the encryption laws late last year, despite strong warnings from the tech industry and some legal experts that they could be dangerous.

The government agreed the PJCIS should examine the laws again.“WHY WOULD WE DO FOR TERRORISM WHAT WE DON’T DO FOR DOMESTIC VIOLENCE?” ASKED BRET WALKER, SC, REFERRING TO POWERS OF DETENTION, CONTROL AND QUESTIONING AND NOTING THAT FAMILY VIOLENCE CLAIMS MANY MORE LIVES THAN TERRORISM.

In her submission last week, IGIS Margaret Stone raised ongoing serious concerns about how the laws are drafted, especially about ASIO’s powers to make voluntary assistance requests and compulsory assistance orders.

Stone found the legislation’s wording meant people subject to compulsory orders did not have to be told about them. She said the orders could also apply both before an underlying warrant was executed and after it ceased.

She found people could be subject to arbitrary arrest and detention because the orders did not have to detail where their subjects had to attend, the assistance required, or the time frame.

Stone cautioned that people could face up to five years’ jail for breaching an order they did not know existed.

ASIO was also not required to delete information obtained under an assistance order that was no longer required, despite the ASIO Act requiring it.

Margaret Stone found the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act allowed agencies to grant tech companies and individuals immunity from civil liability for providing access to someone else’s encrypted data without having to demonstrate the action was reasonable or proportionate.

She found limits and safeguards were inconsistent and sometimes missing and that ASIO’s operating guidelines, which are issued by the attorney-general, had not kept up with technology.

They have not been updated since 2007, despite the PJCIS recommending an update in 2014. Attorney-General Christian Porter told The Saturday Paper the minister for Home Affairs, Peter Dutton, was now responsible for any update of the guidelines.

Porter said the federal government was committed to protecting Australians from terrorism and responding to ever-evolving security threats.

“Amendments to legislation happen regularly during the parliamentary process – that is not unusual or concerning, but is a reflection that national security legislation often deals with issues on which people have strongly held but different perspectives,” Porter said.

He said the PJCIS’s recommendations for change were “almost always accepted”.

“The government continues to monitor the operation and effectiveness of national security legislation, to ensure that it strikes the right balance between protecting individuals’ rights and protecting the community from individuals who pose threats to national security,” he said.

The PJCIS has been pushing back against initial – and sometimes amended – versions of national security laws, deeming regularly that they are not good enough.

That work echoes concerns of the IGIS, the independent national security legislation monitor (INSLM), the Law Council of Australia and other respected organisations.

According to a list maintained by law academics Dr Dominique Dalla-Pozza of the Australian National University, Dr Keiran Hardy of Griffith University and Dr Nicola McGarrity and Professor George Williams of the University of New South Wales, federal parliament has enacted 83 separate pieces of national security legislation since the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States.

One of Australia’s most respected lawyers, Bret Walker, SC, said this week that the volume and hasty drafting of legislation was “a problem”.

Walker was the first INSLM, appointed for three years when the position was created in 2011. He argues that too many special laws are being written and enacted to combat the terrorism threat when it can be addressed under existing criminal law.

“It largely comes about from a well-meaning but inappropriate belief that these problems are most appropriately dealt with by legislation,” Walker told The Saturday Paper.

He said terrorism was wrongly being portrayed as a problem threatening the very existence of Australia.

“It’s not an existential problem,” he said. “It’s a murder problem that we should take seriously.”

Walker said he was “all in favour” of the special expenditure and infringement of privacy required for appropriately safeguarded surveillance – when it was effective.

“One needs to ask what more is necessary,” he said, suggesting that whenever issues around terrorism arise “someone just says, ‘Oh, let’s have another law’ ”.

But this approach risks “the possibility that we’ll confuse legislation with prevention”.

Walker said it was more important to direct funds to properly resource security and law-enforcement agencies.

He said parliament is not correctly engaging with the problem.

“Why would we do for terrorism what we don’t do for domestic violence?” he asked, referring to powers of detention, control and questioning, and noting that family violence claims many more lives than terrorism.

“It’s thought to be popular politics to be able to point to ever-more-special laws. I think it’s at the political level that the failure occurs – failure properly to test whether yet another law is really needed and whether a new law has an appropriate level of safeguards.”

Back in 2011, in his first INSLM yearly report, Walker noted most national security legislation was being enacted on the grounds of an urgent and extraordinary threat.

He rejected the argument made at the time that such laws required only light scrutiny because they were temporary. He said they were likely to be permanent and should be examined closely from the beginning.

“Otherwise, there is likely to be an unfortunate embedding of temporary extraordinary powers more or less permanently,” he wrote.

Walker said this week he remains concerned about the creep of special terrorism measures into other parts of the criminal law.

“That seems to me to be something that we – voters, citizens, residents, lawyers – should all be looking at,” he said.

One group that has being doing that is the Law Council of Australia.

Its president, Arthur Moses, SC, told The Saturday Paper that the breadth of legislation allowed security agencies to “pick and choose” which to rely on.

“This is unsatisfactory,” Moses said this week. “As a direct result of this, there are a myriad of unintended consequences which infringe the rights of citizens and the freedom of the press. It is important that the parliament review this legislative framework with the benefit of expert advice. This will assist in ensuring these laws are applied appropriately, not disproportionately.”

Moses said politics has driven the legislative program.

“Regrettably, we have seen in Australia an increasing move towards legislation that has been rushed for political purposes without adequate consultation,” he said. “Such consultation could have identified clear deficiencies … There are a myriad of laws that overlap and are confusing as to their scope and reach.”

Moses said the Law Council supported ongoing review but that it was “only meaningful if expert advice is not ignored”.

Recently, the PJCIS wholly rejected proposed government legislation that would legalise the use of facial recognition technology for security purposes, recommending it be completely redrafted.

It has previously prompted substantial redrafting of the encryption laws and of separate legislation to temporarily exclude from Australia dual nationals linked to terrorist groups and to strip some of citizenship.

While the federal Home Affairs minister, Peter Dutton, and Attorney-General Christian Porter have redrafted legislation on the basis of advice from the various oversight bodies, not all recommendations have been adopted.

The PJCIS’s second report on encryption laws is due next year.

Separately the current INSLM, Dr James Renwick, is also examining them.

Renwick recently hinted at concern about the volume and nature of legislation.

In a speech to the Lowy Institute in June, he said his job involved assessing whether security laws worked, went too far and properly dealt with human rights concerns.

“In a sceptical world, it is no longer enough for any government or minister to say ‘Just trust us’ or ‘If you knew what I know, you would be satisfied’,” Renwick said.

He said the encryption laws involved “many controversies” and that national security laws were “often unsettling in their novelty and reach”.

The Saturday Paper understands Renwick plans to spell out his concerns about the security legislation in his final annual report next year.

Increasingly, watchdog bodies are reaching out to the wider community to assess the likely impact of these laws.

For the first time in one of his reviews, Renwick specifically sought the views of industry on the encryption laws.

Separately, the IGIS has established a permanent civil society reference group to advise on the real-world impact of security laws.

UNSW’s Professor Williams told The Saturday Paper there was a pattern of rushed legislating on security.

“They’ve passed laws that are not fit for the statute book,” Williams said. “There’s always a sense of political urgency to this, there’s political point-scoring.”

Williams said the drive for bipartisanship affected contestability.

“The lack of scrutiny, of checks and balances, means in Australia really, the quality of these laws depends on the work of parliament,” he said. “And when parliament is in agreement that these laws simply must be passed and the drafting and quality of the laws can be secondary, you end up with our current predicament of a vast number of counterterrorism laws being enacted, many of which are poor quality and overbroad.”

The PJCIS’s members traditionally come only from the Liberal and Labor parties. Independent MP and former intelligence analyst Andrew Wilkie served on it for three years – the only crossbencher to do so, as part of the deal that delivered minority government to Labor’s Julia Gillard in 2013.

Wilkie also says legislation is being pushed through too fast.

“The security agencies are being asked to fill in a blank cheque,” he says. “They’re professionals and they want to have all the tools they need to get the job done… The failure is by government in not being able to stand up to them and rein them in. Who wants to be the minister who stands up to them and then something happens? So, no government or opposition wants to be caught out. But that doesn’t let them off the hook. They do have to be prepared to keep some restraint on these agencies.”

George Williams praised Bret Walker for having been prepared to raise such concerns about overreach, concerns that both Labor and Coalition governments ignored.

Williams has also written about the expanded application of counterterrorism laws into the broader criminal domain, particularly control orders used in a crackdown on bikie gangs.

On Wednesday, the High Court handed down a judgement in a case involving a member of an outlaw motorcycle gang, Damien Charles Vella, who had challenged the validity of a control order brought against him under New South Wales law.

Vella’s lawyers asked the court to rule that the law was unconstitutional, arguing it breached judicial independence.

The court ruled 5-2 that the Crimes (Serious Crime Prevention Orders) Act 2016 was valid and threw out Vella’s challenge.

But in her reasons as part of the majority judgement, Chief Justice Susan Kiefel said she almost ruled the other way, effectively sounding an alarm about how national security laws are being drafted.

Kiefel’s written reasons warned that legislation can risk impinging on judicial independence when its wording contains assumptions that restrict what a court can find. Such assumptions can leave the court having to rubber-stamp government policy – a move which would render a law invalid because the constitution demands the court be independent.

The NSW act provides for the use of control orders against people aged 18 and over who have been convicted of serious crimes or are reasonably suspected of being involved in them.

It says a control order can be made when it “would protect the public by preventing, restricting or disrupting” serious criminal activities.

Chief Justice Kiefel noted the wording assumed both that public protection was necessary and that such a control order provided it.

The wording authorises the court to make orders as it deems “appropriate” to protect the public from risk.

Kiefel said that wording made the public risk “an assumed fact” that did not allow the court discretion to assess whether it existed.

A British judgement in a different case supported the government’s interpretation of the wording and the High Court majority of five judges, including Kiefel, found the NSW law was modelled on that.

But Kiefel stated that if not for the role of that British case from 2010, R v Hancox, her view would be different.

She said she “would have been inclined” to interpret the NSW law as giving “an eligible court such a limited role that it could be concluded that the court had been enlisted by the legislature to do the work of the executive”.

On the key question of whether the NSW law was invalid, she wrote: “If that conclusion were reached, the answer to Question 1 would be ‘Yes’. But the British judgement meant it was ‘No’.”

The judgement is a reminder that the High Court is not empowered to act as an arbiter of values. Without a bill of rights, it cannot rule on the fairness or reasonableness of Australia’s laws, only on whether they are valid under the constitution and whether they are being upheld. The other work is up to parliaments.

Australia is the only country among similar democracies not to have a bill of rights. While advocates say it is long overdue and would better uphold rights and freedoms, critics warn it could undermine democracy by giving too much power to an unelected body – the court – rather than requiring accountable parliaments to put the protections in law.

While a bill of rights is not up for consideration, Australia’s national security laws are being examined overall in a comprehensive review of the intelligence community’s legal framework.

That report, by former ASIO chief Dennis Richardson, is due next month. Among all the investigations, it may be the only inquiry with the scope to examine not just the reach of the laws governing the work of security agencies but the principles that are meant to underpin them.


This article was first published in the print edition of The Saturday Paper on Nov 9, 2019 as "ASIO officers broke law on warrant". Subscribe here.

OPINION


EDITORIALNOVEMBER 9, 2019

Everything is not okay


Labor’s campaign was flawed but its policies were right. Its failure came in acknowledging that the country needs to change. More than anything, Australians want a prime minister who covers for their shortcomings – who says not to worry, and that most of you will be okay.


OPINIONNOVEMBER 9, 2019

Post-election blues all round


Never has it been more obvious: getting elected is one task, governing is another. While Labor tries to move on from its election loss review, delivered to the executive on Thursday, Scott Morrison is finding that running the country is harder than...


LAW & CRIMENOVEMBER 9, 2019

Brutality checks on activists


For those who have watched the evolution of public-order policing in Victoria over recent years, the sort of police violence we saw at the International Mining and Resources Conference (IMARC) protests in Melbourne would’ve come as no real surprise...


LETTERSNOVEMBER 9, 2019

Bailing out water


The more we hear about the problem of managing water rights in the Murray–Darling system, the more it sounds like a classic example of too many cooks spoiling the broth. Karen Middleton’s report (“Former AFP chief eyes water officials”, November 2-8...


DIARYNOVEMBER 9, 2019

Gadfly: Voters look back in anger


Here we are six months after the federal election and upon swaths of citizens it has dawned that they have bought tickets to a flop. If it’s cringeworthy now, imagine another two-and-a-half years of this clapped-out music-hall routine.



Karen Middleton
is The Saturday Paper’s chief political correspondent.

MORE PIECES OF INTEREST

Chinese spying allegations increase pressure on national security community to claim scalps

ANALYSIS BY DEFENCE CORRESPONDENT ANDREW GREENE
Wang Liqiang looks to the right as he sits mid-speech. He has glasses, wears a checked shirt and dark jacket.
PHOTO 
Wang Liqiang, who has publicly claimed to be a Chinese spy, is seeking asylum in Australia.
SUPPLIED: 60 MINUTES AUSTRALIA
For all its failings over the last couple of decades, the Australian Parliament can at least claim the distinction, dubious or not, to be among the Western world's powerhouses for the production of new national security laws.
Preventative detention, travel bans, metadata, and secrecy orders over court cases — all slid seamlessly off the legislative assembly line, delivered out to the spies and police who asked for them.
No wonder then that one of several influential politicians who helped champion the powers and manoeuvred them towards passage recently admitted to some tetchiness that there's not a lot to show for it.
"We want a scalp," the senior figure was heard to bemoan over the past month.
Even allowing for the fact that the work of intelligence and counter-terrorism agencies is necessarily done in secrecy, recent events suggest that Canberra's national security community is now well aware of the anxiety — and is hankering for a few "scalps" of its own.
Revelations that the Chinese Communist Party may have plotted to install an agent in Australia's Parliament have starkly brought into focus the highly charged atmosphere and pressure now facing the country's intelligence and law enforcement agencies.
Since 2017 the Home Affairs Department has brought together the Australian Federal Police, Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) and the Australian Border Force, with the aim of better coordinating national security work.
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Across the super-charged mega-department there's a renewed sense of muscularity among its various agencies for going after would-be foreign meddlers targeting Australia's sovereignty.
Duncan Lewis, the recently retired ASIO director-general, gave an early glimpse of this new-found resolve when he revealed the domestic spy agency was battling "unprecedented levels" of foreign interference.
His successor Mike Burgess, the former head of the Australian Signals Directorate, is tipped to be even more forward leaning and candid with public statements in his role as the country's new spy chief.
Already the ASIO boss, who is also the first director-general of security to boast his own official Twitter account, has taken the historic step of issuing a press release to confirm his intelligence organisation is taking "seriously" the latest allegations of Beijing's nefarious activities.
Similarly the new Australian Federal Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw is widely expected to revamp the expertise in his organisation, allowing officers to better replicate some of the counter-espionage work of their US colleagues at the FBI.
Senior AFP figures say it's unfair to blame them for a "lack of scalps" so far, pointing to a drastic lack of funding, reductions in staff and age-old problems with information sharing between agencies.
"Ultimately I think the next thing we're going to be looking at is a prosecution," predicts leading China analyst Alex Joske, from the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
"Foreign interference laws have been introduced, we have transparency schemes for people acting on behalf of foreign governments to register themselves on, but to date there haven't been prosecutions of people carrying out foreign interference in Australia.
"Yet every day we're getting more evidence that it is happening."
When Prime Minister Scott Morrison was asked on Monday why authorities had not yet made a single arrest on foreign interference, he pointed to the case of Chinese businessman Huang Xiangmo who was this year effectively barred from re-entering Australia.
Mr Morrison also claimed that when he spoke to other world leaders they yearned for "the integration that we have between our agencies" and "the legal frameworks" that have controversially passed Federal Parliament in recent years.
The Prime Minister also stressed his Government was always prepared to give security agencies any further powers or resources they needed to do their job.
For those close to Australia's foreign interference frontline, it's abundantly clear their job now firmly involves "delivering scalps".


MICHAEL PASCOE'S PIECE ON FRYDENBERG'S TAX INCENTIVES FOR OVERSEAS INVESTORS FARCE

https://thenewdaily.com.au/money/finance-news/2019/11/15/frydenberg-infrastructure-con/

JOBS DOWN 19000

https://thenewdaily.com.au/money/finance-news/2019/11/14/labour-force-unemployment-abs/

ROBOTS REPLACE MIDDLE MANAGERS BETTER AT EMPATHY THERE GOES MOST OF THE AUSTRALIAN PUBLIC SERVICE; BY 2024. GOOD FUCKING RIDDANCE.

https://thenewdaily.com.au/money/work/2019/11/15/robot-managers/



https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/internal-concerns-raised-at-asio/news-story/6d99d9d22d3c6116d6bbe0cbbc8a0685

CAITLIN

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?tab=wm&ogbl#inbox/WhctKJVjMcCqJfGKdGsqQfsGcDFsjqPFRKkCbNbfBlThGSTSgpsclXfkpNghHdGTklPRWml

in a plutocracy, plutocrat-owned media is functionally the same as state media. Reporters for plutocratic media know what they are and are not permitted to say without being told, so they advance narratives which favor the status quo upon which their plutocrat employers have built their respective kingdoms.


Sunday 27 October 2019

FINAL PAGES A LONG EVIDENT DRIFT TO ONE NATION AMONGST MIGRANTS

https://mobile.abc.net.au/news/2019-10-27/the-labor-migrants-voting-for-pauline-hanson-one-nation/11634408?pfmredir=sm&fbclid=IwAR2cOh8DEWhddBoXYxnZNgD0YuFrM02yTiYzEHf_muy4m3o3sXeFntao-aM

Migrants bucking the stereotype and ditching the major parties in favour of Pauline Hanson's One Nation

BY POLITICAL REPORTER STEPHANIE DALZELL
Older man with hat and glasses on standing in street.
PHOTO 
Vic Meli came to Australia when he was 18 months old.
ABC NEWS: STEPHANIE DALZELL
Vic Meli's parents left war-torn Malta for a better life in Australia when he was just a toddler.
But growing up in suburban Sydney as a migrant child in the 1950s was challenging.
"Australia was very racist, the polite ones called us new Australians - the others just called us wogs," he said.
Mr Meli is now among a growing number of migrants voting for One Nation.
ABC analysis of voting trends and Census data has revealed last election, Pauline Hanson's One Nation and Clive Palmer's United Australia Party (UAP) polled strongly in electorates with the highest percentage of migrants in Australia, despite campaigning against further immigration.
When asked why a migrant was voting for a party that has been outspoken against some immigrants, Mr Meli said he was protective of his country.
"Migrants are not migrants after they come here, they are new Australians," he said.
"And if they waited a long time in a queue and went through lots of steps — how do you think they feel about a so-called queue-jumper?
"They don't like it."

Migrants critical of Labor's social policies

Mr Meli lives in Fairfield, which sits in the federal electorate of McMahon, in Sydney's west.
Half of voters in the area are migrants, predominately Christians from the Middle East.
In the last federal election, One Nation picked up more than 8 per cent of the vote, while the UAP gained almost 4 per cent.
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Labor suffered a swing of more than 7 per cent on primary votes.
It was a similar story in other diverse electorates.
Take nearby Chifley, where more than 45 per cent of voters are migrants from countries like the Philippines and India. Here, the UAP picked up almost 5 per cent of the vote.
Labor's primary vote was down almost 7 per cent here also.
In the Melbourne seat of Calwell, where 43 per cent of voters are migrants from countries like Turkey and Iraq, the UAP picked up almost 4 per cent of the vote, while Labor lost almost 5 per cent of its primary vote.
ABC chief elections analyst Antony Green said it was difficult to tell from demographics whether the vote for One Nation and UAP was coming from the migrants or native-born Australians in the electorates.
"If you think of One Nation entirely as a party about race and immigration, you'd wonder why it would do so well in a seat like McMahon," he said.
"But it's also a protest party. People are voting for the party as a protest against other major parties. It's a sign of the breakdown of our party system in this country."
Mr Meli said he had not thought about changing political sides until recently.
"If you lived in the western suburbs and you were a new Australian — Labor was your party of choice because they protected the worker," he said.
"That's how it was, nothing else was considered."
Then came the same-sex marriage debate.
"I can tell you now, when those idiots went into some mass hysteria in Parliament House, our blood curdled, especially when local MPs, who knew we were opposed to that bullshit, voted for it," Mr Meli said.
"We didn't move, Labor did. We stuck to the same values."
Mr Meli said One Nation's policies, which include a call for greater assimilation of migrants and cut in immigration numbers, resonated with him.
"What Pauline has said, if you come to Australia — be Aussie," he said.
"I did."
The ABC spoke to other migrants in western Sydney who supported One Nation.
All of them said they were scared to go on the record because of the potential for public backlash, but said they saw One Nation as the only way to protect Christian values in Australia.

Hanson insists she's reflecting community concerns

Pauline Hanson has been outspoken on immigration issues since she entered Parliament.
She used her maiden speech in 1996 to call for a reduction in Australia's migrant intake, declaring Australia was at risk of being "swamped by Asians".
She echoed those comments two decades later when she entered the Senate, saying Australia was in danger of "being swamped by Muslims who bear a culture and ideology that is incompatible with our own".
More recently, she has called for a US-style travel ban against countries that are "known sources of radicalism".
However, the One Nation leader said she was not against immigration.
"The perception was I was anti-immigration, that's never been the case," Senator Hanson told the ABC.
"I've always said you bring in people into the country but make sure you have the facilities, the infrastructure in place before you invite more people into Australia."
Senator Hanson also attributed her support in migrant communities to her outspoken nature.
"I say what a lot of Australians haven't got the guts to come out and say."
Western Sydney Women director Amanda Rose said many migrants in the area were not even focused on the leader's immigration policy
She said their priorities were jobs, education and providing for their families.
"She can go anywhere in Australia and she'll find her people," Ms Rose said.
"People will at least look at her and say, 'I know what you stand for, I'll either back you or not back you' and you can't get that with the two major parties the majority of the time."

One Nation a party of 'disappointed conservatives'

If they are focused on her immigration policy, emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Technology Sydney Andrew Jakubowicz said many migrants were supportive.
He said while Asian and Muslim communities might feel isolated by Senator Hanson's rhetoric on migration, other groups were on board.
"One Nation is a party essentially of the disappointed conservatives," Professor Jakubowicz said.
"What they're looking for is a party who will articulate their sense of frustrated desire."
Former Liberal candidate Dai Le, who is now an independent councillor in Fairfield, said she first became aware of Senator Hanson's support among her community at the last election, when people asked for One Nation how-to-vote cards.
"In south-west Sydney, the majority are non-English speaking, 50 per cent are born overseas, and who really represents them?" she said.
"The population and constituents are now questioning the representation of the major parties, and any minor parties, who actually stand up and voice different perspective and do not talk in the same language, have a different language, a different perspective on society, on social issues, on economic issues.
"The voters are ready for that."

Pauline Hanson effect politically significant

Mr Green said while One Nation only holds two Senate seats, Senator Hanson's power was still politically significant.
"I think the concern for the Labor party is if they lose support to One Nation, which is what appeared to happen in a couple of Western Sydney seats, those people might be on the way to vote for the Liberal Party instead," he said.
"What you're seeing is a loosening of the ties."
But political science lecturer from Sydney University Shaun Ratcliff said it was important to remember part of One Nation's success in 2019 was because the party ran more candidates than previously.
He said different migrant groups voted for all sorts of parties, and those who voted for One Nation were typically motivated by economic insecurity and immigration policies.
"Plenty of research has shown some people that were part of earlier groups that arrived a few decades ago, for instance, were not necessarily supportive of new groups from different parts of the world coming to Australia."

Labor and Liberal politicians admit they need to do more

Further south in Melbourne's inner-north, Egyptian-Australian Labor MP Peter Khalil said he believed his party needed to better engage migrant voters.
"I'm going to be very straightforward — which is unusual for a politician — but I have, for many years, said we cannot take for granted, multicultural communities," he said.
"Yes, they've always been big supporters of the Labor party but that doesn't just happen automatically."
The Member for Wills did not suffer any backlash in his own diverse electorate and is now part of a new multicultural Labor committee set-up to examine the issue.
"We have a job to make sure we are constantly finding ways to address the needs of these communities to make sure they feel like they're being represented," he said.
Liberal Senator Eric Abetz said the rise of support for One Nation was a concern.
"It's a lesson to both major parties that you've got to be in touch with the mainstream, but also be concerned about some of the issues that the politically correct and elites within our community don't necessarily want to talk about," he said.
"We've got to reach out to every sector within the community.
"We do it well but accept at all times we can do better."
For Vic Meli, One Nation has heard his concerns in a way the major parties never have.
"Us wogs made Australia a better place," he said.
"We don't want to see it buggered up."