Home Australian politics The 2025 election was a win for Australian Nationalists

The 2025 election was a win for Australian Nationalists

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Anthony Albanese this week won a second term as Australian Prime Minister. With barely a third of the primary vote Labor won nearly 60 per cent of lower house seats, so establishment left wing outlets are boasting that Australia is a diverse, leftist paradise.

This belies the fact that less people voted for Labor in 2025 than voted for “the voice” in 2023, yet the former resulted in a Labor landslide while the latter constituted a stunning victory for ordinary Aussies. A referendum which gives a clear choice between yes and no generally reflects the will of the people, while Australia’s convoluted preferential voting system in conjunction with compulsory voting basically forces people to vote for the opposite of what we want.

The establishment media is feeding normies a false dichotomy for the Liberal Party’s survival; either become Labor-lite, or stay true the Liberal Party’s “values”. This fake debate deliberately ignores the real issue why the Liberal Party lost – immigration.

Both major parties essentially vie for the favour of foreigners and take the votes of White Australians for granted. The Liberal Party will always be at a disadvantage in this auction because Labor is better at bribing foreigners, and what should be the Liberal Party’s natural constituency – White Australians – are betrayed and we take our votes elsewhere.

There will be no pendulum swing. The Liberal Party is doomed to terminal decline. The Noticer has hosted an excellent discussion of what a post-Liberal Party future will look like. Australia’s nationalists are making it happen, laying the foundations for a political party, and dominating the news cycle and the political agenda during an election campaign.

Early on in the election campaign the ABC was forced to commission a hit-piece dedicated entirely to The Noticer. This is a huge achievement, something The XYZ could never force them to do, which indicates just how scared the establishment is.

This fear becomes further apparent when we dissect the voting results of the 2025, 2022, 2019 and 2016 elections.

2025 Australian federal elections. From AEC.
2022 Australian federal elections. From AEC.
2019 Australian federal elections. From AEC.
2016 Australian federal election. From AEC.

We see a steady increase in Labor’s vote due to mass replacement immigration, a steady decrease in the Coalition’s vote for the same reason, and perennial fluctuation for the Greens. The biggest change has occurred in the size of the vote for independent parties to the right of the coalition post-Covid. Doing some very rough rounding off, it was about three quarters of a million in 2016, 1.2 million in 2019, and approximately 1.6 million in 2022 and 2025 (80% counted).

Covid Tyranny, censorship and the suppression of political dissidents has boosted the power of the state, and mass immigration has literally imported voters for the uniparty. However these anti-Australian policies have doubled support for parties to the right of the coalition, a persistent and growing bloc which now rivals the Greens. The coming electoral cycles will be characterised by a combination of amalgamations and intense competition amongst independent right wing parties.

It is a process Australia’s nationalists will win, because they directly, explicitly and exclusively assert the interests of White Australians. Parties, movements and newspaper editors on the right are always advised to tone it down, to not be too “divisive” and build a broad base of support. This misdirects the fact that it is mass immigration and “multiculturalism” which causes division, and in advocating for our own interests, Australian nationalists are merely doing what every other ethnic and religious faction in the country is doing.

This is precisely why electoral support for minor parties on the right fluctuates, the parties come and go, and they rarely gain seats in the House of Representatives. Their message may be less diluted than the Liberal Party, but it’s still diluted. Donald Trump has demonstrated that the only way to mobilise mass support on the right is to say what you mean and to mean exactly what you say.

Moreover, Trump mobilised disengaged White Americans, something Australia’s nationalists can emulate. Voter turnout in Australian federal elections is generally around 90%, and informal votes generally hover between 700,000 to 800,000. (The AEC currently records an 80% turnout, but with 80% of the vote counted this is likely to increase.)

This roughly equates to a bloc of 2-2.5 million votes disengaged from the political process. Many of these will be foreigners who don’t know how to vote, and many native White Aussies who don’t care and never will. However a strong leader with a clear message could swell the nationalist voting bloc by hundreds of thousands at the very least, because if people who don’t usually vote see a point in voting, they’ll vote.

While the bloc on the nationalist right should consolidate and grow, it is also likely that the vote on the left will fragment, dissipate and, frankly, die off.

Whether they are Labor, Liberal or Teal voters, the boomers are vaxxed up to the eyeballs, they don’t have very long to go. Labor hopes it can import voters to replace dying boomers, but this will at best only maintain support. Importing voters will fail for the same reason importing “new Australians” will fail – they’re importing the world’s problems.

Conflicting interests will ultimately incentivise ethnic and religious factions to form their own parties, a process already underway. Eventually the Labor and Liberal parties will merge (as seen in Europe) formalising their status as the uniparty. This may stave off the inevitable for an election or two, but will delegitimise them even further.

The era of stable government will soon come to an end, despite the best efforts of the rigged Westminster system. Australia’s nationalists are laying the foundations to make the most of the opportunities this affords, and an analysis of Australia’s voting patterns indicates a constituency exists for electoral success.

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