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LIVE: Election 2025 – Pauline Hanson’s daughter asked to recreate saucy ‘green panel van’ pic that has haunted her mother’s political career

Australians head to the polls in just four days.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton begins the day in Sydney, while Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will fly to Queensland to target the seats of Griffith and Brisbane, which are both held by the Greens.

Follow Daily Mail Australia’s live coverage of day 32 of the Federal Election campaign. 

Picture that has haunted Pauline

Pauline Hanson has revealed her and her daughter Lee, who is standing as a One Nation candidate this election, have had a good old laugh ‘clearing up a very funny rumour’.

In a video of the pair shared on social media, 42-year-old Lee says the campaign had been ‘amazing’.

‘But I’ve had a few quirky moments too,’ she adds.

‘So I have been asked to do a photo shoot on a Ford panel van for some reason?’

Her mother, rocking back on her heels, says: ‘Oh, god, that’s like that one of me on the panel van!’

Staring into the camera, the One Nation founder adds: ‘Let me make it quite clear: not me, never has been, never was – it isn’t me’.

‘Okay? Get over it people.’

Readers can make up their own minds about the resemblance or otherwise (pictured, below)..

Pauline Hanson

It is not the first time Senator Hanson has been caught up in a scantily-clad photo scandal.

In 2009, the Sunday Telegraph printed pictures of a supposed young Pauline Hanson in various states of undress.

‘Pauline betrayed: the secret photos hidden for 30 years,’ the headline screamed.

Except it wasn’t her – a fact she had told the paper pre-publication.

The paper later admitted it had ‘learnt a valuable lesson’ and apologised for any ‘hurt and embarrassment’ it caused.

‘Wizard of Oz’ election guru calls close election

Sir Lynton Crosby, the world-famous election strategist, has claimed the election will be ‘closer than many people think’.

Labor are riding high in the polls, with an exclusive Ipsos poll commissioned by Daily Mail Australia revealing last week that the PM’s personal approval rating has surged.

But Crosby, the man credited with John Howard’s election victories and for turning former UK PM Boris Johnson into a serious political player, warned people not to place all their faith in the polls, according to the Australian Financial Review.

He said that although polls were ‘accurate for what they measure’, they ‘don’t replicate what people face when they go into a polling place’.

Crosby, who has been variously described as the ‘Wizard of Oz’ and the ‘master of the dark political arts’, argued that the strength of local candidates can make the difference.

But the centre-right strategist was critical of the Coalition.

‘If I was to be critical in any way about the election campaign of the opposition in Australia at present, I worry that there’s not enough future focus,’ he reportedly told a private gentleman’s club on Monday.

‘Elections are about the future, so you have to have a story about the future and it has to be about how people’s lives can be better.’

Dutton drops ‘gotcha’ question – or does he?

The Opposition Leader was asked to name the inflation rate at a press conference this afternoon.

‘2.7 per cent is the answer to your question’, he responded confidently.

A quick Google search would suggest it is not. The current inflation rate for February – the latest available data – is 2.4 per cent.

Figures for the March quarter will be released tomorrow.

However, the underlying inflation rate, which removes the effects of volatile, is in fact 2.7 per cent.

Given the reporter did not specific which rate he was referring to, Dutton can claim it as a win.

Teal MP accused of using death for ‘political gain’

Teal MP Sophie Scamps has been accused of using the sudden death of an NRL player to ‘gain political points’.

Keith Titmuss (pictured, below), 20, died after a Manly Sea Eagles training session at the club’s Narrabeen training base in November 2020.

Scamps, the MP for Mackellar in Sydney’s northern beaches (pictured, bottom), has suggested Titmuss had been a victim of ‘lethal humidity’, caused by climate change.

‘With every rise of one degree in temperature you have seven degrees increased per cent in humidity, so the death of that young man – and I’m not saying – the death of the young man, the rugby league player when it was 33 degrees, a very humid day, died from heat stress – you know, after a training session,’ Scamps told an event in February.

‘That type of lethal humidity is something that the medical fraternity is getting more and more concerned about.’

Now Titmuss’s mother, Lafo, has told the Daily Telegraph she was ‘disappointed’ by Scamps’ comments, given the Deputy State Coroner Derek Lee did not mention ‘lethal humidity’ in his verdict.

Instead, Mr Lee found that the off-season training session was ‘more likely than not inappropriate’ given the high temperature and listed various other factors, such as Titmuss’s high body-mass index, that may have contributed to his death.

‘I’m disappointed that (Ms Scamps) is using my son’s name to try and gain political points when all she needed to do was read Derek Lee’s findings, which mention nothing about climate change,’ Ms Lafo told the paper.

Manly chief executive Tony Mestrov said that ‘lethal humidity’ or climate change was not mentioned in the coroner’s report.

’To suggest otherwise is insensitive and incorrect,’ he said.

A spokesperson for Ms Scamps said the footy player’s death was ‘caused by exertional heat stroke’.

‘As a doctor and former elite athlete, Sophie takes the threat of lethal humidity extremely seriously,’ the statement added.

‘As parents, we do not want our kids to have to train and compete in conditions that put their health at risk.’

Former PM weighs in on Welcome to Country debate

Former PM Tony Abbott has backed Dutton’s comments about Welcome to Country ceremonies being ‘overdone’.

‘Peter Dutton has done us all a favour by admitting and acknowledging that these things are overdone, and they certainly can be very out of place at things like Anzac Day ceremonies,’ Mr Abbott told 2GB radio.

Abbott said the practice by airlines like Qantas and Virgin of acknowledging the traditional custodians of the land was ‘absolutely grating’.

‘I mean, why is Melbourne suddenly the preserve of people, one group of people, as opposed to everyone who’s lived there?’, he added.

Dutton’s presser gate-crashed by protesters

The Opposition Leader was scheduled to hold a press conference at a junior footy club in the ultra-marginal seat of Gilmore.

That was, until anti-nuclear protesters had other ideas.

The demonstrators, dressed up as mad scientists in hazmat suits, had a stand-off with the waiting media as they sounded an air-raid siren and caused a ruckus.

The men pulled out a tape measure, claiming they were ‘’marking a spot for a nuclear reactor’.

Club officials remonstrated with them, with one saying: ‘Hey, we’re here for juniors’.

Dutton was whisked away from the event, but not before he’d had a chance to have a chat with a local dog-walker.

The Australian reported that the protesters identified themselves as being members of local trade union group the South Coast Labour Council – and they left in a car bearing a sign for the local Teal candidate.

NOWRA, AUSTRALIA - APRIL 29: Protesters interrupt a press opportunity with Opposition Leader Peter Dutton at St George's Basin Junior Rugby League Dragons Club on April 29, 2025 in Nowra, Australia. Australia will hold a federal election on May 3. (Photo by Dan Peled/Getty Images)
NOWRA, AUSTRALIA - APRIL 29: Protesters interrupt a press opportunity with Opposition Leader Peter Dutton at St George's Basin Junior Rugby League Dragons Club on April 29, 2025 in Nowra, Australia. Australia will hold a federal election on May 3. (Photo by Dan Peled/Getty Images)
NOWRA, AUSTRALIA - APRIL 29: Opposition Leader Peter Dutton visits St George's Basin Junior Rugby League Dragons Club on April 29, 2025 in Nowra, Australia. Australia will hold a federal election on May 3. (Photo by Dan Peled/Getty Images)

No law change over Welcome to Countries, Coalition confirms

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton sparked a national conversation when he claimed on Sunday night that Welcome to Countries were ‘overdone’.

But the Coalition will not be bringing in any laws about when and where the ceremonies can be confirmed.

In subsequent comments, Dutton clarified the occasions he thinks it’s appropriate to hold one: To clarify: the opening of Parliament.

But not on Anzac Day, on planes, at the footy or at the start of work meetings.

Now, Coalition campaign spokesperson James Paterson has confirmed it is a ‘matter for organisers’.

‘We’re not proposing new legislation or laws to dictate when there should or shouldn’t be Welcome to Countries,’ he told ABC News Breakfast.

‘We’ve said we think they’re appropriate at some events, and Peter’s given the good example of the opening of parliament.

‘He says he thinks it can be overdone. We’ve all seen events where on Zoom calls people are doing various Acknowledgements of Country or conferences where every single person does it.

‘It cheapens it if it’s tokenistic.’

Albo’s nemesis caught out on Anzac Day

Albo given very Aussie greeting

The PM certainly received very different greetings when he visited the seat of Banks in southern Sydney yesterday.

‘What happened to Labor Friends of Palestine! You are the establisher of Friends of Palestine, yet you don’t want to speak out!’, she screamed.

While Albanese’s media minders ensured that Darwich didn’t get too close, they couldn’t do anything about a passing motorist who chose that very moment to yell at the PM.

But, to undoubted relief, it was a very Australian endorsement of the Labor leader.

‘Albo, you sick c***t!’, the ute driver yelled.

The press pack were in hysterics. So too was the PM, who was captured grinning from ear-to ear inside his car.

Social media users were quick to laugh at the interaction.

One said: ‘No higher accolade’.

‘I love that Albo knew it was a compliment,’ one wrote.

Another called the PM a ‘legend’.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese gives a thumbs up after visiting an early voting polling place in Padstow in the electorate of Banks on Day 31 of the 2025 federal election campaign, Sydney, Monday, April 28, 2025. (AAP Image/Lukas Coch) NO ARCHIVING
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese laughs as he gets back into his car after visiting an early voting polling place in Padstow in the electorate of Banks on Day 31 of the 2025 federal election campaign, Sydney, Monday, April 28, 2025. (AAP Image/Lukas Coch) NO ARCHIVING

Push to end spam political texts

Millions of Aussies have been receiving unsolicited texts from Clive Palmer’s Trumpet of Patriots party during the federal election campaign.

It is understood that the party will have bought personal phone numbers from data harvesters, which they can then spam en masse.

This type of behaviour would be illegal if it was a private telemarketing company. But political parties are exempt.

‘Political parties are exempt from the Spam Act and the Privacy Act and are able to send unsolicited text messages without an opt-out option,’ an Australian Electoral Commission spokesperson told the ABC.

‘Any changes to these laws would be a matter for the Parliament to consider.’

And Independent MP Zali Steggall has said she is considering exactly that.

‘The crossbench, in fact, have been repeatedly pushing for changes to the Australian Electoral Commission laws to outlaw that spamming of voters because you can’t even opt out the way you do for commercial texting,’ Steggall told Today.

Until then, Aussies only really need to worry about the Trumpet of Patriot’s boss.

‘Only Clive Palmer has enough money to engage in scattergun tactics like texting every phone number they can get hold off,’ the ABC’s Anthony Green said.

Unseen moment during final leaders’ debate

Dutton’s office vandalised

A teenage girl has been charged after allegedly targeting Peter Dutton’s office in Arana Hills in Brisbane’s north-west overnight, 7News reports.

Red paint was splashed across the doors and over a portrait of the Opposition Leader.

The vandals reportedly left messages referencing Donald Trump, the war in Gaza, and Aboriginal land rights, including the slogan, ‘Always Was, Always Will Be’.

It marks the third time Dutton’s office has been targeted in as many weeks.

‘Around 2.30am police were called to Wye Street in Mitchelton following reports of four people in a red sedan acting suspiciously,’ a Queensland Police said.

‘The vehicle fled the scene before police arrived.

‘A police dog tracked a woman to Leslie Patrick Park and responding police located graffiti to a nearby building at Dawson Parade.

‘An 18-year-old Chapel Hill woman has been charged with one count of wilful damage and is expected to appear before Brisbane Magistrates Court on May 20.’

Peter DuttonAustralia Politics

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