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Home World NewsNews live: PM says he ‘volunteered’ support for removing former prince Andrew from succession; One Nation just behind Labor in new poll | Australia news

News live: PM says he ‘volunteered’ support for removing former prince Andrew from succession; One Nation just behind Labor in new poll | Australia news

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PM says Australia ‘volunteered’ support to remove former prince Andrew from line of succession

Prime minister Anthony Albanese said he had spoken to his UK counterpart, Keir Starmer, and said he would support former prince Andrew being removed from the line of succession.

Albanese was asked on RN Breakfast directly if he believes Mountbatten-Windsor should be removed from the line of succession. The prime minister said:

double quotation markI certainly do. And I think that Australians will as well. These are very serious allegations. Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor will face the full force of the law.

I’ve written to prime minister Keir Starmer and I’ve engaged with him as well directly overnight to confirm that my government would agree to any proposal to remove him from the line of royal commitment secession.

Albanese said he wasn’t asked to provide his position to the UK, but had “volunteered” it. He said of his conversation with Starmer:

double quotation markWe engaged, and he thanked me for our position.

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Tom McIlroy

Tom McIlroy

A deeper look at One Nation’s big gains in latest polls

We brought you the latest Capital Brief/DemosAU federal poll results earlier this morning, showing One Nation with a primary vote of 28%, just one percentage point behind Labor on 29%.

The poll continues the bad news for the Coalition, who are in third place, with 21% primary support.

While the results include rough seat projections – suggesting One Nation could win between 23 and 54 seats to become the new opposition – it is worth taking a quick beat to consider the results.

A few things to keep in mind: the poll is the first since Angus Taylor replaced Sussan Ley as opposition leader and comes at the start of a big rebuild effort by the Liberal and National parties. Equally, One Nation are primarily a Senate-based party and has previously faced difficulty winning lower house seats.

One Nation leader Pauline Hanson. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

The minor party led by Pauline Hanson is dramatically scaling up right now, including to contest the South Australian state election, but so far we don’t know if they can translate strong poll results into on-the-ground wins.

Importantly, polls are only a snapshot of public sentiment at the time they are taken. The election is likely more than two years away and we’d expect the dynamics in federal politics to change in that time.

Even with all these caveats, the poll will be closely watched in federal politics and will be widely discussed in Parliament House today.

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