In boost for Australian PM Turnbull, right-wing party lost power to block his Bills

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull needed the support of Pauline Hanson's One Nation to get legislation passed. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

SYDNEY (REUTERS) - A defection from Australia's most prominent right-wing political party, Pauline Hanson's One Nation, on Thursday (June 14) robbed it of its ability to block Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull's legislation, raising the prospect he can introduce tax cuts.

Brian Burston, who will now sit in the Upper House Senate as an independent, resigned from One Nation over in-fighting, the latest blow to the party that re-emerged as a force in Australian politics in 2016.

Turnbull had often needed the support of One Nation to get legislation passed although the third-largest party in the Senate had recently blocked plans for corporate tax cuts, and threatened to block income tax cuts.

"Turnbull will now not run into a situation where Hanson rejects the government legislation," said Nick Economou, senior lecturer in politics at Monash University in Melbourne.

Burston has said he would support both tax cuts, although a vote is still likely to be very tight with widespread opposition from left-leaning lawmakers.

Turnbull, speaking after Burston's resignation, said the government would seek closer ties with independents in Parliament.

"Treating people with respect, seeking to persuade them, listen to their point of view, reach a compromise where necessary, that's all about getting things done," Turnbull told reporters in Tasmania.

Hanson made an unlikely but successful first run for Parliament while managing a fish-and-chip shop in 1996.

After using her maiden speech to warn the country would be "swamped by Asians", she co-founded the One Nation party.

It enjoyed early electoral success, before imploding over infighting.

Hanson re-entered the federal Parliament in 2016 on a platform of restricting Islamic migrants and foreign acquisitions of Australian assets, after a near two-decade absence.

But her party has now lost two senators to resignations, while a third was forced out of Parliament because he was a citizen of Britain at the time of his nomination, which is not allowed.

Turnbull's government responded to the challenge posed by Hanson with an "Australia first" drive, launched in 2017 and echoing US President Donald Trump's campaign slogan, tightening immigration and citizenship rules and drawing some voters away from her.

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