‘Don’t underestimate me’: Hanson dismisses questions she’s too old to lead

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‘Don’t underestimate me’: Hanson dismisses questions she’s too old to lead

One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has declared she is fit to serve as prime minister after turning 72 last week, as polling showed Labor falling behind One Nation.

One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has declared she is fit to serve as prime minister after turning 72 last week, as the government dismisses new polling that shows Labor falling behind the populist party for the first time.

Liberal MPs have blamed the latest polling, which placed the Coalition third, on the government for angering voters, as shadow treasurer Tim Wilson and former prime minister Tony Abbott clashed over the latter’s role as the party’s new federal president.

Asked on Monday during a radio appearance on 2GB if she would be ready and able to contest the next election, which is likely to be held when she is almost 74, Hanson said: “It will come down to my health. I’ve got nothing wrong with me. I take no medication, nothing. I’ve got more energy in me than a lot of these other people.”

“My staff are flat out keeping up with me from eight o’clock in the morning till 10, 11 o’clock at night. I can still run down the halls of parliament in my heels when I have to get to the chamber. So don’t underestimate me,” she said.

Hanson said she had instructed staff to “tap me on the shoulder” should she “become like a Joe Biden”. Robert Menzies is the oldest person to serve as prime minister, retiring at 71.

The poll is the first major survey to record One Nation with a higher primary vote than Labor.

In the most recent Resolve Political Monitor, published by this masthead on May 17, Labor recorded a primary vote of 29 per cent, One Nation 24 per cent and the Coalition 23 per cent.

Convention holds that the prime minister sits in the House of Representatives, and Hanson has started discussing a move from the Senate as her party’s polling has improved. There has been speculation that she could run in a number of Queensland electorates, including the Coalition-held seats of Capricornia and Wright or the Labor-held seats of Oxley and Blair.

Speaking to Sydney radio on Monday, Hanson said there was no constitutional requirement for the prime minister to sit in the House and that she would consider her options.

Health Minister Mark Butler dismissed the polling, which showed Labor in second place for the first time in this term of government.

“I wouldn’t read too much into the numbers. We’re two years out from an election. There’ll be a million polls between now and election day, which will determine future government,” Butler told ABC radio.

Wilson blamed the poll result on the government for angering voters with last month’s budget.

“We’re a political party that’s focused on building out a story and vision for the future of Australia. What Austra

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