November 8, 2024

‘How dare you’: Angry Lisa Wilkinson tells Pauline Hanson to ‘GO AWAY’ after the senator accused feminist protesters of ‘demonising men’

Pauline Hanson #PaulineHanson

Television identity Lisa Wilkinson has fired an angry response to Pauline Hanson after the One Nation leader accused feminist protesters of ‘demonising men.’

Senator Hanson also questioned parliamentary rape whistle blower Brittany Higgins for going public with her alleged ordeal two years after the event instead of pursuing the matter through the courts.

Ms Wilkinson, a long term presenter of The Project, didn’t mince her words in response.

‘Oh for Christ’s sake Pauline Hanson. How dare you,’ she tweeted on Tuesday afternoon.

‘You don’t know the first thing of the detail of Brittany Higgins’ experience. Go away and stop adding to the trauma. ‘Seriously, GO AWAY!’

Media identity Lisa Wilkinson called out Pauline Hanson, after the One Nation leader accused feminist protesters of 'demonising men' before lashing out at alleged rape victim Brittany Higgins

Media identity Lisa Wilkinson called out Pauline Hanson, after the One Nation leader accused feminist protesters of ‘demonising men’ before lashing out at alleged rape victim Brittany Higgins

Veteran media identity Lisa Wilkinson called out Pauline Hanson, accusing her of 'adding to the trauma'

Veteran media identity Lisa Wilkinson called out Pauline Hanson, accusing her of ‘adding to the trauma’

Thousands joined 40 rallies across Australia including in major cities Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Hobart on Monday (pictured, the protest in Brisbane)

Thousands joined 40 rallies across Australia including in major cities Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Hobart on Monday (pictured, the protest in Brisbane)

Pauline Hanson’s strong words came a day after March For Justice rallies took place across Australia which called for more action to stamp out sexual abuse and punish offenders.

‘Stop demonising men,’ Hanson told Sky News on Tuesday.

‘There are false allegations, there are men who have been accused of these things that didn’t, it didn’t happen.’

Pauline Hanson has accused feminist protesters of 'demonising men' before lashing out at alleged rape survivor Brittany Higgins

Pauline Hanson has accused feminist protesters of ‘demonising men’ before lashing out at alleged rape survivor Brittany Higgins

Ms Higgins, a former Liberal Party staffer, had a hand in kick-starting the movement after she went public with claims she had been raped by a colleague at Parliament House in 2019

Ms Higgins, a former Liberal Party staffer, had a hand in kick-starting the movement after she went public with claims she had been raped by a colleague at Parliament House in 2019

Thousands joined the March For Justice rallies across Australia on Monday, with the issue of sexual abuse stirred up by a historical rape allegation against Attorney General Christian Porter, which he denied.

Ms Higgins, a former Liberal Party staffer, kick-started the movement by going public with claims she was raped by a colleague at Parliament House in 2019.

‘For so long it felt like the people around me only cared because of where it happened and what it might mean for them,’ Ms Higgins told the crowd at Canberra’s rally.

‘It was so confusing because these people were my idols. I had dedicated my life to them. They were my social network, my colleagues and my family.

‘And suddenly they treated me differently. I wasn’t a person who had just gone through a life-changing traumatic event, I was a political problem.’ 

Hanson criticised Ms Higgins for waiting two years to speak out about the alleged rape, despite the now 26-year-old telling police immediately afterward.

‘Brittany Higgins, she had the right to go and lay those charges,’ she said.

Hanson criticised Ms Higgins for waiting two years to speak out about the alleged rape, despite the now 26-year-old telling police immediately after the alleged incident

Hanson criticised Ms Higgins for waiting two years to speak out about the alleged rape, despite the now 26-year-old telling police immediately after the alleged incident

Labor leader Anthony Albanese attended Monday's rally with a contingent of colleagues, along with the Greens and independents

Labor leader Anthony Albanese attended Monday’s rally with a contingent of colleagues, along with the Greens and independents

‘Take it to the courts. If you’ve got a case for assault then you take it to the courts.’

Hanson spoke from her family experiences in saying that false rape allegations can ‘destroy lives’. 

In 2019, the senator accused her son’s ex-wife of making false claims that he sexually abused his own child.

‘I know this feeling because for years my own son faced these destructive allegations in an attempt to stop him having access to his young son,’ she told the Senate at the time. 

‘My ex-daughter-in-law claimed to police that my son was outside her home in Townsville.

Signs including 'we are marching for everyone's daughters', 'stop violence against women' and 'it's time for men to change' were visible in the crowd in Canberra

Signs including ‘we are marching for everyone’s daughters’, ‘stop violence against women’ and ‘it’s time for men to change’ were visible in the crowd in Canberra

Brittany Higgins speaks at the Canberra Women's March 4 Justice on March 15 in Canberra

Brittany Higgins speaks at the Canberra Women’s March 4 Justice on March 15 in Canberra

‘That was despite him being sick and on the Gold Coast, some 1,000 kilometres away. He was forced to defend himself, at enormous expense, and was dragged through the courts.

‘She also falsely alleged – a soul-crushing claim – that my son had sexually abused his boy. Again, the false claim was designed to stop him having any connection with his son. No charges were brought against my son.’ 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who was a focus of criticism at the rallies for resisting an independent inquiry into the allegations against Mr Porter, had offered to meet protest leaders behind closed doors but they refused and demanded he attend.

Labor leader Anthony Albanese did go to Monday’s rally with a contingent of colleagues, along with the Greens and independents.

Signs including ‘we are marching for everyone’s daughters’, ‘stop violence against women’ and ‘it’s time for men to change’ were visible in the crowd.

Protesters handed a petition backed by 94,000 people to Labor MP Tanya Plibersek and Greens senator Larissa Waters, to present to parliament. 

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