Clive Palmer's Patriot Trumpet Despite Text Spam and Ad Blitz | Australian Election 2025

What is what is spent on tens of millions of dollars in advertising and bombing people’s texts? Nothing if you're Clive Palmer - at least in the House.

Palmer's recent party, Patriots, won't win a small house seat, with only 1.85% of the national vote as of Saturday noon. The marijuana legalization of only $6,200 on social media ads in the past 30 days has won 1.14% of the vote so far.

How much did Palmer's party spend on this campaign. He told the Telegraph that he spent as much as $60 million, but the figure has not been independently verified. Public records show that the party spent more than $5 million on YouTube ads and $1.2 million on Meta ads.

It’s too early to say whether minors will win enough votes and preferences to secure a Senate seat. Its best chance is in Queensland, but it currently has less than one-third of the required quota. This result may have been a few days.

Palmer said on Channel 7 on Saturday night that advertising spending “inspired debate” and claimed to appreciate the challenge discussions that welcomed the national ceremony, which his party strongly criticized.

“I think we can win some Senate seats and play a very important role in the next parliament,” Palmer told Channel 7.

During the election campaign, the front page of nine newspapers released an advertisement for “We don’t need to welcome our country we don’t need to welcome our country”. Welcome to the country address a few hours later, the ANZAC DAY DAWN Services was interrupted, and similar ads surrounded the homepage of News.com.au.

Patriots leader Suellen Wrightson, who appeared on lengthy TV commercials during prime time, was not close to the vote that affected the location of Hanter coal mining in NSW, receiving only 2,855 votes, or about 3.3% of the vote so far. Legalizing Australian marijuana has received 4.98% of the vote.

On Saturday night, Wrightson thanked Hunter for his candidate at Hunter for “the respect and engaging debate about the respect we need in our community.”

"One thing we can all agree on is that Australia is the best country on earth and our collective future is worth fighting for," Wrightson said.

In the final weeks of the campaign, Patriot Trumpet's preferences did cause some confusion. A country has changed its voting card to allow nationals and liberals to raise higher and higher trumpets at the last minute to keep the Union MPs going.

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"Australia needs many policies from the Trump administration, which will effectively get Australia back on track," Wrightson said in April when launching the Patriots' trumpet. The yellow hat says "again makes Australia great again". American journalist Tucker Carlson published in the lawsuit.

In Saturday night's victory speech, Anthony Albanese criticized attempts to imitate foreign political movements in Australia, but did not specifically mention the Patriots' United States or Trumpet.

“Australians choose to face global challenges in an Australian way and take care of each other as they build their future for the future,” Albanes said.

While the trumpet text has angered many Australians, the practice is not new or illegal. Australian political parties are exempt from privacy laws and anti-spam rules. Although there is no same frequency, this is also a bipartisan practice.

On the last day of the 2022 election, the Liberal Party used unsolicited text messages about the arrival of asylum seekers' ships and the 2016 campaign, and Labor sent messages about Medicare. Independent Congressman Monique Ryan also sent them during this campaign.