ss BREAKING NEWS: Australia is on edge after a jaw-dropping intervention from mining billionaire Gina Rinehart, who openly declared that Anthony Albanese is “not worthy” of being Prime Minister and demanded his immediate resignation in the aftermath of the Bondi tragedy. Her blistering words—accusing Albanese of having no right to attend memorials or seek forgiveness—have ignited nationwide outrage. Streets are filling with protesters, support for Pauline Hanson…

Australia is on the brink of a political earthquake as mining magnate Gina Rinehart, the nation’s wealthiest individual with a fortune exceeding $40 billion, has unleashed a blistering attack on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, demanding his immediate resignation in the wake of the devastating Bondi Beach terrorist attack.
In a shocking public statement released yesterday, Rinehart declared: “HE SHOULD NOT BE PRIME MINISTER BECAUSE HE IS NOT WORTHY OF IT!” She went further, insisting that Albanese “should leave this farewell ceremony because he is not worthy of visiting and seeking forgiveness from them,” referring to the memorial for the 15 victims of the December 14, 2025, mass shooting at a Hanukkah celebration.
Rinehart’s intervention has supercharged a nationwide fury, with thousands flooding the streets in protests, chanting support for One Nation leader Pauline Hanson as a viable alternative to what many now brand as Albanese’s “weak and indecisive” leadership.
This bombshell threatens to fracture the Labor Party and topple Albanese’s grip on power.

The Bondi Beach tragedy – where two Islamic State-inspired gunmen opened fire on families celebrating Hanukkah, killing 15 including a child and injuring dozens – has exposed deep vulnerabilities in Australia’s immigration and security policies under Albanese’s watch.
Eyewitnesses described scenes of unimaginable horror at one of Sydney’s most beloved landmarks, a place of joy turned into a killing field. Yet, instead of decisive action, Australians witnessed Albanese being booed at the memorial vigil on December 21, a humiliating moment that underscored his detachment from public grief.
Rinehart, a longtime critic of soft border policies, seized the moment to voice what millions are thinking: Albanese’s lax approach to migration has invited disaster, and he lacks the moral authority to lead.
Rinehart’s scathing words didn’t stop at resignation calls.
In a leaked private correspondence amplified across social media – which sources close to her confirm reflects her views – she allegedly blasted Albanese as “a spineless globalist who floods our shores with unvetted risks for cheap votes and corporate handouts, while real Australians bleed on our beaches.” She accused him of prioritizing “woke diversity agendas” over national security, stating shockingly: “Albanese would rather hug extremists than protect our kids – he’s sold Australia’s soul for a pat on the back from the UN elites.
If he won’t resign, the people will force him out!” This explosive rhetoric has gone viral, fueling protests in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and Perth, where crowds wave signs reading “Albo Out Now!” and “Hanson for PM!”

Pauline Hanson, the fiery One Nation senator who has warned for decades about unchecked immigration, has emerged as the protest movement’s hero. Thousands of demonstrators explicitly back her as Albanese’s replacement, viewing her tough stance on borders as the antidote to Labor’s failures.
Hanson, whose party is surging in polls amid migration backlash, addressed a massive rally in Brisbane: “Albanese’s open-door policy let these monsters in – he’s weak, he’s indecisive, and he’s got blood on his hands! Gina Rinehart is right: he’s not worthy.
Australia needs a leader who puts Aussies first, not globalist sell-outs.” In a jaw-dropping escalation, Hanson dropped her own bombshell: “Albanese is a traitor hiding behind gun control distractions while radicals walk our streets. He’s turned Australia into a soft target – resign, or we’ll make you!”
The roots of this crisis trace back to Albanese’s post-2022 policies, which saw net overseas migration explode to over 500,000 annually, many through streamlined visas with reduced checks. Critics, including security experts from the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, have long warned of “infiltration risks” from high-risk regions.
The Bondi attackers – a father-son duo linked to Islamic State ideology – exemplify these failures, entering via pathways critics say were loosened under Labor’s “compassionate” reforms.
Rinehart, echoing Hanson’s longstanding calls to slash intake to 130,000 per year, lambasted Albanese for ignoring warnings: “He’s too busy virtue-signaling to secure our borders. This attack wasn’t inevitable – it was Albanese-made!”
Protests have swelled, with thousands marching despite heavy police presence. In Sydney, near Bondi, demonstrators clashed with authorities, demanding accountability. Social media erupts with #AlboResign and #HansonForAustralia, trending worldwide. Even within Labor, cracks appear: anonymous backbenchers whisper of leadership challenges, fearing electoral annihilation.
Petitions calling for Albanese’s ouster have surpassed 200,000 signatures, amplified by Rinehart’s influence.

Rinehart’s bold stand isn’t new – she’s a vocal advocate for Trump-style policies, deregulation, and strong borders. In private circles, she’s reportedly fumed: “Albanese is destroying what makes Australia great – safe streets, strong identity. He’s unworthy because he betrays every hardworking Aussie for foreign agendas.
Step down, or be dragged down!” Her wealth and platform give her words unparalleled reach, galvanizing conservatives disillusioned with the Coalition’s moderation.
Hanson, riding a polling resurgence to levels not seen since the 1990s, positions herself as the people’s champion. “For 30 years, I’ve fought this fight alone,” she thundered at a rally. “Now, with Gina speaking truth, Australians see Albanese for the weak leader he is.
He’s indecisive on terror, soft on borders – a danger to us all!” In a shocking private leak attributed to her camp: “If Albanese stays, more Bondis await. He’s not just unworthy – he’s complicit in our downfall!”
This uproar threatens Labor’s foundations. Albanese’s silence on Rinehart’s attack speaks volumes, as does his pivot to gun laws – dismissed by critics as deflection from immigration roots. Opposition figures, sensing blood, pile on, with some whispering Hanson could be a coalition partner or even successor in a hung parliament.
Australia reels from grief and rage. The Bondi massacre has become a catalyst for reckoning: weak leadership invited terror, and voices like Rinehart and Hanson demand change. As protests grow, Albanese’s seat teeters.
Will he heed the call and resign, restoring dignity? Or will his indecisiveness seal his fate? One thing is clear: the wave of anger, fueled by Rinehart’s thunder and Hanson’s fire, could reshape Australian politics forever. The people have spoken – Albanese is unworthy.

