The sentiment it created was clear: if the bloke who was deputy prime minister thinks the Coalition has lost its way, something in the system must be broken.Saturday night's win for One Nation may have triggered a sense of dread amongst Labor and Liberal operatives, but Hanson is just getting started.Seizing the regional NSW electorate of Farrer from the Liberals has removed it from Coalition hands for the first time in its 77-year history.Liberal leader Angus Taylor is now nearing three months in the job He argued that a year of chaos for the Coalition since the 2025 election, including two break-ups with the Nationals, had damaged his chances of retaining Farrer, which Sussan Ley vacated after being dumped as leader.Hanson's candidate, David Farley, leapt ahead of community independent Michelle Milthorpe as the seat turned from blue to orange.But some Liberals are privately arguing that the result in Farrer also demonstrates that Taylor, who vowed to stop the bleeding to One Nation in his pitch to colleagues to become leader, has not been able to cut through and reclaim its so-called base.In fact, Saturday night's result was so dire for the Liberals that the party recorded a first preference count of just 12.4 per cent.To put that in context, at the 2013 election, when Labor was thrown out of office, it still managed to get 17.24 per cent of first preferences in Mackellar, one of the safest Liberal seats in the country, then held by Bronwyn Bishop.We did not have to wait long on Saturday night to see grievance turn into electoral success for One Nation.The political landscape is suddenly deeply disrupted.This is no longer a case of angry voters parking their vote in an opinion poll with One Nation to send a message that they are pissed off