A ONE Nation candidate in Bruce has been unable to find a distributor to deliver his white-supremacist pamphlets, but has won preferences from Family First.
Neil Henry Smith, who ran as a self-proclaimed "racist" in Mt Waverley in last year's state election, has reprised his platform of restricting immigration to "people of white, European and Christian backgrounds".
In an election pamphlet he states: "That treacherous Liberal Party has turned Glen Waverley into a suburb of Beijing and instigated the genocide destruction of our white Australian identity.
"Vote 1 Neil Henry Smith One Nation to enforce a 100 years moratorium on coloured immigration."
While Labor, Liberal and Australian Democrats candidates have preferenced Mr Smith last in a seven-candidate field, Mr Smith won No.4 on the Family First ticket.
Family First candidate Bronwyn Rawlins placed Mr Smith ahead of Labor MP Alan Griffin, Democrats candidate Richard Grossi and the Greens' Rob Cassidy.
The move mirrors Family First's decision to preference One Nation ahead of Labor, Liberal, Democrats and Greens in the Senate.
Ms Rawlins said Family First had preferenced the Coalition because the Labor Party walked away from preference negotiations with Family First and chose to do a deal with the "extreme" Greens.
"One Nation has no chance of getting elected in Bruce and, on that basis, Family First based its preference decisions on keeping out the other parties which do have a chance of being elected."
Christian Democratic Party candidate Sandra Herrmann, who preferenced Mr Smith second-last ahead of the Greens, said she was "poles apart" from the One Nation candidate - though she advocates a 10-year moratorium on Muslim immigration.
"I don't hate Muslims. I'm a Christian, and I sincerely love all Muslims ... I have a huge issue with the ideology of Islam.
"I do not support Neil Henry Smith's call to stop coloured immigration. It is not the colour that is the problem, it is whether the race or people concerned have respect for the Judeo-Christian principles and freedoms we hold dear in Australia."
Mr Griffin, Mr Grossi and Mr Cassidy condemned Family First's preferences for One Nation.
Last week, Mr Smith told the Journal his election pamphlet was knocked back by a Bayswater distribution company, Red Cap Distributors, and so he would be personally hand-delivering several thousand of his 50,000 brochures.