Lidia Thorpe has invaded the American pro-nuclear energy activist Grace Stanke's press conference in parliament and confused it.
Thorpe shouted: 'You have no permission for nuclear in Australia' and 'You poison the children of your children' during the visit of the American on Wednesday morning.
Mrs Stanke is a nuclear engineer, model and beauty queen that Miss America 2023 has won.
The 22-year-old studied nuclear engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and tours Australia for nuclear energy, during a trip that was partially financed by Dick Smith.
Smith told Daily Mail Australia that Mrs. Stanke is 'clearly very capable' and he will meet her during a dinner in Sydney on Wednesday evening.
In response to Thorpe's eruption, Mr. Smith said: 'That will create some publicity for this important issue, I think it is good.
'I am very worried about climate change for our grandchildren and we need as much discussion as possible.
“My strong opinion is that the only way we can reduce carbon to very low levels is nuclear.”
Lidia Thorpe rushed into the American pro-nuclear energy activist Grace Stanke's press conference in parliament and began to hang it
Grace Stanke is an American nuclear engineer, model and beauty queen who won Miss America 2023
Dick Smith, who partially funded Mrs. Stanke's tour, said he was happy that Thorpe gave publicity to the nuclear issue
He added that he had many left -wing friends who are completely and completely against nuclear and it is like a religion with them. “
“I am pro-renewable energy sources, but I think it is delusions to lead the country on it.”
The experienced businessman emerged earlier to support the nuclear plan of opposition leader Peter Dutton.
Last year, Dutton promised to build seven public nuclear power plants in Australia, with predictions the first online from the middle to late 2030s.
He has argued that nuclear will be crucial for stopping blackouts and lowering electricity accounts.
He also said that his $ 331 billion plan will be 44 percent cheaper than the Labor program to almost replace coal and gas power with solar and wind energy within 15 years.
The Labor plan is for renewable energy to include 82 percent of Australia's energy generation by 2030, rising to 98 percent in 2040 based on solar and wind.
Both parties of politics support a net zero by 2050 goal, but the coalition sees nuclear that is 38 percent of the electricity generation of Australia by that time, in which solar and wind energy makes up 49 percent.