Ms Thorpe, wearing a native fur coat (pictured), repeatedly shouted, 'Not my king,' before she was ejected from the room by security on Monday

Lidia Thorpe’s outburst at Parliament during King Charles III’s visit is just the latest in a long list of controversial stunts the independent senator has masterminded. 

From defending her bikie ex-boyfriend from deportation to screaming profanities outside a Melbourne strip club at 3am, Ms Thorpe, 51, has kept Australians on their toes since she was sworn into the Senate in 2022.

Yet she managed to top her list of stunts on Monday when she aggressively interrupted King Charles’ royal welcome at Parliament in front of stunned guests.

Shortly after His Majesty finished his speech praising Australia, Ms Thorpe launched into a foul-mouthed tirade by screaming ‘f**k the colony’ and ‘you are not my king’.

‘You committed genocide against our people,’ she shouted, cloaked in a native fur coat.

‘Give us our land back. Give us what you stole from us.

‘Our bones, our skulls, our babies, our people. You destroyed our land.

‘Give us our treaties. We want a treaty in this country. You are a genocidalist. This is not your land, this is not your land.’

Ms Thorpe, wearing a native fur coat (pictured), repeatedly shouted, 'Not my king,' before she was ejected from the room by security on Monday

Ms Thorpe, wearing a native fur coat (pictured), repeatedly shouted, ‘Not my king,’ before she was ejected from the room by security on Monday

Ms Thorpe (pictured at a protest in 2022) has repeatedly made headlines for her divisive protests and opinions

Ms Thorpe (pictured at a protest in 2022) has repeatedly made headlines for her divisive protests and opinions

Ms Thorpe then repeatedly shouted, ‘not my king,’ before she was ejected from the room by security.

She was formerly a member of the Greens before leaving the party and declaring herself an independent in February 2023 during her No campaign against an Indigenous Voice to Parliament.

‘Now I will be able to speak freely on all issues from a sovereign perspective without being constrained by portfolios and agreed party positions,’ she said at the time.

‘Greens MPs, members and supporters have told me they want to support the voice. This is at odds with the community of activists who are saying treaty before voice.’

In September 2022, shortly after taking her position in Senate, she faced harsh backlash after leading a protest that smeared the wrong coat of arms with fake blood during an anti-monarchy protest.

Thousands of protesters had rallied against British colonisation in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Canberra during the national day of mourning for Queen Elizabeth II.

The most dramatic scenes were in Melbourne – where demonstrators set fire to the Australian flag and smeared a royal emblem with red dye.

Thorpe was infamously filmed verbally attacking a group of men outside a Melbourne strip club (pictured)

Thorpe was infamously filmed verbally attacking a group of men outside a Melbourne strip club (pictured)

In early 2023, Ms Thorpe (pictured) disrupted a 'Let Woman Speak' event outside Parliament House in Canberra held by controversial women's rights campaigner Kellie-Jay Keen-Minshull

In early 2023, Ms Thorpe (pictured) disrupted a ‘Let Woman Speak’ event outside Parliament House in Canberra held by controversial women’s rights campaigner Kellie-Jay Keen-Minshull

However, protesters demonstrating outside the building that houses the British consulate unknowingly smeared the wrong royal emblem with fake blood – vandalising the coat of arms for the Portuguese monarchy.

Ms Thorpe was a leading voice in the protest, addressing the crowd with hands dripping with fake blood. 

‘The Crown has blood on their hands. Our people are still dying in this country every single day,’ she said.

‘The Crown’s boot is on our neck and we’re sick of it.’

She followed the stunt with more antics in 2023 – including getting into an infamous row outside a Melbourne strip club.

David Ross, the general manager of Maxine’s Gentlemen’s Club in north Melbourne, previously told Daily Mail Australia Ms Thorpe had been approaching ‘white men’ and ‘telling them that they’d stolen her land’ before the viral 3am spray.

The senator was filmed as she let loose on a group of men, telling one ‘you’ve got a small penis’ and another ‘you’re marked’ in a menacing tone. 

One of the men called her a ‘racist dog’ to which she responded ‘f*** you’ as a friend held her back.

She told the men: ‘All I want to say to the black brothers there and anyone that we’re fighting… 

‘Any black man that stands with the f****** white little c*** like that – yous (sic) can all get f***** too!’ 

One of the men then asked: ‘How the f**** does someone get in parliament like you?’

She hit back: ‘We’ve been repressed all our f***** life in this country and you let this little dog speak.’

Ms Thorpe's previous relationship with bikie boss Dean Martin (pictured together) was drawn back into the spotlight earlier this year after she claimed the government had made a mistake in cancelling his visa on character grounds

Ms Thorpe’s previous relationship with bikie boss Dean Martin (pictured together) was drawn back into the spotlight earlier this year after she claimed the government had made a mistake in cancelling his visa on character grounds

Ms Thorpe faced backlash after demonstrators at a protest she led smeared fake blood on the wrong coat of arms (pictured)

Ms Thorpe faced backlash after demonstrators at a protest she led smeared fake blood on the wrong coat of arms (pictured)

After reviewing footage of Ms Thorpe’s confrontation, Mr Ross said she would not be welcome back at the strip club. 

In February 2023, Ms Thorpe clashed with police after interrupting Sydney’s Mardi Gras parade.

She had laid down in the middle of the procession as it made its way along Oxford St, prompting the large crowd to ‘boo’ at her.

Daily Mail Australia watched as Ms Thorpe suddenly crashed the police section of the parade holding her arms crossed above her head yelling ‘f**k the police’.

After chasing down officers as they marched, she repeatedly yelled her slogan in their faces as others confronted her.

She then jumped in front of the Australian Federal Police float and laid down on the ground, bringing it to a stop.

Ms Thorpe later said she was ‘proud’ of her action.

‘Black and brown trans women started the first pride march as a protest against police violence,’ she wrote on Twitter.

‘Today, we still face violence from police. Proud to have joined the #PrideInProtest float in Sydney to say #NoPrideInGenocide, #NoPrideInPrisons and #NoCopsInPride.’

Ms Thorpe’s previous relationship with former bikie boss Dean Martin was drawn back into the spotlight earlier this year after she claimed the government had made a mistake in cancelling his visa on character grounds.

The New Zealander is a former national president of the Rebels bikie gang and infamously dated Ms Thorpe while she was on a committee investigating bikie gangs.

In 2022, Ms Thorpe (right) marched onto the floor of Parliament with a Black Power salute to give her parliamentary oath

In 2022, Ms Thorpe (right) marched onto the floor of Parliament with a Black Power salute to give her parliamentary oath

Despite claims she was quietly booted from the Greens for failing to disclose the relationship, Ms Thorpe came to Martin’s defence in July.

Ms Thorpe said while she hasn’t spoken to Martin, she believed ‘the government had made a mistake with this decision’.

‘Mr Martin has proof, support and recognition that he is Aboriginal from Elders and community in Lutruwita Tasmania,’ she said.

‘We’ve already seen the High Court rule in 2020 that the Commonwealth lacks constitutional power to deport First Peoples under the Migration Act.

‘The 2020 ruling reflected the Mabo decision, which recognised that First Peoples’ connection to this country has never been severed.’

Martin did manage to avoid deportation in August after proving his Indigenous heritage.

Ms Thorpe has also made enemies within other left-wing movements and in early 2023 disrupted a ‘Let Woman Speak’ event outside Parliament House in Canberra held by controversial women’s rights campaigner Kellie-Jay Keen-Minshull. 

Draped in an Aboriginal flag, Ms Thorpe made a beeline toward Ms Keen-Minshull, before she was intercepted and taken down by police. 

She crawled along the lawn and made her way toward a group of more than 100 pro-trans counter-protesters.

The independent ‘black sovereignty’ movement senator later claimed she was ‘pulverised’ by police and said Ms Keen-Minshull – who she referred to as ‘filth’ – should not be allowed to speak on Aboriginal land.

Even Ms Thorpe’s first act as a senator was controversial.

Ms Thorpe (pictured amongst the crowd) on Monday told King Charles: 'You committed genocide against our people'

Ms Thorpe (pictured amongst the crowd) on Monday told King Charles: ‘You committed genocide against our people’

She had marched onto the floor of Parliament with a Black Power salute to give her parliamentary oath.  

After raising her right fist, Ms Thorpe sarcastically swore to serve the monarchy. 

She added her own twist on the oath, saying: ‘I will be faithful and I bear true allegiance to the colonising Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second.’

You May Also Like

The NGO Complex Is Irredeemably Corrupt

The NGO Complex Is Irredeemably Corrupt

Woman is found dead at Port Melbourne

By CAITLIN POWELL FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA Published: 21:50 EDT, 2 April…

China vows to counter Trump's 'bullying' tariffs as global trade war escalates

China has vowed to hit back after President Donald Trump announced major…

Tesla Vandals Keep Getting Caught, Democrats Keep Staying Silent

There are two stories here. Once is the ongoing wave of…