An Australian Senate candidate at the centre of a gun control controversy has resigned from his party after footage emerged of him touching dancers and making sexist remarks at a strip club.
The videos of Steve Dickson, of the anti-Islam One Nation party, were filmed in the US last year and broadcast on Australian TV on Monday.
Mr Dickson, who had been the minor party’s leader in Queensland, apologised for his actions.
Australia will hold an election in May.
In the videos, Mr Dickson can be seen touching dancers and making derogatory comments about Asian women inside the club in Washington DC.
On Tuesday, he said he was “deeply remorseful” and that “the footage shown does not reflect the person I am”.
One Nation leader Pauline Hanson accepted his resignation, describing his behaviour as “unacceptable”.
However, Mr Dickson’s name will remain on ballot papers for the 18 May election because it is too late for parties to announce new candidates.
Mr Dickson was embroiled in a scandal last month when secret recordings, made by media organisation Al Jazeera, showed him and another senior party official allegedly seeking political donations
MPs across the political spectrum expressed concerns that One Nation may be seeking to water down Australia’s strict control laws, introduced after a mass shooting in Tasmania in 1996 killed 35 people.