The political satirist who created Pauline Pantsdown is considering resurrecting the Hanson parody to coincide with the One Nation leader's return to federal politics.

University of New South Wales media lecturer and LGBTI activist, Simon Hunt, played music festival Homebake in the late 1990s on the back of two hit songs poking fun at the one-term Queensland MP, ABC News reports.

Since Ms Hanson's successful Senate bid in Saturday's election Mr Hunt said he had received dozens of messages from people "assuming Pauline Pantsdown will be back".

"I'm not sure yet, but it's what people want. I don't know whether it's useful or not," he said.

In 1997 Mr Hunt released the songs 'Backdoor Man' and 'I Don't Like It', which sampled Ms Hanson's voice.

'Backdoor Man', which included the line "I'm a backdoor man for the Ku Klux Klan with very horrendous plans", led to Ms Hanson suing the ABC for defamation when the song was played on Triple J.

Mr Hunt followed it up with 'I Don't Like It', which peaked at number 10 on the ARIA charts during the 1998 federal election campaign, where Ms Hanson lost her seat after one term.

As Ms Hanson's faded from the national stage Mr Hunt retired the character but her re-emergence has him questioning whether resurrecting Pauline Pantsdown will help or hurt the divisive politician.

Pauline Pantsdown.

"I always have to go with that idea of whether I am raising her stakes. Who are her supporters this time round, and am I helping her cause by satirising her?" Mr Hunt said.

"Last time when I had my 15 minutes of fame, it was Aboriginal people and Asian people who came up to me and said 'thank you for giving me a conduit to help me through the pain I felt'".