Jacqui Lambie's political future hangs in the balance as the battle for Tasmania's six senate seats continues to tighten.
As of Monday morning, provisional results indicate the state's final senate seat is expected to go to either Senator Lambie or One Nation.
According to the Australian Electoral Commission website the Labor Party currently has 2.44 quotas, the Liberals 1.54 quotas, the Greens 1.22 quotas.
The Jacqui Lambie Network follows with a provisional quota of 0.46 quotas, ahead of Pauline Hanson's One Nation who hold 0.38 quotas and the Legalise Cannabis Australia party with 0.27 of a quota.
Senator Lambie said she was disappointed the Liberals' decision to preference Pauline Hanson's One Nation ahead of her, saying the final result is "anyone's guess".
"The Liberals have put me nearly last in preferences and One Nation will get their preferences," she told The Mercury.
The Senator also said she was "sick of competing" against the funding of major parties.
"We haven't raised the cash we usually do from people giving us $10 or $20 because times are tough," she said.
"I only had about $600,000 for eight candidates."
Twelve parties were on Tasmania's Senate ballot paper in Tasmania, with Senator Lambie the only Indigenous candidate for either the House of Representatives or the senate.
More broadly, the federal election saw Yanyuwa Garrwa woman Senator Malarndirri McCarthy re-elected in the Northern Territory.
Wiradjuri MP Gordon Reid was also re-elected after retaining the Central Coast seat of Robertson with a healthy swing, and Tiwi woman Marion Scrymgour was returned as member for the Northern Territory seat of Lingiari.
Overall, Labor won the election by majority following a healthy two-party preferred swing of more than 4.6 per cent.