First, it’s wrong and usually even offensive to say ‘Hello natives’. Here, it really isn’t because we know from your other mistakes that your English level isn’t that high.
Better is:
I have a question for native speakers of English. (To be honest, the very definition of being a ‘native speaker’ is rather vague but unfortunately English doesn’t have a better term.)
The best things to say are:
Native speakers of English
Native speakers of English from (America, England, Britain, the UK, the US, Australia etc)
Native English speakers
‘English native speaker’ is technically grammatically wrong because ‘speaker’ or ‘native speaker’ isn’t the relevant noun, ‘English speaker’ is. But it’s the type of the error that’s common.
For example, I could easily say ‘I’m a native speaker’, but only if from the context we know that we are talking about a specific language, in my case, English. I.e. it would be short for ‘native English speaker’. But it doesn’t make sense to shorten the phrase and then add back the word in the wrong place. It suggests that you’re trying to convey a different meaning.
For example, if we know we are talking about the English language, it would be correct, grammatically at least, to say
“I say ‘boot’ and I’m an English native speaker. Don’t worry about what those Americans say.” That would be short for ‘I’m a native English speaker from England’.