By John Wayne on Wednesday, 22 May 2024
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

Two Thirds of Australians Want Lower Immigration, but They Won’t Get it Without Mass Protests, By James Reed

Last financial year's net overseas migration (NOM) numbers were 528,000, which is not counting the "silent" immigration factor of overseas students, who almost all stay, especially those from India, as covered in previous blog pieces. Opinion polls have shown massive opposition by the Australian public to mass immigration such as now being experiencing which has led to the worst accommodation crisis in Australian history.

A recent poll by Resolve Political Monitor, shows that two thirds of voters are opposed to the present level of immigration, and even 50 percent believed that the proposed cuts to 260,000 levels in 2024-25 are "too high" as well. Labor ran in the last election on a low immigration platform, only to double cross the voters once they got power, to keep the Big Australia lobby in continuous profits, while too many Aussies live in tent cities.

The Liberals, if they had any sense at all, would ditch Dutton and put in place Senator Price as Opposition leader. She showed her strength in the No campaign of the Voice, and would be a fine prime minister, ticking all the boxes, being indigenous, and a woman. She could slash immigration and push for nationalism and conservative values, and brush aside the "racism" cry that leads Liberal Whites to collapse in a puddle. What do you think?

https://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2024/05/two-thirds-of-australians-want-lower-immigration/n

"Prior to the pandemic, almost every opinion poll showed that Australians do not support high levels of immigration. For example:

Polling released earlier this year also showed that Australians want substantial cuts to immigration:

New polling from Resolve Political Monitor shows that two-thirds of Australians believe that last financial year's net overseas migration (NOM) numbers of 528,000 were "too high".

Exactly half also believe that the federal government's projected NOM cuts to 260,000 in 2024-25 are "too high."

Voters have also lost trust in Labor on immigration, with 60% believing the government has handled migration in an "unplanned and unmanaged way" and only 20% believing immigration was being run in a "carefully planned and managed way."

"Immigration is becoming a growing issue", said Resolve director Jim Reed. "This isn't a product of who is coming here or why, but the sheer quantum".

Almost every Australian knows somebody who has been adversely impacted by the rental crisis, which has been driven by Labor's record immigration.

Remember also that Labor promised to run a lower immigration program before the last federal election only to then double-cross voters and ramp immigration to record highs.

No wonder Australians are angry. They have every right to be."

Let the protests begin. 

Leave Comments