Pauline Hanson's One Nation
Immigration, Population and Social Cohesion Policy 1998
Introduction
Since British colonial settlement in 1788 the
Australian continent has had continuous population growth
initially fuelled by immigration. Migration began through
the desperate need of the British Government to find a
dumping ground for convicts who, together with the
military and a few free settlers, faced the problems of
carving out a life in the harsh environment of the Colony
of New South Wales.
No immigration philosophy existed in these early days
of European settlement, migration mainly being influenced
by events such as the gold rushes.
Between 1881 and 1888, because of the very real fear
of large scale Chinese immigration and of the consequent
availability of cheap labour, the union movement called
for restrictions on Chinese immigration. In response, the
colonies enacted such legislation, which reflected the
mood of the times. Indeed, in 1882 the Congress in
America similarly passed their Chinese Exclusion Act.
By the early post-federation period, the
implementation of economic protection provided the basis
for Australian nation building; premised upon the
conviction that national economic protection would
provide the basis for both fair wages and for labour and
business profitability. Business profitability would be
secured by protection from cheap imported goods and the
living standards of Australian workers would be protected
by preventing the entry of cheap foreign labour. In this
context, the Immigration Restriction Act was one of the
first pieces of legislation to be passed by the new
Australian Government in 1901.
Following the Second World War, the idea that a small
population added to Australia's vulnerability, together
with the imperative for accelerated economic development,
led to the introduction of a massive immigration program.
Although it initially relied upon migrants from Europe,
by the 1980's immigrations policy had been reorientated
towards Asia. This development reflected the end of the
post-war economic boom, a growing sense of economic
uncertainty, a loss of confidence in the ability of
national governments to manage their economies, and the
growing influence of global-market interests. During the
1980s and 1990s, under the influence of free-market
doctrines, and the belief that global markets ought take
precedence over national interests, integration with Asia
was promoted by elites as a key economic and social goal
for Australian society. Immigration numbers reached new
heights. To economic, political and itellectual elites,
immigration had become central to a perspective which
holds that inherited Australian institutions, culture and
identity are outmoded and expendable obstacles to the
establishment of a borderless world.
After 200 years of uncritical acceptance of the twin
policies of population growth and immigration we approach
the 21st century where times and circumstances have
changed.
It is now critical to develop a population policy for
Australia in order to decide immigration numbers
rationally and in the best interest of Australians. The
immigration policies of the major political parties
during the 1980s and 1990s have proven disastrous,
proceeding as if there was no balance of payments
problem, no foreign debt and no geographical or
environmental constraints to population growth. If
continued, such immigration policy will irreversibly
alter the natural and urban environments, economic
viability as well and undermining the maintenance and
further development of a unique and valuable Australian
identity and culture.
We believe accurate demographics are a pre-condition
to sensible debate and that the implementation of all
government policies, including immigration, should be
costed. The extent of all immigration costs, social,
environmental and economic must be tabled.
Australia's current immigration policy contains no
such costing and suffers from lack of justification. The
arguments used in previous eras to justify
immigration:populate or perish, defence, for economic
benefits and for the prevention of the burden of an
ageing population, are clearly wrong and have been
rejected. One can only speculate why the program
continues today.
The policy of immigration requires a process of
balance- on one hand concern for the individual migrant,
and on the other concern for the host country and its
people who will be accepting, supporting and providing a
new home for that immigrant. Unfortunately most of the
media and government concern has been for the migrant,
not for the other side of the equation. As Australia
accepts migrants, migrants should also accept, recognise
and value the opportunites Australia, her people, her
environment, her institutions and democratic system of
government extend to them.
We believe mass immigration is a concept whose time
has passed. Only five countries in the world now have
official immigration programs. ONE NATION wishes to see
our current policy replaced by a program where an annual
quota could be set to match the number of permanent
departures each year, that is up to a zero net
immigration program. This is not a zero immigration
program as it would admit in order of 30 000 migrants per
annum. Our policy is similar in numbers to the policies
of the Democrats and the Australian Conservation
Foundation and would be supported by the majority of
Australian people. The justification for our policy of
not exceeding zero net immigration is that:
environmentally Australia is near her carrying capacity,
economically immigration is unsustainable and socially,
if continued as is, will lead to an ethnically divided
Australia. Current policy is encouraging large numbers of
illegal migrants and it is time Australia, while
recognising the contribution made by migrants in the
past, sends to the world the message that mass
immigration has passed its use by date.
Principles
Principle One - Population Policy
A population policy must underwrite any immigration
policy for Australia.
`Merely maximising the population is hardly a worthy
goal for humanity' (Nathan Keyfitz, respected American
demographer, 1972)
A population policy considers the interrelationship
between population, the environment, resource usage and
carrying capacity, the economy and quality of life. In
other words, it asks how many people can live in
Australia, at what standard of living, and with what
environmental impact. A population policy must be the
result of unbiased scientific thinking and not be high
jacked by the self-interests of pro-immigration elites.
Immigration mistakes are big mistakes, they do not go
away and only get bigger. Currently, immigration policy
is being conducted without a population policy. It
continues under pressure from the ethnic lobby, big
business and the housing industry all of which see
profits in population growth. The churches as well as
other misguided humanitarians add to this pressure. The
only other beneficiaries are new migrants themselves. An
immigration program framed within an explicit, rational
population policy would enable the Australian people to
place their trust in such a program, rather than endure
the current situation. Under the present system many
Australians have well grounded fears that the situation
is open-ended, out of control and subject to political
manipulation.
Even if other nations are not prepared to control
their population growth, Australians are under no
obligation to increase theirs, nor lower their quality of
life in order to match or assist the irresponsible
policies of other nations.
The report titled, Australia's Population Carrying
Capacity, 1994, compiled by the House Of Representatives
Standing Committee, concluded with four options, each
with a different scenario. These scenarios varied from
populations of 5 to 50 million depending on immigration
numbers and the quality of life and standard of living
Australians would accept. The larger our population the
lower will be our quality of life and standard of living.
The Australian people must be consulted on what standard
of living they expect as this benchmark would underwrite
any population policy. A consensus seems to have arisen
that a population of 23 million would be an acceptable
compromise but on current demographics our population
will exceed 23 million even if immigration is cut to zero
net immediately.
Official immigration figures exclude many categories
in which people come to live permanently in Australia.
Such excluded categories include illegal migrants, some
change-of-status migrants, many New Zealanders and the
tens of thousands of foreign nationals with renewable
four year visas. The number of people intending to
permanently settle in Australia is much greater than
official immigration figures. The intention of such
division of categories is to deliberately mislead the
public.
ONE NATION feels that there is no justification for
population growth in Australia. However, the Liberal and
Labor Parties presume that population growth is
beneficial and necessary.
Principle Two: The Government's
Responsibility is to its Own Citizens.
A government's responsibility surely is to protect its
people's welfare, security, environment, economy and
standard of living. Our Government's responsibility
should not be to intending migrants over and above its
responsibility to current and future generations of
Australians. ONE NATION believes it is the Australian
government's responsibility to pass onto future
generations of Australians a country to be cherished,
enjoyed, and free from the problems of over population
and ever growing massive foreign debt.
Previous governments have acted inappropriately
through a confused responsibility to other nations. ONE
NATION believes international obligations can be
expressed through appropriate foreign aid to those most
in need.
Principle Three: Australians are the
Caretakers of the World's Oldest, Driest, Least Fertile
Landmass.
In the face of environmental degradation in Australia
we should be proceeding slowly with population growth
because growth will only exacerbate current environmental
problems. The next generation has the right to inherit a
country in a better environmental condition than the
preceding era.
Principle Four: Opposition to mass
immigration should not be misinterpreted as being an
anti-migrant philosophy. One Nation's disagreement is
with government policy.
Principle Five: Freedom of speech should be
extended to all discussions on immigration and
multicultural policies and the cry of 'racism' should not
be used to silence debate or to promote violence against
those who wish to debate these issues.
Principle Six: Australians, like other
peoples of the world, have the right to maintain their
unique identity and culture.
It is never immoral to want to retain one's own
independence and identity. Those who say that it is,
simply will not realise the existence and importance of
Australian culture to our people. However when it comes
to Third World peoples, culture is suddenly of the
greatest importance.
Principle Seven: Our migrant intake will be
non-discriminatory on condition that the numbers do not
significantly alter the ethnic and cultural make up of
the country.
Principle Eight: English is the official
language of Australia and government policy will
encourage widespread use of English within all
communities and in all the institutions of the land.
Principle Nine: Compassion must be extended
to genuine refugees but temporary refuge need not extend
to long-term permanent settlement in Australia.
Principle Ten: The Government
institutionalised, publicly funded policy of
Multiculturalism is not in the best interests of
migrants, nor of Australia, and will be abolished.
Principle Eleven: No person other than an
Australian citizen, or a permanent resident of the
Australian community, has a basic right to enter
Australia.
Principle Twelve: Any person entering
Australia for a period in excess of 6 months must pass
both health and character screening.
Principle Thirteen: One Nation has a vision
for Australia as a proud, independent, self sustaining,
sovereign nation.
Reasons for policy
1. Environmental constraints
Attention must be paid to the ability of the
environment to sustain a population for ever.
Australia, the world's oldest driest continent,
suffers severe soil degredation and climatic uncertainty.
It is a land of'droughts and flooding rains,' and already
faces declining agricultural productivity. Only 10% of
our huge land mass is arable and this land produces less
grain per annum than two small states in the USA. The
reality is that Australia always will be a small food
producer by international standards, but agricultural
export income is essential for this country. With the
doubling of our population presumably we double
consumption of foods produced here and consequently have
less for export income.
Australia has a reponsibility to protect its
bio-diversity and not allow its flora and fauna to be
ousted from their habitats to extinction because of
population or economic pressures. In comparison, the
pro-immigration lobby feel we have no moral right to this
land unless we push development beyond the limit. Our
population must be stabilised as population growth will
need to be stabilised elsewhere in the world.
Current government propaganda states that more
environmental damage occurred in Australia during the
early days of settlement with a small population than in
present times. This is untrue. More degradation has
occurred in Australia in the last fifty years- the years
of high population growth, high economic growth, and
increasing trade- than in the previous 150 years. Over
half that destruction has occurred in the last 25
years.... (AGM of the Australian Academy of Science,
Canberra 1995)
As the world's driest continent, constant reliable
water supply is one of our major problems. Australia is a
country that not only experiences low rainfall and high
evaporation rates but which also lacks any permanent snow
fields. The water flow of all Australian rivers together
do not make up the flow of a minor tributary of the
Amazon. Our major river system is the Murray-Darling
Basin. Its basin carries half of Australia's sheep, crop
land and orchards plus a quarter of its beef and dairy
herds and is now under great threat from rising salinity.
Due to irrigation and urban demand our current population
is using 2/3 of river flows and straining supply to the
limits.
Our major cities have grown beyond their optimum size.
Pollution, sewage disposal, increasing traffic, urban
sprawl, failing community services, high crime rates and
a lower quality of life are occurring. These crowded,
smog covered cities, with all of the dysfunctional
problems of a Los Angeles, are the inevitable consequence
of further mass immigration, yet current migration policy
will double the size of these cities over the next 30
years. Is this what Australians, new and old, or of any
ethnic group want?
The Premier of NSW, Bob Carr was right when he said,
'the nation can't handle more people...Sydney is bursting
at the seams...the debate ought to be about the carrying
capacity of the continent- a continent that has lousy
soils, fragile vegetation and depleted and degraded river
systems.'
2. Economic cost of
immigration
'It is time we considered the enormous costs of
bringing migrants to this country.'(Paul Keating, Maiden
speech to Parliament, 1970)
To cope with our massive immigration program which has
produced the fastest population growth in the OECD
(except for Turkey), we are spending $12 billion per
annum. Australia is forced to build the equivalent of a
city the size of Geelong, or half a Canberra, with all
the required infrastructure and social services just to
cope with one year's migrant intake. Every migrant must
be provided with accommodation, food, transport, a job,
schools, pensions, hospitals, water, electricity, roads,
sewerage, universities and all other basic necessities of
modern life. This has been a magor factor in giving
Australia one of the highest per capita foreign debts in
the world. The pro-immigration Bureau of Immigration and
Population Research could not find any economic benefits
from our immigration program and concluded that
immigration was economically 'benign.' This conclusion
was biased as the study omitted the inherent enormous
infrastructure costs mentioned above.
Currently our foreign debt is $230 billion, with a
current account deficit of about $ 2 billion per month,
half of which is due to immigration. It is the impact of
immigration on our foreign debt that is continually left
out of any immigration or economic arguments. Australia
can no longer afford to fund all the services
underpinning our standing of living which we, as a
community, expect- such as standards of medical treatment
and hospitals, aged care, education, pension levels,
sewage disposal and road provision. Yet current
immigration policy will double our population within 50
years while the foreign debt necessitates massive fund
cutting to all our community service. We cannot afford to
maintain our current infrastructure let alone keep
expanding it to cope with population growth!
Australia still relies heavily on export income from
mining and agriculture neither of which requires more
people. Indeed, due to trade and industry policies, we
now rely heavily on imports for consumer goods which are
no longer manufactured here, a demand which will increase
with a growing population. The costs of mass immigration
have not been offset by growth in export income.
3. Unemployment
A country in debt must decrease all spending. This
means less jobs and higher unemployment. We now have
approx 2 million unemployed with a shameful youth
unemployment figure of around 30 per cent. To add 100 000
extra migrants each year is insanity. These people
predominantly take jobs from the existing pool or join
the dole queue. 36 per cent of all migrants over the past
5 years have joined the long term unemployement queues.
This includes 90 per cent of some ethnic groups. As
technology replaces labour, employment opportunities
could possibly significatnly recede. This situation
should be seriously considered by those promoting mass
immigration.
4. Skilled and business
migration
During the late 1980s the Department of Education
Employment and Training had difficulty identifying skills
which could not be supplied from within Australia. This
situation still has not changed. Skilled migrants are not
matched with employment vacancies in Australia which
leads to oversupply and/or the unemployment of immigrant
and locally trained skilled persons. ONE NATION will
ensure that any skill entering Australia will be matched
with a position that cannot be filled from within
Australia. Skilled migration will not be used instead of
training our own.
It is morally indefensible to import skilled labour
into Australia merely because it is cheaper than training
our own. Neither do we have the moral right to invite
skilled people into our country whose education has been
paid for by their mother country.
Australia has a responsibility not to put the dreams
and aspirations of our own youth onto the scrap heap.
The Business Migration program was commenced in 1983
and rapidly developed a repuation as a fraudulent,
crime-infested, money-laundering immigration rort. The
Federal Public Accounts Committee investigated the
program and concluded that it should be abolished.
A new program has replaced it and, as with the old
program, the Immigration Department claims it to be a
great success. During 1996-97, in excess of 200,000
Business Visitors Visas were issued. The category of
temporary business visas is discussed on page 14.
ONE NATION has no faith in the present administration
of the Business Migration Program. In many cases the
surety money brought in does not even cover settlement
costs.
ONE NATION will allow a continuation of a business
migration program on condition that:
(a) the proposed business activity is in the best
interest of Australia.
(b) the promised capital stays in Australia.
(c) the business proposals are actually implemented.
Immigration status will be rescinded if investigation
reveals the application is fraudulent.
5. Family reunion
Family reunion has been driving our immigration
program out of control for many years and with the
cutting of total migration numbers would naturally
decrease as a category. Why should Australia always be
the country in which the reunion takes place? The
majority of these people are semi and unskilled and
consequently have high unemployment rates. There is no
logic in continuing to bring into Australia hundreds of
thousands of unskilled people when our manufacturing
capacity has been sent offshore and unskilled jobs no
longer exist.
Family responsibility should go hand in hand with
family reunion and One Nation supports a two year waiting
period before a migrant becomes eligible for social
security benefits. The Australian tax payer should not be
asked to fund family reunion.
Compassionate factors for immediate dependent family
members should always be taken into account.
6. Change of status migrants
All change-of-status migrants will be included in the
following year's immigration figures.
Change of status opportunities will be restricted and
will only be granted if the change is proved to be in the
best interests of Australia.
Foreign fee paying students should not presume that
they will be able to change their status and remain in
Australia. Access to education will not be a backdoor
migration route.
7. Decentralisation
Decentralisation is the latest catch cry from those
who recognise that our major cities can no longer cope
with more migrants. Because of our indebtedness, rural
Australia is currently being stripped of all its services
and has the highest unemployment youth rates in the
country. If we can't look after the infrastructure
supporting one of Australia's important export income
earning sectors, how are we going to develop rural
Australia to support many thousands of migrants.
8. Illegal immigrants
In the 20th Century it is very easy to become an
illegal migrant. Europe, USA, Australia and all first
world countries are now experiencing a massive influx of
illegal migrants. To keep people out, rather than
encourage them in, will be the job of the immigration
department in the 21st Century.
Current official figures concerning illegal migrants
in Australia are inaccurate. About 500 illegal migrants
on visitors visas enter Australia every week, primarily
through our airports. These people have had no health
checks, have few relevant skills, will work for very low
wages, are exploitable, meld with their ethnic community
and often are forced into crime. Australia needs accurate
statistics concerning illegals and a well understood and
community supported rationale for detection and
deportation.
ONE NATION supports the detection and mandatory
detention of illegal immigrants with properly funded
deportation services. Deportation is very difficult after
many years of illegal residence, but the entire process
must be facilitated and funded to enable rapid removal of
illegal overstayers from Australia. Proper detection,
detention and deportation will act as a deterrent for
others.
Illegal migrants will not have access to tax payer
funded legal aid and the appeal process.
9. Health
Our hospital waiting lists are evidence that our
health services are not coping. Further immigration will
exacerbate waiting lists.
No migrant will be admitted into Australia if known to
be carrying a communicable disease which may put the
health of the Australian public at risk and/or be a
burden to the Australian tax payer.
Many diseases are now being introduced or reintroduced
into Australia. TB and Hapatitis B, primarily entering
Australia from developing countries, are becoming an
increasing problem. Rates of TB, a disease which was well
controlled in Australia, are now increasing. Rates of TB
contact, shown by positive Mantoux tests, of 25 per cent
in inner Sydney schools are now being seen.
In future all migrants, including children, will have
Mantoux tests for TB and those with a positive test will
be required to follow a screening program when in
Australia. Any migrant having active TB will not be
allowed into Australia until they produce proof of
effective treatment. Failure to follow the screening
program when in Australia, will be grounds for heavy
fines or deportation.
All adult migrants will be required to have a chest
X-ray prior to entry.
Until all Australians at risk are immunised against
Hepatitis B, Hepatitis B carriers will be excluded from
entry as migrants. The government admits it does not have
the resources to immunise all those at risk of Hepatitis
B or to provide the necessary TB screening procedures.
Protection of the community from all communicable
disease will always take priority.
Other health requirements currently in place will
continue.
10. Defence
As long ago as 1987 the Government Policy Paper on
defence in Australia stated, "no population increase
is necessary for defence". Let there be no hangover
from the World War II 'populate or perish' philosophy
that migration is necessary for Australia's defence.
Indeed, a healthy economy and a cohesive and united
society, not a divided multicultural society, is what is
needed for our defence.
11. Refugee
We accept the UNHCR definition of a refugee, that a
refugee claimant shows a well-founded fear of persecution
on his or her return to their own country. Also it is the
contemporary situation that determines a claim, not
events in the past.
In an increasingly unpredictable world with political,
economic, religious, racial, environmental and
socio-ethnic instability, an increasing flood of refugees
is occurring. In the current world situation of 15
million refugees, Australia's refugee program which
acceps 12,000 per annum (one of the largest per capita by
developed countries), is nothing more than a token
gesture as it gives no assistance to the 99.9 per cent of
refugees left behind. Any program that helps 0.1 per cent
of refugees, does nothing for 99.9 per cent and costs
billions is indeed unfair and immoral.
ONE NATION believes in providing temporary refuge
until the danger in the refugee's country is resolved.
There is no assumption of automatic permanent residence
in Australia.
12. Multicultural policy
ONE NATION understands the desire for migrants to
maintain their culture in Australia. But, the desire
Australians have to maintain their culture, history and
traditions must take precedence. The Australian national
culture is unique emphasising a balanced way of life,
free of excessive striving and materialism. As in Canada
and New Zealand, Australia has incorporated the best
features of British culture: a balance of freedom and
order, a separation of public service from politics,
conflict solving by debate and not by force, violence and
insurrection, a tolerance of minorities, economic
opportunity fortitude in war without militarism and
provision of social services. We have our distinctive
art, theatre, literature, film and sport with
achievements in science, medicine, social welfare and a
unique quality of life.
Our culture has developed historically on the basis of
our common experiences and memories, stories and
traditions. Australia has a unique political history of
which we can be proud. Australia led the way with the
secret ballot, the 8 hour day, votes for women, invalid,
widow and old age pensions, strong trade unions, the
arbitration system and the basic wage. Our culture
embodies the values of egalitarianism and mateship. It
rejects excessive authority and believes in a fair go,
admiration for the battler and a belief in the dignity of
the individual.
Currently, successive governments and the media,
together with the publicly funded multicultural and
immigration elites, have imposed a wholly different
cultural vision for Australia: multiculturalism. This
policy does not simply mean encouragement of greater
tolerance of difference, or the appreciation of ethnic
foods or traditions. What we are experiencing now in
Australia is a threat to the very basis of the Australian
culture, identity and shared values. Threats to our
freedom of speech, the freedom of the individual
overtaken by group rights, funding given on the basis of
ethnicity and race rather than need and our people
divided into separate ethnic groups which are funded to
stay that way. We see no reason why migrant cultures
should be maintained at the expense of our shared,
national culture.
Current education practices leave many Australians
ignorant of the fact that we owe much of our way of life
to our distinctive national culture. The survival of any
national culture relies on a common national memory of
events, history and traditions. It is such a common
national memory which binds people together into a
nation. But the policy of multiculturalism attempts to
discredit and destroy our shared story and impose upon us
a different story. This will produce Australians whose
feelings toward the pre 1965 Australia and her heroes
will be those of contempt, guilt, indifference or
ignorance.
Every variety of culture in Australia today has a
mother country where their particular culture can survive
and develop. Our unique Australian culture and identity
has nowhere else in the world in which to survive.
Destroy it here and it is gone, forever.
Multicultural Policy operating through the power of
the ethnic lobby is creating divisive ethnic politics as
demonstrated through threats of block voting and branch
stacking. We see the power of the minority directly
influencing the policies which affect the majority,
against the demonstrated will of the majority. Are we
heading for an Australia where every issue will have to
pass a minefield of ethnic and racial voting blocks?
Multiculturalism which has failed elsewhere in the
world such as Yugoslavia, Sri Lanka, Fiji, Bosnia,
Chechnya, Rwanda, Tibet, Israel, Timor etc. is now being
imported into Australia.
The government's unspoken justification for
immigration and the result of the policy will lead to the
Asianisation of Australia. Our politicians plan an Asian
future for Australia. As the then Immigration Minister,
Senator Bolkus said, on 6/12/94, "We cannot cut and
should not cut immigration because it would jeopardise
our integration with Asia". Do we need to change the
ethnic/racial make up of Australia for trade? Trade comes
and goes, but our identity as a nation should not be
traded for money, international approval or to fulfil a
bizarre social experiment.
70 per cent of our immigration program is from Asian
countries. Consequently Australia will be 27 per cent
Asian within 25 years and, as migrants congregate in our
major cities, the effect of Asianisation will be more
concentrated there. This will lead to the bizarre
situation of largely Asian cities on our coast which will
be culturally and racially different from the traditional
Australian nature of the rest of the country. In a
democracy, how dare our government force such changes on
the Australian people without their consent and against
their often polled opinion.
Policy conclusions
To aim for population stability in Australia, the
immigration intake will be restricted to zero net
migration, that is, immigration numbers replace those
numbers of persons permanentlly leaving Australia each
year.
The program will be non discriminatory, unless
immigration numbers are such that the program will alter
the ethnic and cultural make up of our country.
Migrants, with the exception of genuine refugees, will
not be eligible for unemployment benefits until after the
first two years of residence.
Skilled immigration, comprising 20% of the program,
will be directly related to labour market needs in
Australia and will only occur if:
1. no Australian can be trained for the job.
2. no Australian is available for the job.
The Business Migration program, comprising 20% of the
program will continue under intense scrutiny.
Family reunion is a privilege and not a right. Family
reunion will continue to be a part of the immigration
program but will be restricted to dependent immediate
family.
Change-of-status opportunities will be restricted and
endless review processes and claims of residence will be
stopped.
Decentralisation as a proposal to send migrants to
country centres is an unrealistic policy and will not be
envisaged.
Past governments have created a massive illegal
immigration problem and funds will be allocated to begin
the enormous task of indentifying present offenders and
of stopping illegal immigration.
The health of Australians will not be put at risk by
failure to properly health screen immigrants.
Australia will continue to assist genuine refugees
through providing temporary asylum and appropriate
foreign aid.
The government funded, institutionalised policy of
multiculturalism will be abandoned. Ethnic diversity as
an integral part of the Australian Community will not
disappear under a policy of integration which will be
encouraged.
NOTE- Family Reunion Program- Basic English language
is essential, however it is understood that young
children will meet this condition during schooling.
SPECIFICS OF CATEGORY CHANGES AND NUMBERS FOR
A ZERO NET MIGRATION PROGRAM.
The Immigration Program currently consists
predominantly of :
(1) Family Reunion
(2) Skilled and Business Migrants.
The Humanitarian Program consists of:
(1) Refugee
(2) Special Humanitarian
(3) Special Assistance Categories.
New Zealand are currently not included in immigration
numbers.
THE IMMIGRATION PROGRAM.
(1) Family Reunion
Family reunion historically usually accounts for about 60
per cent of the program with the greatest numbers
comprising spouses, fiances, parents and children.
Within the ONE NATION policy, family reunion will be
maintained at about 60 per cent. The parent category from
countries without an adequate transferable social
security net, will be discontinued as these people have
been an enormous drain on our social security services.
The concessional family category, which includes
non-immediate family members such as nieces and nephews
will also be discontinued.
(2) Skilled and Business Migrants.
Skilled immigration will comprise approximately 20 oer
cent of the program and will be tightly controlled.
The independent skilled category will be abandoned.
Business migration will comprise the remainder of the
program.
THE HUMANITARIAN PROGRAM.
The humanitarian program will be replaced by a program
of temporary refuge of those who meet the UNHCR
definition of a refugee, with repatriation when the
situation resolves. The number of places for genuine
refugees will remain at 12,000 which are not included in
the zero net migration program.
The special humanitarian program and special
assistance categories which should never have been
created in the first place, will be scrapped.
The total humanitarian program will be decreased
whilst accommodating refugees at approximately the
current level.
NEW ZEALANDERS
The situation with New Zealand immigration has been
one sided for too long. A reciprocal arrangement whereby
the numbers of Australians permanently leaving to live in
New Zealand will equal the number of New Zealanders
allowed to migrate to Australia each year.
TEMPORARY ENTRY
There are three general categories of temporary entry
into Australia which allow entry visas of from 3 months
to 4 years.
(1) Temporary Resident Program.
(a) Skilled
(b) Business:
(i) temporary business (visas up to 3 months)
(ii) self sponsoring 'executives' (visas up to 4 years)
(2) Students
(3) Vistors
Public confidence in our immigration program has never
been lower. This is the result of present and past
governmental policy failures and incompetence in the
administration of the official migration program, as well
as lack of will and competence in the administration of
the temporary entry program.
Government forecasts estimate the numbers of short
term, or temporary, arrivals will more than double to 7.6
million by the year 2003.
ONE NATION will ensure that the Temporary Entry
Program is properly administered and that all activities
of migrants in the temporary entry category are tightly
controlled, especially in employment areas.
(1) Temporary residents program
ONE NATION will allow persons to enter Australia on a
temporary basis to meet specific objectives of benefit to
Australia in the areas of skilled and business
employment, social/cultural and international relations.
No application for change of status will be allowed
from within Australia except in exceptional
circumstances. Such a circumstance will be accepted only
if the change of status is in the best interests of
Australia. Extensions may be granted solely on an
individual basis and only if of benefit to Australia.
Any person entering Australia for a period exceeding 6
months must perticipate in full health screening.
(a) SKILLED
All intending skilled and business temporary entrants
will be subjected to a 'good character' test.
Temporary entry to Australia of skilled persons is
essential to satisfy areas not supplied from within
Australia and to teach Australians the relevant skill.
However, over the past decade both major parties have
caved into pressure applied by multinational companies to
relax regulations which in the past protected the
interests of employees. The governments duty is to
protect the best interest of Australians and this may
necessitate standing up to nultinational corporations.
There should be reciprocity in travel and intent of
skilled Australians to other countries.
(b) BUSINESS
Temporary Business visitor visas fall into two
categories:
(i) Temporary Business (visas up to 3 months)
The deregulation of the temporary business entry category
has been a disaster for Australia. 280,000 temporary
business visas wer issued during the 1996/97 financial
year and the Department of Immigration and Multicultural
Affairs has little knowledge of what work the visitors
have been engaged in. A number have been found working
for extended periods as door-to-door salespersons, in
massage parlours and as factory hands.
ONE NATION will ensure that 3 month business visas are
issued only from the country of origin and are for
bonafide purposes or benefit to Australia.
(ii) Self Sponsoring "executive" (visas up
to 4 years)
ONE NATION will ensure that independent self-employed
executive visas will be issued only from the country of
origin and solely for bonafide business purposes. That
the temporary migrant is conducting the business or
employed in the activities for which the visa was issued
will be constantly checked. There will be no automatic
renewal of four year visas, any subsequent extensions
must be bonafide and in the best interests of Australia.
(b) Social/Cultural
Temporary visas will be granted to include such
persons as entertainers, visiting academics,
sportspersons, exchange students and religious workers
etc.
(c) International relations
Working holiday makers comprise 45 per cent of this
group. ONE NATION will continue to supply temporary visas
for this purpose but will proceed with caution to ensure
the labour market can accommodate these people.
Reciprocal arrangements must exist.
2. Student program
ONE NATION will continue to allow students to enter
Australia to undertake full-time courses of study or
training. However, such courses must be accredited and
registered for overseas students. Since January 1994
overseas visitors to Australia have been able to
undertake ELICOS or other non-formal study for up to 3
months and this will continue.
ONE NATION is adamant that educational fees for
overseas students will not be used as basic funding for
institutions due to lack of funding from the Australian
government as has been happening in recent years.
Consequently visas will only be allocated to overseas
students providing the numbers do not mean fewer places
for Australian students.
Overseas students must have the prerequisite studies
and other entry requirements for any course. Teaching
time will not be disproportionately devoted to overseas
students.
As a result of the numbers of students from People's
Republic of China who overstayed and/or did not comply
with student visa conditions in past years, the entry of
these students will continue to be restricted.
Change-of-status and extension principles will apply:
3. Visitors to Australia
Tourism has been one of the fastest growing sectors of
the Australian economy in recent years. The Sydney 2000
Olympics will result in further increases in visitor
numbers.
ONE NATION will ensure the integrity of our border
entry requirements are maintained.
Unfortunately the increasing numbers of illegal
migrants is sourced through our airports on visitors'
visas. A properly controlled visitor program will ensure
tourists are welcome in Australia but ONE NATION will
ensure that the detection of illegal migrants for
deportation is properly funded and administered.
Citezenship
As a democracy, political authority in Australian
society derives from the will of its Citizens. It does
not derive from ethnic and multicultural lobby groups or
business and intellectual elites with divided loyalties.
Therefore, the Australian Federal Government's first duty
is to care for the welfare of its citizens. Australian
benefits should not necessarily be extended to
non-citizens who merely reside here and who use
Australian society to obtain the maximal individual
advantage for themselves.
Within the ranks of citizens and non-citizens in
Australia there are now large numbers who do not feel
reciprocal obligations of duty to Australia.
Organisations or indiviuals who deflect loyalty from
Australia should be sidelined in debates on national
issues.
Much current 'politically correct' philosophy pays
superificial respect to the concept of citizenship while,
at the same time, devaluing and undermining its
importance. In the new globalized world the concept of
nation, and of citizenship, is being eroded. Pauline
Hanson's ONE NATION believes that Australia should be a
sovereign nation, not merely a geographical area
populated by 'world citizens.'
Pauline Hanson's ONE NATION wishes to see nationhood
and citizenship re-established amongst the highest
priorities of government. Hence, ONE NATION's policy
includes the following:
1. Five year permanent residence before being eligible
for citizenship. Time out of Australia within this period
must not exceed 18 months.
2. Passing a spoken and written English test to be
compulsory before naturalisation.
3. Applicants must pass a test demonstrating a basic
understand of Australian institutions, history and
environment. Schools will be obliged to teach such
material to all students as part of the school
curriculum.
4. The advantages of citizenship will be strengthened,
ie.
(a)Only citizens can sponsor migrants.
(b) Legal aid will only be available to citizens.
(c) Government employment will only be extended to
citizens except where those skills are unobtainable in
Australia.
(d) Children of illegal migrants will not automatically
be granted citizenship.
5. Non-citizens will be deported for criminal offences
where they are subject to being gaoled. Australia will
seek treaties with other countries for co-operations in
deporting non-Australian citizens. They will be found,
tried and sentenced within Australia and deported to
their country of origin to serve their sentence. Their
assets in Australia will be sold to defray all expenses.
If necessary, Australia will contribute to the cost of
gaoling in their own country- in most cases this will be
cheaper than keeping them in Australia.
6. With regard to citizenship, we believe our pledge
of commitment needs to become one of loyalty to Australia
and its people above all others.
In conclusion, all citizens will be expected to have
an over-riding commitment to Australia and to accept the
basic structures and principles of Australia, that is -
the rule of law, tolerance, equality of opportunity,
parliamentary democracy, freedom of speech and religion,
English as the national language and equality of the
sexes and races.
If individuals internalise the above principles and
love of country as part of their own sense of identity,
we will re-establish a cohesive society in which, in
times of threat, citizens will, if necessary, risk their
lives and perhaps sacrifice themselves to protect their
fellow Australians and our country. Our responsibilty and
such patriotism was described in the World War I poem,
'Flanders Fields':
..."Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders Fields."
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