• About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Login
Newsletter
NRI Affairs
Youtube Channel
  • News
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Visa
  • Student Hub
  • Business
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Other
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Visa
  • Student Hub
  • Business
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Other
No Result
View All Result
NRI Affairs
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

Politicians have scapegoated immigration for decades. It’s time to flip the script

Anti-immigration rallies across Australia are the culmination of years of political scaremongering. But better immigration messaging could change the trajectory.

Guest Author by Guest Author
September 5, 2025
in Opinion
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
0
Politicians have scapegoated immigration for decades. It’s time to flip the script

@thePulseGlobal on X

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Advertisements

Jane McAdam, UNSW Sydney

For decades now, public discourse about refugees and immigrants has become increasingly fractured, ugly and untrue.

From John Howard’s “we will decide who comes to this country” mantra, to Kevin Rudd’s “if you come by boat you will never permanently live in Australia” in 2013, through to Tony Abbott’s “stop the boats” election victory that same year, it has been a prominent feature of Australia’s recent political landscape.

For the Coalition, it was about stopping so-called “illegals”.

For Labor, it was framed as “saving lives at sea”.

For both, it was about keeping people seeking asylum out of contact with the Australian community, demonised and dehumanised, called by numbers, not names.

Against this backdrop, it’s perhaps unsurprising Australians turned out in the thousands to rally against immigration this weekend. It could be seen as the culmination of years of MPs using immigration issues for short-term political gain.

But just as government messaging has partly contributed to this situation, it could also help get us out of it.

Not always ‘sinister invaders’

Political language about immigration wasn’t always so negative.

At the end of the second world war, then-Prime Minister Ben Chifley welcomed 170,000 refugees and other displaced people from Europe.

In the 1970s, when the first boats of Vietnamese asylum seekers arrived in Australia’s north, Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser insisted they be treated humanely and processed fairly.

As writer Thomas Keneally recalled:

there was no long-term mandatory detention involved. The newcomers were not depicted as sinister invaders […] language was not misused and neither were human souls.

And as former Immigration Minister Andrew Giles said in 2023:

Seventy years ago, of course, we embarked on a migration journey that has transformed our nation into a diverse and dynamic multicultural society […] in very large part […] shaped by the nearly one million refugees who have come to Australia since the end of WWII. We should take great pride in this.

‘Real people, real families’

The threatening thuggery on display at the weekend’s anti-immigration marches has been rightly called out by Australian politicians on both sides.

In a change from her predecessor’s hardline approach, Federal Opposition Leader Sussan Ley said while “strong borders keep us safe, they also allow us to be generous and compassionate to those fleeing conflict”.

Meanwhile, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke reiterated “there is no place in our country for people who seek to divide and undermine our social cohesion”.

At the same time, we can’t simply ignore concerns people have about the impact of immigration on housing, cost of living and infrastructure – much of which is based on misinformation which feeds a far-right agenda, according to Multicultural Affairs Minister Anne Aly.

When misinformation spreads, it impedes evidence-based decision-making and results in poor laws and policies.

Advertisements

The positive role of immigration is something the opposition’s new immigration spokesman, Senator Paul Scarr, wants to stress.

He seems to be setting a new tone based on empathy, not division, drawing on his deep “respect and admiration” for migrant and refugee communities who are making “an outstanding contribution”.

When “we talk about immigration”, he says, “we should never forget that we’re actually talking about real people, real families”.

When Prime Minister Anthony Albanese came to office in 2022, he stressed the importance of a vision for Australia that promotes “unity and optimism, not fear and division”.

For the first time in a long while, there does seem to be bipartisan support for this approach.

Walking the walk

The dissonance, though, is that the broader architecture of Australia’s asylum policies remains squarely in place. It’s largely about deterrence, interception and offshoring.

And this week, parliament is expected to progress a bill that would facilitate the swift removal of around 350 non-citizens to Nauru.

In 2023, the High Court of Australia ruled it was unlawful to hold people in immigration detention indefinitely, so for the extraordinary sum of A$408 million up-front, and $70 million a year, Australia will pay Nauru to take them.

While the deal may solve a political problem for the government, it does so at great financial and moral cost.

As Australia’s Race Discrimination Commissioner, Giridharan Sivaraman, has warned:

economic inequality, housing stress, and job insecurity are real and urgent challenges, including for people from migrant backgrounds. We need genuine solutions to these challenges – not dangerous, exploitative, anti-migrant rhetoric.

Telling a new story

The more positive public statements we have seen in recent days and months will remain hollow unless we start to see real policy change.

Governments can, and should, help people around the world who are struggling most.

This doesn’t mean shying away from people’s legitimate concerns about housing, infrastructure and cost-of-living pressures.

But it does mean explaining migrants are not the cause of these challenges, and that reducing immigration could in fact be counterproductive.

While the evidence shows immigration isn’t behind Australia’s housing woes, for instance, there’s plenty of proof migrants are crucial for the country’s economic development.

The latter is the story politicians should be telling. Some have started to, but counteracting decades of messaging to the contrary will take time.

Jane McAdam, Scientia Professor and ARC Laureate Fellow, Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, UNSW Sydney

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

?s=32&d=mystery&r=g&forcedefault=1
Guest Author

Guest Author

Guest Author

Related Posts

The genocide will not end until the Palestinian political leaders are free
Opinion

The genocide will not end until the Palestinian political leaders are free

October 20, 2025
Why India’s monsoon is becoming more extreme – even though overall rainfall has hardly increased
Opinion

Why India’s monsoon is becoming more extreme – even though overall rainfall has hardly increased

October 16, 2025
India’s burgeoning financial technology sector could teach Keir Starmer something about levelling up
Opinion

India’s burgeoning financial technology sector could teach Keir Starmer something about levelling up

October 12, 2025
Next Post
Indian Cinema Breakthrough: “Pyre” Makes History as First Film to Premiere in Three Major U.S. Cities

Indian Cinema Breakthrough: "Pyre" Makes History as First Film to Premiere in Three Major U.S. Cities

Donald Trump was once India’s best friend. How did it all go wrong?

Donald Trump was once India’s best friend. How did it all go wrong?

The Humanisation Trap: Blaming Countries, Viruses, and Everything Else Rather Than Leaders

The Humanisation Trap: Blaming Countries, Viruses, and Everything Else Rather Than Leaders

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

South Australia Visa

South Australia to open visa program for offshore applicants this week

4 years ago
Indian diaspora holds campaign on Human Rights Day in Brussels

Indian diaspora holds campaign on Human Rights Day in Brussels

3 years ago
Indian-origin activist alleges visa denial to visit ailing mother

Indian-origin activist alleges visa denial to visit ailing mother

9 months ago
pexels anna shvets 3943882

‘Horrified, disappointed, deeply concerned’: Australian-Indian community reacts strongly to new travel ban from India

4 years ago

Categories

  • Business
  • Events
  • Literature
  • Multimedia
  • News
  • nriaffairs
  • Opinion
  • Other
  • People
  • Student Hub
  • Top Stories
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • Visa

Topics

Air India Australia california Canada caste china COVID-19 cricket Europe Gaza Germany h1b visa Hindu Human Rights immigration India Indian Indian-origin indian diaspora indian origin indian student Indian Students Israel Khalistan London Migration Modi Muslim New Zealand NRI NSW Pakistan Palestine Racism Singapore student students travel trump UAE uk US USA Victoria visa
NRI Affairs

© 2025 NRI Affairs.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Visa
  • Student Hub
  • Business
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Other

© 2025 NRI Affairs.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
WP Twitter Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com