The 2025 federal election has been called and Australians will once again be asked to go and decide who is going to manage the escalating decline of the country.
As has been talked about at length, this election is the immigration election. Despite the uniparty’s best efforts to bury this or only pay it lip service, immigration is the number one issue and is the everything issue. I would argue energy policy and free speech are numbers two and three.
When he isn’t kicking independent journalists out of press conferences for asking questions about the border, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has been busy importing an Adelaide’s worth of population in two years and signing the disastrous Indian qualification recognition scheme. He has also presided over escalating migrant crime across the country and the NZYQ High Court decision, while also planning to bring in record numbers of Afghanis despite them bashing our lifeguards.
Further to that, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke was accused of stacking the vote by handing out expedited citizenships last month. Now, the same diaspora is apparently making threats against him and is leading a campaign to harass him during the election.
And as the pièce de résistance, turns out the ALP’s Made in Australia initiative looks like it’s really Made in Acapulco:
BREAKING: Unskilled Migration Program
The Australian Labor Government has paid advertisements directly targeting unskilled Spanish / Mexican workers to come here where they will be trained and provided sponsorship to live and work the “Future Made In Australia” program pic.twitter.com/mvmooFxjS8
— Aus Integrity (@QBCCIntegrity) March 27, 2025
What’s adding a few Los Zetas and Sinaloa Cartel members to the migration numbers?
On the blue side of the uniparty, Peter Dutton has done nothing other than promise to slow the invasion of Australia by 25%, which he then backflipped on later. When he’s not grovelling to Israel, he’s been grovelling ad nauseum to India and the Chinese.
Former PM Tony Abbott has also confirmed that the Liberal Party is now officially the ‘Migrant’s Party’ because no Australian under 60 would vote for them anyway:
🚨 Former PM Tony Abbott admits the Liberal Party is now the MIGRANTS party. pic.twitter.com/zSjRFm23dZ
— British Australian Community (@Brit_Aus_Com) March 26, 2025
Unfortunately, the rusted-on, North Shore dickheads still think this guy is some kind of conservative Christ, when his actions firmly suggest otherwise.
This is in-between both the ALP and LNP meeting with Indian migration agents to ensure the hordes of Hindu and Sikh nationalists can continue to fight each other on our shores, while colonising the country.
We all know the Greens and Teals want the entire world to live here, so they aren’t worth mentioning.
I’ve already dissected the hopelessness of the Libertarian Party’s immigration policy and how it’s a waste of time, despite all the hype and John Ruddick’s 5-year moratorium which isn’t long enough anyway. It also does nothing to solve the problems caused by foreign enclaves already here.
One Nation are promising the world, but have done that for nearly 30 years and haven’t delivered anything except some media stunts, mediocre cartoons, liquor sales, consistent betrayal and Indian candidates. They have been the biggest handbrake on Australian nationalism and Malcolm Roberts deserves to get turfed at this election, if for nothing else for the sell out on the hate crimes bill.
So where does that leave us?
Senator Gerard Rennick’s People First Party has launched it’s policy platform, including its immigration policy:
“Australia is a country built on immigration.
Our current immigration rate, however, is unsustainable as it is having an adverse impact on the cost of living and housing affordability.
Australia’s immigration policy needs to address the current challenges of housing, cost of living, and employment.
While zero immigration would be ideal, Australia must focus on enhancing workforce productivity and prioritising practical skills in education, along with greater responsibility for aged care, NDIS, and childcare from families.
The People First Party proposes the following changes:
Cut & Cap Immigration
Limit immigration to under 100,000 work visas to reduce pressure on housing, services, and infrastructure. Incentivise settlement in regional areas.
Deny Entry from Radical Nations
Prevent entry from countries known for radical views or extremism incompatible with Australian values.
Deport Illegal Immigrants
Expel all 75,000 illegal immigrants in Australia.
Deport Violent Foreign Criminals
Immediately deport any immigrant convicted of a violent crime.
Abolish the ART Appeals Process
Streamline the deportation process and eliminate costly delays caused by the Administrative Review Tribunal.
Investigate & Close Fraudulent Education Providers
Shut down training providers involved in fraud, fake qualifications, and diploma mills.
Reduce Foreign Student Intake
Prioritise university placements for Australian citizens and require foreign students with poor attendance to return home and finish their studies online.
No Welfare Benefits for 10 Years
Foreign-born citizens must wait 10 years before receiving Australian Centrelink benefits.
Repeal the India Deal
The recent immigration deal with India increases the flow of temporary workers and students into Australia, putting strain on housing and services. This deal needs to be repealed, as it undermines the goal of reducing immigration pressure while prioritizing local employment and community well-being.”
I won’t go into too much detail as there’s a lot to address, but I’ll give my general perspective on the main body of it.
I disagree with that first line as we were built via settlement and that’s an important distinction to make, as it’s often weaponised against us.
I also disagree that the intake rate needs to be 100,000 – it needs to be almost zero and energy and incentives to increase our birth rate and local skills prioritised.
The ART policy is big thumbs up from me. Initially set-up in 1976, the ART (formerly AAT) was never intended to hear migration law appeals and its original purpose was to settle commercial disputes between the states, the Commonwealth and private entities. The ART-Federal Court-Ministerial Intervention-High Court pipeline of spurious visa appeals has cost the country billions over the years, and has led to scandals such as the Tamil family.
Deporting visa overstayers is a no-brainer, but I would add on a permanent ban for visa overstayers as the penalty is currently only a three-year temporary ban under PIC 4013 (which can be waived if you cry hard enough to Home Affairs).
On criminals, I would go one step further and cancel and deport anyone convicted of any crime, not just a violent one. There are hundreds of cases where migrants have escaped the s501 mandatory cancellation trigger due to activist judges, so this would close that loophole. I would also go further and remove revocation rights for anyone cancelled under s501 – if you’ve done 12 months or more in prison or committed offences against children you should not have any kind of appeal rights to stay – this is currently a big problem.
Matt Barrie had some good ideas on X for student visa reform. In my view, Rennick’s policy on this is generally good, but the entire student visa program could just be scrapped overnight and nothing of value would be lost. Some post-graduate studies at the Group of 8 and semester exchange students from Europe and the 5-eyes nations could still get visas, without many downsides.
Incentivising settlement in regional areas is just replacing Australians in the countryside. We’ve had this program for nearly 30 years in various forms and it’s been a hive of fraud and the usual ethnic strife. This should be scrapped completely. South African farmers may be the only exception to this rule, but I’d prefer we help them keep their homelands instead of just transplanting them somewhere else.
Repealing the Indian qualification scheme is also a huge thumbs up, as no other party other than One Nation is offering this, let alone talking about it. As for welfare restrictions, the Swiss model of citizenship is a good starting blueprint with some amendments for the Australian context.
The People First immigration policy is far from perfect, but in my view it is easily the best on offer and a good starting point.
However, all of this must be enacted after a hard border closure accompanied by a policy of active remigration. This is the only policy that will actually remedy most of the problems and the long-term demographic disaster Australia is currently facing.
Too many in the debate are saying they’re against further immigration and when they are asked about what they’re going to do about the multitudes of foreigners currently causing all the problems, they’re apparently fine with them staying forever.
I also give major credit to Rennick as he is also the only one in parliament talking about the monetary and banking system, which is a huge issue and underlying cause of where we are as a nation. He’s also correctly identified Paul Keating’s economic betrayal of the country in 1985 as leading to the current housing debacle:
Repost from based.rennick on TikTok.#auspol pic.twitter.com/eNOU4waRIO
— Senator Gerard Rennick (@SenatorRennick) March 20, 2025
Overall, I will be voting for Rennick and hopefully we can return him to the Senate.
I’m under no illusions that this election and voting generally is going to deliver anything of value, but we have to start the rebirth of the country somewhere.
At the least, we should be creating as many meme-worthy moments at uniparty press conferences as possible.
Header image: Rennick campaigning in Melbourne (Facebook).