Creator Forum - Racial Loyalty News Online

Racial Loyalty News => General News => Downunder News => Topic started by: Rev.Cambeul on Wed 28 Oct 2020

Title: Australians: The Country Doesn't Need More Immigration
Post by: Rev.Cambeul on Wed 28 Oct 2020
'We're full!' Overwhelming number of Australians say the country doesn't need any more immigration as voters reject 'leftist elites'

* Survey of 2,029 people was done by Australian Population Research Institute
* It found that half of the Australian electorate want a reduction in immigration
* About 72 per cent of respondents said Australia does not need any more people
* Many politicians have supported plans for a Big Australia for almost 20 years

Sahar Mourad | Daily Mail (https://www.dailymail.co.uk/) (UK) | 27 October 2020

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8882601/Overwhelming-number-Australians-say-country-doesnt-need-immigration.html

Excerpt: An overwhelming majority of Australians oppose high immigration, fearing it could affect their way of life, a study has found.

Before the pandemic saw the border closed to non-citizens and non-residents in March, Australia's net annual immigration rate was approaching 200,000.

Australia's population also surpassed the 25million mark in August 2018 - 24 years earlier than predicted in the federal government's inaugural Intergenerational Report of 2002.

With Sydney and Melbourne among the world's least affordable housing markets, 72 per cent of respondents have told The Australian Population Research Institute (TAPRI) Australia was full.

(https://creativityalliance.com/forum/gallery/2/9-130717033739.png)

Half the people polled wanted a reduction in immigration, fearing it caused more pollution and congestion.

Study authors and sociologists Katharine Betts and Bob Birrell said rapid population growth before the pandemic had worried a majority of Australians, who regarded both major parties are representing the interests of 'leftist elites'.

'High immigration was responsible for the deterioration of the quality of life in Australia's big cities, as well as stressing its natural environment,' they said in an opinion piece for News Corp.

'Moreover, at least half the electorate do not support the progressive cultural values that left elites (including Labor's leaders) regard as legitimating high immigration.

'This is a key finding since it shows that there is only lukewarm support for the core Big Australia strategy of high immigration.

'We can say with confidence based on our and other surveys that half the electorate are prepared to say, within the safety of an anonymous survey, that immigration should be reduced.'

The TAPRI survey however found people no longer believed it was 'possible' to accommodate more immigrants.

'The conditions that made it possible to sustain a Big Australia and ignore this concern no longer exist in the post-Covid environment,' the study read.

'If the Coalition, or Labor, does try to revive a Big Australia many of these voters would respond readily to any attempt to mobilise them.

Australia's population stood at  25,715,134 as of October 27, 2020.

The survey found that most respondents who took a stance against more immigration were not university educated, while those with a degree were more likely to back immigration.