1. Introduction
We set up End Mass Migration Alliance to address the main issue of mass immigration. For years, Australians have voted in surveys and polls for lower immigration, only to be ignored by the Australia Labor Party, Liberal National Party and The Greens.
Demographers have shown Australia can maintain gradual population growth by reducing net overseas migration (NOM) to less than 100,000 migrants per year. This is in line with Australia’s longer-term NOM trends.
However, we believe the optimum immigration policy for Australia is zero net migration. There are several reasons for this which we will elaborate on in future newsletters. In the meantime, we encourage readers to go to One Nation’s website as zero net migration is their core policy, and they provide more detail.
Zer net migration will enable Australia’s infrastructure, housing, hospitals, schools and other services to keep pace with population growth. As will be shown in future newsletters, zero net migration does not equate to population decline over the mid-term. This is due to what demographers call “population momentum.”
2. A common sense approach to immigration policy
We have signed up to Substack to provide alternative news and information about Australia’s rapidly changing population. There is a demand for this in Australia. For example, over the past decade the majority of Australian’s voting in polls and surveys would prefer a significant reduction in net overseas migration. Many respondents demonstrate a genuine concern about loss of national identity.
3. Rapid cultural change
Australia is going though rapid cultural change. It has one of the highest amounts of foreign-born residents in the world (both in total numbers, and per capita). The 2021 Census showed immigrants account for 29% of the population, the highest proportion among major Western nations. A recent survey found a startling shift in public attitudes due to excessive immigration. A majority (53 per cent) of voters think that cultural diversity is now a threat to Australia’s own culture and identity.
To get an understanding of how much the ALP and LNP have changed Australia with immigration policy. The Australia Population Research Institute show from 2004-2019 the proportion of net migration to Australia coming from the UK, Ireland and Europe fell from 21 percent to five percent. At the same time the proportion coming from Asia rose from 45 percent to 72 percent. By 2018-19, 85 percent of net migration was from Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, and Sub-Saharan Africa.