House debates
Monday, 25 May 2026
Questions without Notice
Migration
2:42 pm
Mr Tony Burke (Watson, Australian Labor Party, Leader of the House) Share this | Hansard source
I thank the member for Macarthur both for the incredible work he does in south-west Sydney and also the work he does for every one of his constituents, no matter where they come from.
In Australia we've seen net overseas migration fall to 45 per cent below where it peaked, and those opposite seem reluctant to acknowledge that, when the peak occurred, every single one of the settings were the settings they had left in place when the peak occurred. With the reduction of 45 per cent in net overseas migration, the largest part of the growth we had to deal with was in student visas. When we brought forward legislation not only to be able to cap the number of student visas but also to be able to link the number of student visas to student accommodation—link it directly to housing—what did those opposite do? They opposed the legislation. We also, in the budget, have flagged further changes we'll be making with respect to working holiday-makers. For those opposite, it was the National Party, before the election, that said they would be opposed to any changes to reducing the number of working holiday-makers.
In the budget reply speech, the Leader of the Opposition took a step that I haven't seen a political leader take in this place before. A lot's been made of what he said about permanent residents but there's one permanent resident he seems to like, in that Senator Pauline Hanson is a permanent resident inside his head, living rent free. He introduced a new argument that I've not seen before from any leader in this parliament, and that was to claim that, somehow, you will be more worthy as an Australian if you come from a liberal democracy. Somehow, you will be more worthy based on where you're from.
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