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Parliamentary Speech: Immigration
House of Representatives on Wednesday 13th May 2026
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The Treasurer stood up last night and hit us with hard news—that housing prices have increased more than 400 per cent since 1999. For many Australians, the dream of homeownership is dead. Every week people line up at open homes only to have their dreams crushed. I hear these stories in my community of Mandurah all the time. What's Labor's plan to fix this? New taxes on housing—taxes they ruled out before the last election.
The Treasurer failed to mention immigration. He didn't mention that, under Labor, Australia's population has grown by 1.8 million people, and that growth has been driven by 1.4 million migrants—at a time when our fertility rate has hit a low of 1.4 births per woman. We're not having enough children to replace ourselves, and Labor is running the fastest immigration program in our history.
The Treasurer also failed to mention that we've only built around half a million homes under Labor. No wonder young Aussies are locked out of the housing market. Now we learn that Labor will welcome another 750,000 migrants over the next three years. Labor is on target for two million migrants before the next election, yet we can't build fast enough to house these people.
Prime Minister, here's a tip. Why don't you tie immigration to housing builds? Look after Australians; get our people into a home, before you open our borders to everyone else.
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Andrew James commented 2026-05-18 11:28:34 +0800Hi Andrew. As Labor voter, I’m not opposed to reducing migration as an one of many steps I hope to help improve our housing crisis, but there certainly lacks any details about who/why the reduction is. e.g. There’s about ~600,000 people arriving a year, with a net migration of ~300,000. Which visa’s specifically matter? e.g. Stopping family from citizens already here? Reducing student visas? No more NZ’ers? I don’t think anything constructive can be done until a decent policy is drawn up, and ideally worked in bipartisan manner with Labor party. Because there’s going to be consequences to whatever grouping is reduced and we need to be transparent about that. Otherwise all we’ll have is more culture wars that achieves nothing but social division, which I’m tired of. -