Cap migration at 80,000 GROSS annually (prioritising skilled workers and family reunions), with a five-year freeze on non-essential visas. This will allow AUSTRALIANS to return home and enable exception-based critical skills entry, weeding out non-essential migration.
This policy will result in net-negative Net Overseas Migration and a reduction of 2.6 million non-citizens over six years to prevent economic collapse. Approximately 70,000 Australians return each year; the 80,000 gross cap allows for Australians to return and a very small buffer for emergency skilled placements (removing generalised categories).
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This reduces pressure on housing, wages, and infrastructure, saving billions while preserving Australia’s cultural identity and significantly reducing demand-side pressure on house prices and rents.
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Cancellation and remigration of visa abuse candidates
- Return 126,000 student overstays (declined AAT cases).
- Revocation of 400,000 bridging visas – if your visa expires, you will be required to immediately exit the country and obtain a new visa approval prior to re-entry.
- Shift to online learning for foreign students in Australian universities and educational programs, revoking more than 1.4 million visas over the next five years. University-based visa pathways to be cancelled from 2026, returning physical placement priority to Australian youth.
- Immediate revocation of all student visas where the student has ceased studying for more than 90 days.
- Cancellation of all welfare, pension, and medical eligibility for non-citizen persons.
- Full stop on any immigration from countries with dissimilar values, customs, or democratic systems.
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UAE-style no-citizenship model: permanent residency and temporary visas only, strictly enforced, with removal of any non-citizen who offends Australian criminal laws.
- Economic buffering (GDP protection) through immediate energy cost reductions, payroll tax halving, and land tax relief to hyper-stimulate industry and manufacturing for Australian-owned operations. Government income should be derived through delivering services, not excessive taxation.