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Josh Taylor
Restricting welfare to citizens not ‘punishing’ but ‘incentivising’, shadow minister says
The shadow immigration minister, Jonno Duniam, has said Angus Taylor’s budget reply proposal to limit welfare payments only to Australian citizens was not a punishment for permanent residents but a way to “incentivise that pathway to Australian citizenship”
ABC 7.30 host Sarah Ferguson asked Duniam how does “punishing tax-paying permanent residents appeal to would-be migrants that the country so badly needs?”
Duniam responded that “countless” people who have migrated to Australia and have become wealthy because of the opportunities have not been punished, and people like them who want to come won’t be punished either.
He said:
double quotation markBut they’ll still have to wait under the visa system a number of years, in almost all cases, to receive the kinds of welfare benefits that you are talking about.
And in many cases now, under Labor’s current approach, there are wait times between 4 and 10 years for various supports that people may want to take advantage of.
So this is not about punishment, but it is about trying to incentivise that pathway to Australian citizenship.
Jonno Duniam. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAPHe said the Coalition is pro-migration, noting Australia’s ageing population, but says that “we want to determine who is coming here [and] in what number”:
double quotation markWe want to ensure that we have houses for them to live in.
And can I say, we want to preserve, for those who eventually become Australian citizens – which I hope is all of them that want to come here – the services that we provide in this country.
That’s a pretty pro-migration policy, if ever I’ve seen one.
But there will always be critics, and they will say what they say.
ShareUpdated at 23.47 CEST
Good morning
Good morning, it’s Nick Visser here again to dive into this gloomy Tuesday, in Sydney at least. Here’s what’s on deck in the news:
More than $57bn of infrastructure in Victoria is at risk due to climate hazards, according a new study. An independent adviser assessed risks to government-owned or regulated assets, and found many were exposed to climate hazards. By 2070, the value could rise to more than $71bn.
A flood warning remains in place for the Nerang and Coomera Rivers in the Gold Coast after moderate to heavy rainfall in the region since Sunday night, and there are reports of flash flooding across roads. Rainfall is forecast to continue into Tuesday, with further river and creek level rises and flooding expected, according to the Bureau of Meteorology.
We’ll bring you more soon.
ShareAustralia news live: flash flooding hits Queensland roads; $57bn of Victoria infrastructure threatened by climate hazards NYT News Today.
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