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Paul Scarr Rebukes Party Hardliners in Evidence-First Migration Reset

He outlines an evidence-first approach that links migration settings to housing supply and demands greater transparency from government.

Overview

  • In a speech to the Migration Institute of Australia, Scarr warned the immigration debate must not inflame emotion and defended Australia’s multicultural tradition.
  • He criticised Andrew Hastie’s use of language associated with Enoch Powell’s 1968 rhetoric and contrasted it with a measured, fact-based discussion.
  • Citing ABS data, he noted net overseas migration hit 315,900 in the year to 31 March 2025, well above the roughly 216,000 pre‑COVID average.
  • Scarr argued migration levels should be set with housing supply constraints in mind and said credible proposals must detail visa categories and policy levers.
  • He attacked Labor’s decision to hold the permanent program at 185,000 for 2025–26, calling the late, brief announcement poor practice and urging multi‑year planning to maintain social licence.