Meme Release – Vote Low Immigration

Which Parties Are For Low Immigration In 2025?

PUT THESE PARTIES FIRST

I’ve done the research. If you want to get immigration DOWN, vote for the parties above and PUT THE MAJORS LAST.

COPY AND SHARE THE IMAGE – IT’S FREE

Say NO to a Big Australia

STAY UNDER 30 MILLION

END THE AUSTRALIA-INDIA Migration and MoBILITY Partnership ‘Agreement’

It’s your choice.

Your preferences ARE YOURS.

Swamping The Country – Vote To Stop It

If your priority this election is to send the message that you’re fed up with mass immigration you didn’t ask for, preference the parties in the image above in the order they appear; Sustainable Australia, Vote Planet, Democracy First, People First (Gerard Rennick), One Nation, Great Australian, Libertarian and then any others and then put the majors last.

You’ll be able to do that for the Senate ballot paper, depending on which state you’re in. (In the Victorian Senate, look carefully for the Vote Planet logo – a black image of the world – it appears inside the Fusion Party logo – a purple doughnut – as in the image above.) However, the House of Representatives ballot will have fewer of these parties. Look for Democracy First candidates using their logo inside the Fusion doughnut logo, especially if you’re in Victoria. Be warned; some Fusion Party candidates are for high immigration, so identifying the logo is important.

The first three parties (SAP, VP & DF) are basically socially in the sensible centre with post-growth economic policies that help reduce inequality (see How A History Scientist Votes). People First is similar, but climate-change denying. The following three (ON, GA & L) are socially right wing and economically right wing. Given the current trend in polls indicating the major parties will maintain their majority status in the next parliament it is crucial to do everything possible to prevent it. The reason being that they will be able to block changes to the electoral system that they recently rigged in their favour with the Electoral Reform Bill. From 2027, it will be ever more difficult to unseat them.

You have to number every box on the ballot paper for the House of Representatives. Depending on where you’re voting, you’ll probably need to decide who put before the major parties (LNP, Labor and Greens). You’ll have to do your own research and Build A Ballot is a great website for this. (If you need help with election words – jargon – go HERE.)

The first three parties are basically socially right wing with degrowth economic policies that help reduce inequality (see How A History Scientist Votes). People First is similar, but climate-change denying. The following three are socially right wing and economically right wing, like the Alternative for Germany (AfD).

As for the order you list the four major parties at the end (Green Labor, Liberal, National), keep this in mind: The rule of thumb should be to put the incumbent (your current MP) at the very end. So for example, if your electorate has a Labor member of parliament, put Labor last, even if you tend to vote Labor. The purpose of this is to get as many MPs on as razor thin a margin of support as possible so that they will be more responsive to their constituents during their term in office rather than their party. This will also help create a hung parliament, which will be more accountable to voters. It helps reduce the power of parliament (which has become fire-walled from low immigration advocates, among other things), shakes it up a bit and keeps MPs on their toes. This is natural when a society is going through a transitional period. It increases the pressure on MPs from different perspectives to negotiate a range of party policies and reach compromises. This is necessary when structural reform is required.

For more detailed information, go to Election 2025.

One response to “Meme Release – Vote Low Immigration”

  1. noisilymaker28c322b310 Avatar
    noisilymaker28c322b310

    Thanks I appreciate your research on this Simon,

    P

    Paul Loney

    0427 621 525

    Sent from Outlookhttp://aka.ms/weboutlook

    Like

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