Party Calls for Immigration Cuts

Church and religious leaders are divided over the rapid rise of a right-wing political party that is inflaming tensions over racial issues.

Australians go to the polls October 3 in a sharply contested federal election in which the controversial One Nation party may gain enough seats to wield influence in Parliament.

One Nation’s founder, Pauline Hanson, an outspoken former fish-and-chip shop owner, advocates abolition of the government’s policies favoring multiculturalism. Hanson also wants severe cutbacks in immigration.

One Nation was widely assumed to be just another minority group with extremist views and little influence, until June elections in Queensland. The results shocked Australia: One Nation gained 23 percent of the vote and may now gain 10 to 15 percent nationally.

Bill Feldman, the leader of One Nation in Queensland, openly professes to be a born-again Christian.

Feldman’s regional success is due partly to the Christian vote. Anglican minister Alan Colyer says, “None of the other candidates had any Christian conscience or morality about them, so I voted for somebody who I knew was prayerful and biblical.” Feldman says his party wants equality for all, regardless of color, but squadrons of police are assigned to protect One Nation’s Hanson from antiracism demonstrators.

Asian tourism to Australia has fallen 23 percent since May 1997, and tourism industry leaders blame Hanson’s comments that Australia is “in danger of being swamped by Asians.”

A One Nation branch president, Brendan Bogle, recently resigned, claiming One Nation has been infiltrated by the Confederate Action Party, which he says advocates racial segregation.

Some Australians fear that One Nation aims to revive the White Australia Policy, which from 1901 to the 1960s prohibited non-Caucasian immigration. But Feldman says the immigration policy is not about race but about economics. Once high unemployment figures drop, Feldman says, “We as a country with so much to offer can open up our borders again and be generous.”

In late August, church, welfare, business, and union leaders issued a joint statement saying that One Nation’s policies “threaten both our internal cohesion and our international reputation.”

Copyright © 1998 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

How Evangelicals Became Israel's Best Friend: The amazing story of Christian efforts to create and sustain the modern nation of Israel.

Cover Story

How Evangelicals Became Israel's Best Friend

Giving and Getting in 1997

Unreached People Group: Classical Musicians

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from October 05, 1998

The Good HMO

Is Hell Forever?

The Baroness Cox: The Homeless Church of Myanmar

Theology for the Rest of Us

PAX TV off the Ground

Reconcilers Fellowship Folds

Evangelicals Are Not an Interest Group

LifeLine Subscribers Get Busy Signal

Bringing Up Babies

U.S. Churches Join Global Warming Debate

Urban Kids Meet Wilderness and Christ

60,000 Churches Join Prayer Effort

In Brief: October 05, 1998

Religion Law Jeopardizes Evangelism

In Brief: October 05, 1998

Signs of Canaanite Jerusalem Found

New Coptic Church Forcibly Closed

C. S. Lewis Birth Bash Draws Crowd

Editorial

The Prodigal Who Didn’t Come Home

Obsessed with the End Times

Letters

Methodists: Council Bans Same-Sex Rites

More PK Downsizing

Congress: Curbing Religious Persecution Difficult

Split Deepens over Religious Liberty Bill

Christian Science: Sect Polishes Image

Terrorism: Bombings Inflame Religious Tensions

Vineyard: Costa Rican Coffee Finances Urban Outreach

Champions for Christ Pulled into NFL Convert Controversy

A Postmodern Primer to Doctrine

Jerusalem as Jesus Views It

Smuggling Jesus into Muslim Hearts

The Muslim Challenge

Satan with a Stethoscope

Putting Death in Your Daytimer

The Lord Puts Strange Hooks in the Mouths of Men

Finishing Well

The Unmoral Prophets

Me? Apologize for Slavery?

View issue

Our Latest

The Just Life with Benjamin Watson

Stephen Enada: Exposing a Silent Slaughter

Unpacking the crisis facing Nigeria’s persecuted Church

The Strangest Enemy I’ll Ever Meet

Scripture speaks of death as an enemy Christ conquers—and the door through which we see God face to face.

Review

First Comes Sex, Then Comes Gender

A new book acknowledges both categories as biblically valid—but insists on ordering them properly.

In Politics, Contempt Is a Common Tongue

Antisemitic, racist texts show the need for spiritual and character renewal.

News

Government Shutdown Deepens Hunger Crisis

When paychecks and SNAP distributions stop, the food pantry line grows.

Jonah in an Age of Outrage

The prophet’s lesson is also ours: We must recover compassion for neighbor and enemy alike, or our words will be hollow.

Grassroots Efforts Bring Together Diverse Sects in Iraq

Interfaith group uses projects and dialogues to push for greater religious freedom.

Becoming Part of God’s Family

Weekly participation in ordinary church life isn’t flashy, but it is radical.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube