PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
20/11/1998
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
10927
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON. JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS TO THE FEDERATION OF ETHNIC COMMUNITIES COUNCIL NATIONAL CONFERENCE, BRISBANE

E&OE...............................................................................................

Thank you very much, Randolph, can I commence my address by congratulating

you for your re-election as chairman of this organisation, and I

would like to acknowledge the presence this morning of representatives

of many organisations, most particularly jil Djekurra and Evelyn

Scott as leaders of ATSIC and the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation.

I am particularly pleased to be here this morning and have the

opportunity so soon after the Government's re-election to discuss

our approach to immigration and other policies which are very important

to the members and supporters of the various organisations that

are represented this morning.

The next three years does provide all of us with tremendous opportunities

to celebrate and showcase the Australian achievement. Our achievement

as a nation of immigrants will be central to our national celebrations

during that time. 1999 will mark the 50th anniversary

of Australian citizenship, and the year will provide the chance

to reaffirm the value of Australian citizenship and its role as

a unifying force in our culturally diverse Australian community.

The Olympic Games in the year 2000 will be an opportunity to showcase

our success as a harmonious and united nation with a commitment

to shared values, excellence and respect for each individual. And

of course most importantly, the centenary of federation in 2001

will allow us to reflect on the Australian achievement and how far

we have come as a nation and what our aspirations are for the new

century.

Above all, in observing these things and celebrating these events,

we must celebrate the values and principles that have made us such

a cohesive nation. We are a society united in the belief that each

of us should have the same opportunity to reach our full potential

and share in what this great country has to offer. Our society is

underpinned by those uniquely Australian concepts of a fair go and

practical mateship - integral features of our community and national

identity.

Ours is a resilient and optimistic community that has extended

the gift of welcome to people from every corner of the world. Whether

Australian by birth or by choice we join as one people strengthened

by a diversity of experience and cultural background.

But above all of this we share a strong set of values:

We honour the importance of family life where the hopes of our

children can be realised and where our elderly can be given the

respect that they have earned and deserved.

We dedicate ourselves to the principles of free enterprise, to

the fruits of working hard and taking risks. We revere our democratic

national institutions and respond to calls for personal responsibility

and the provision of practical help for the less fortunate. And

we are ambitious for Australia to succeed into the next century

and for all of us to share in that prosperity.

These enduring values hold important messages for all of us.

First and foremost, we are all Australians, and no Australian need

feel foreign in their own land. No-one is better or worse than any

other. There exists no qualification by birth or race, wealth or

heritage, which limits a person's pride in this nation or the

stake they hold within it.

We all belong to Australia and we all have an equal right to regard

it as our home, with all the sanctuary that a home provides. There

is no place within our community for those who would traffic, for

whatever purpose, in division based on a person's religion, their

place of birth, the colour of their skin or their ethnic makeup.

There is no place in Australia for any semblance of racial or ethnic

intolerance.

In October 1996 the Commonwealth Parliament passed a resolution

that contained a simple, direct and unambiguous statement of certain

values and principles including the commitment to maintaining a

non discriminatory immigration policy and the denunciation of racial

intolerance.

What I never want to see, and I know no person in this audience

wants to see, is an Australia where people of a particular racial

background feel unwelcome. That would be a denial of everything

that our country stands for. We have welcomed people from all around

the world and all deserve to be treated equally and with an equal

share of decency and civility. That is one of our common bonds as

Australians.

My answer to all of those who feel threatened by our immigration

programme is that they need not feel that way. I don't call

them racist. I genuinely believe, however, that there are some who

seek to prey upon community fears to encourage a sense of hostility

towards people of particular racial backgrounds.

This is something that we should all oppose very strongly and I

believe we should be reassured by the message sent by the Australian

mainstream at the election that we are in essence a great hearted

people and small minded policies will never hold sway over us.

One of the great virtues of being Australian as we come to the

close of the century is that we occupy a unique intersection of

history, geography, culture and economic circumstance.

Australia is a projection of western civilisation in this part

of the world. We have deep and enduring links with Britain and the

other nations of Europe and we share much of their great legal,

cultural and democratic political inheritance.

We have profound links with North America and we have shared many

experiences with the United States in both war and peace.

We are geographically located in the Asian-Pacific region, and

we have within the Australian community a vibrant community of people

of Asian descent who add to the strength and the vitality and the

tolerance and the great cross section of modern Australia. This

unique intersection means that we can draw strength from our diversity

and our understanding of the region. We have an opportunity to use

these unique characteristics in an effective way to achieve what

no other country can.

And having just come from a meeting of APEC in Kuala Lumpur, and

that is an organisation that brings together leaders of all of the

pacific nations, and therefore a great cross-section of that enormous

community, it was a reminder to me of just what a special intersection

of those circumstances of history, geography and culture and other

things that Australia really occupies. And we do have insights and

understandings because of that particular background and the diversity

of that background that gives us an opportunity to project a view

which is superior and more enlightened and more comprehending of

what is needed in that part of the world than that possessed by

any other country.

And it is because of that combined background, our European associations,

our long association with the nations of North America, our location

in the Asian-Pacific region and our understanding of the people

to people contact that that location gives us all of those things

combined in a very special way to give Australia a capacity to influence

events that no other country can possibly possess.

Our diversity is a source of great national strength. Particularly

since World War II, migration has made an enormous contribution

to Australia's economy, Australia's society and Australia's

culture.

There is not an example anywhere else in the world of the successful

absorption of such a diverse group of new citizens.

Multiculturalism involves the principle of mutual obligation. Within

the framework of an overriding commitment to Australia, it respects

the right of each individual to celebrate his or her particular

cultural identity in an atmosphere of tolerance, understanding and

mutual self respect.

As a Liberal Party Prime Minister I am proud to be the recipient

of the Liberal Party heritage of compassion and commonsense in relation

to our immigration programme.

In the post World War II years, both sides of politics pursued

policies which brought millions of migrants to Australia and greatly

strengthened Australia. Liberals, in particular, are grateful that

it was the Liberal Party of Australia that did away with the White

Australian Policy.

It was under the Fraser Government that Australia realised its

full humanitarian obligation by taking on a per capita basis, a

larger number of refugees from war torn Indo-China than any other

country in the world.

This tradition, which has given Australia a level of tolerance

and harmony without parallel, lives on today in our own immigration

programme which seeks to strike a proper balance between compassion

and the national interest. When the Coalition came to power in 1996,

we set about making changes to the programme to restore confidence

in it.

Any sovereign country has the right to determine how it will dispense

its compassion and determine the level, from time to time, of its

migration programme. In our view, our predecessors failed to assert

control over the programme in the national interest and overtly

politicised aspects of immigration and multicultural policies.

That is why we have now fine tuned programme levels in accordance

with Australia's economic situation. It is why we altered the skill

composition and selection criteria to better reflect future development

requirements. That is why we have not exempted this area from fiscal

consolidation and why we have cracked down on illegal immigrants

and overstayers.

During our second term we aim to build on our achievements to ensure

that the immigration programme continues to be managed with integrity

and compassion so that it enjoys the confidence of the entire Australian

community.

We will continue to run the programme in the national interest.

This means balancing economic and non-economic components of the

programme and ensuring an appropriate dispersal of our migrant intake.

We will examine the recommendations of a Commonwealth/State working

party which is due to report next year on options to increase the

number of skilled migrants in regional areas.

It is important that the immigration programme be managed in an

open and publicly accountable manner and that migrants are selected

on an objective case by case assessment of applications against

clear legal criteria.

To maintain community confidence in our programme we will curb

the number of applicants who seek to abuse the review process by

reintroducing legislation in the Senate to restrict access to judicial

review in all but exceptional circumstances.

We will also reintroduce legislation, which was delayed in the

Senate, to streamline the two-tier review process of non-refugee

visa decisions to a single review by the Migration Review Tribunal.

We will also continue to balance the humanitarian, family and economic

components of our immigration programme. The skilled proportion

of the migration programme increased from 32 per cent to 52 per

cent in the last financial year. Skills in short supply in Australia

will continue be the principal determinant of skilled migrant entry.

Employer nomination, where migrants are guaranteed employment,

will be accorded a higher priority for skilled entry. Minimum thresholds

will be established to remove anomalies in the current points test

and we will introduce factors more relevant to gaining employment

in Australia.

During the election campaign, I committed the Coalition, if re-elected,

to consult community groups, academics and others on settlement

and multicultural policies and to engage all sections of the community

in the settlement process.

The goal of our settlement programme is to allow our newest arrivals

to fully participate in our community.

Over the next term of office we will maintain the role of community

organisations in providing settlement services, support for migrant

resource centres, the community settlement services scheme and funding

for the Adult Migrant English Programme.

We will tender out the AMEP Research Centre and ensure that the

eligibility criteria for programmes are sufficiently liberal and

flexible to achieve more lasting benefits for non English speaking

migrants.

We will maintain funding to English language and literacy training

and education.

We will also provide better access to the translating and interpreting

service as well as put the operation of the service on a commercial

basis.

Australia is one of the oldest democracies in the world and democratic

principles are deeply etched in our national character. It is that

very democratic tradition, so much part of the Australian way, which

has allowed the cultural diversity produced by our immigration programme

to flourish so successfully.

Last year the government established a new National Multicultural

Advisory Council, chaired by Mr Neville Roach, to recommend policies

and an implementation framework to ensure that cultural diversity

remains a unifying influence. The Council's report is expected shortly.

As you are aware, after appropriate consultation and research we

launched the first stage of the 'Living in Harmony' campaign to

promote community harmony and the enormous benefits of cultural

diversity within Australian society.

The first stage included a $2.5 million programme of grants and

partnership projects with the Australian Cricket Board, the New

South Wales Rural Fire Service and Woolworths. We are committed

to maintaining this campaign through the allocation of an extra

$5 million which will take the overall campaign to $10 million.

We are also planning for the celebration of 50 years of Australian

citizenship in 1999. For this reason we established the Council

for Australian Citizenship to promote debate on citizenship issues.

We will report to the Parliament on the findings and recommendations

of the Citizenship Council and I look forward to next year's

celebrations.

Let me at this opportunity, Mr Chairman, pay particular tribute

to Philip Ruddock who has been the Minister for Immigration and

Multicultural Affairs since the Coalition Government took office

in March of 1996. I believe that Mr Ruddock has handled the portfolio

with great skill and compassion. He has been very professional and

evenhanded. Philip's qualities both as a Minister and as person

who has unique insights and understandings of the area for which

he has responsibility have been recognised in his promotion to Cabinet

and his new role in assisting me in relation to reconciliation issues.

I record with great thanks and admiration Philip Ruddock's

contribution in these areas.

Mr Chairman, let me conclude by saying a couple of general things.

I have every confidence as we head towards a new Australian century

that we can become even stronger and more united. I take a profoundly

optimistic and positive view about the character of Australian society.

I believe that the things that unite us as Australians will always

be more powerful and more enduring than those things that divide.

Our nation has been immensely enriched through the successive waves

of immigration over the years that have brought new people from

every corner of the world. We have succeeded better than any other

nation on earth in recognising that we are a community of many parts

and many origins. We do have a level of tolerance and understanding

that is the envy of most nations. We are essentially a united people,

but we respect the different cultural heritage of those within our

community and we recognise and support their right to celebrate

their own particular culture and their own heritage in a completely

tolerant and open fashion.

We are a nation like any, not without our blemishes. We have within

our ranks those who are intolerant, and those who would seek to

exploit differences based on race for their own particular purposes.

As a community we face the challenge of achieving an effective and

widely accepted reconciliation between the indigenous people of

this country and the rest of the Australian community. And I particularly

welcome the presence here today of Gatjil and Evelyn in that context.

But it is important that we approach these issues in a spirit of

both optimism and hope. The Australian achievement, and I believe

it is a glorious one, is quite special, it is unique. There is an

Australian way, there is an Australian character and all have made

a contribution to it. And whether you were born in this country

or your parents and grandparents were born in this country or whether

this is your country of choice, it is equally our own and we all

have a right to share in its benefits and we all have a right to

enjoy both its tolerance, its respect and its protection.

I have great confidence that the next century hold enormous prospects

for Australia. I have a great belief that the unique intersection

of which I spoke gives a capacity to leave a mark, not only on this

part of the world, but on the world generally which would be denied

to any other community.

I thank the Federation for inviting me here today. We will continue

to have as a government and at a political level as two coalition

parties we'll continue to have a constructive ongoing dialogue

with your organisation. We will agree on some things, we will disagree

on others. You will like some of the things we do, you will dislike

some of the other things we'll do. That is in the nature of

public office and public life. But I come on behalf of the Government

in goodwill, with a positive attitude to all of the organisations

and all of the different groups that are represented here today.

I thank you for inviting me, I wish you and your deliberations

well and I look forward to three years of constructive co-operation.

Thank you.

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