New poll suggests 49 per cent of Australians back Muslim migrant ban

Labor leader Bill Shorten has weighed into a poll which shows almost half of all Australians want a ban on Muslim immigration.

 Muslim women outside the Opera House in Sydney (AAP)

Muslim women outside the Opera House in Sydney (AAP) Source: AFP

Federal Labor has cautioned against the findings of a poll showing almost half of all Australians want a ban on Muslim immigrants

Forty-nine per cent of people surveyed in an Essential poll agreed that Muslims should be blocked from the country while 40 per cent disagreed with the idea.

There was 60 per cent support for the ban among coalition voters, 40 per cent from Labor and a surprising 34 per cent from Greens voters.

More than a third felt Muslims did not integrate into Australian society as their main reason for supporting a ban, with some citing concerns about terrorism and lack of uptake of Australian values, the poll published in The Guardian showed.

'We all came from somewhere else'

Labor leader Bill Shorten said Australia was an immigrant country and the future of the nation relied on people working together.

"Other than our first Australians we all came from somewhere else," he told reporters in Adelaide.

"I don't want to do is see this country scapegoating minorities for the challenges of the bigger issues."

It was the argument of "crazy fundamentalist" Islamic extremists to say Muslims couldn't support western Liberal democracy.

"We would be playing into the hands of the crazies, of the fundamentalists, of those who hate the Australian way of life by somehow saying that that religion, Islam, is incompatible with western democracy."

One Nation leader Pauline Hanson snatched headlines last week when she called for such a ban, saying that Australia was in danger of being swamped by Muslims who had "a culture and ideology incompatible with our own".

The call was rejected by senior government figures including Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who stressed Australia was the world's most successful multicultural society.

Meanwhile, Mr Turnbull on Wednesday announced Australia would keep its refugee intake at nearly 19,000 a year as well as including Central Americans in a fresh intake program.

Share
2 min read

Published

Updated

Source: AAP

Share this with family and friends


News

Sign up now for the latest news from Australia and around the world direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to SBS’s terms of service and privacy policy including receiving email updates from SBS.

Download our apps
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
Independent news and stories connecting you to life in Australia and Mandarin-speaking Australians.
Understand the quirky parts of Aussie life.
Get the latest with our exclusive in-language podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on SBS
Simplified Chinese Collection

Simplified Chinese Collection

Watch onDemand