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Australia Immigration

Huge update: Nationwide ‘March for Australia’ anti-mass immigration rallies

Rallies on August 31, 2025, follow an August 9 neo‑Nazi march and occur amid policy shifts: 185,000 migration ceiling, 71% skilled share, AUD 2,000 student fee, new Skills in Demand visa and limited Global Talent places, prompting migrants to seek employer sponsorship and regional options.

Last updated: August 15, 2025 9:44 am
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Key takeaways
Nationwide rallies called March for Australia set for August 31, 2025, in nearly every capital city.
Permanent migration ceiling cut to 185,000 for 2024–25; skilled stream 71% (132,200 places).
Student visa base fee rose to AUD 2,000 from July 2025; stricter financial and English rules.

(AUSTRALIA) Nationwide rallies branded the March for Australia are scheduled for August 31, 2025, with events planned in nearly every capital city. Organizers say the protests aim to stop mass migration and “take our country back,” while police watch for extremist involvement after a neo-Nazi march in Melbourne on August 9. The timing coincides with visa rule changes, higher student costs, and a tighter permanent migration program, feeding a public debate over who gets to call Australia home and how immigration shapes life.

Protest plans and messaging

Huge update: Nationwide ‘March for Australia’ anti-mass immigration rallies
Huge update: Nationwide ‘March for Australia’ anti-mass immigration rallies

According to the rally’s social media accounts, the events will centre on national symbols, with Australian flags and Eureka flags encouraged and foreign flags banned. The call to action stresses identity, culture, and the idea of national “reclamation.”

Yet the movement’s structure remains murky. Pages created in August say the March for Australia isn’t run by any single group, and they have publicly distanced the rallies from high-profile extremists, including Thomas Sewell of the National Socialist Network.

Despite those disclaimers, online promotion has been intense across Telegram, TikTok, X, and Instagram, where far-right influencers have pushed the August gathering. The August 9 Melbourne street march, led by Sewell, sharpened concerns that extremist groups could try to co-opt the day.

Public reaction has been mixed:

  • Public figures Abbie Chatfield and Carly Findlay condemned the rallies.
  • Rukshan Fernando voiced support.
  • Some activists described the plan as racist and bigoted.

As of mid-August, authorities had not announced bans on the rallies, but police and security agencies were monitoring plans in the lead-up to the final weekend of winter.

Organizers describe the aim as halting “mass migration,” a phrase broad enough to draw in people with different grievances — from housing costs to job competition. Academic and policy experts warn that migrants are being blamed for problems driven by wider economic pressures and caution that fear-framed protests can fuel abuse against recent arrivals and long-settled minority communities.

Policy backdrop: what has changed since 2024

While the streets fill with rhetoric, policy changes are concrete and recent.

Key migration settings for the 2024–25 program year:
– Permanent migration ceiling: 185,000 places (down from 190,000).
– Skilled stream share: 71% (132,200 places).
– Employer-sponsored visas: 44,000 (lifted).
– Skilled independent visas: 16,900 (cut).

Official planning levels are published by the Department of Home Affairs; readers can review the current settings here: https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/what-we-do/migration-program-planning-levels.

Students and education sector changes:
– From July 2025, the base fee for a student visa rose to AUD 2,000.
– Stricter financial and English-language rules, plus a two-tier processing approach under Ministerial Direction 111.
– Many institutions and education agents report fewer casual inquiries and more careful family budgeting.

Skilled migration reset:
– A new “Skills in Demand” visa replaces the Temporary Skill Shortage system.
– Two streams target specialist and core roles.
– The occupation framework now covers more than 450 jobs, prioritising healthcare, technology, and trades.
– Regional measures (DAMA) adjusted: higher age limit (now 55) and more flexible English thresholds to help employers outside major cities.

Investment and high-talent pathways:
– The Business Innovation and Investment Program closed in July 2024, replaced by a National Innovation visa framework.
– Only 4,000 places were allocated to the Global Talent stream in 2024–25, tightening a previously high-demand pathway.

Summary: the gates aren’t closed, but they are narrower and more targeted. Employer sponsorship and regional pathways are now the clearer routes to settlement compared with the classic points-tested independent stream. VisaVerge.com reports these adjustments have increased competition among skilled candidates and pushed more applicants to secure job offers before lodging applications.

Public response and practical implications

The March for Australia taps into a broader discontent driven by high rents, slower wage growth, and stretched services. Protest messaging frames these issues into a single solution — stop immigration now — but the underlying data are mixed.

Labour market and service pressures:
– Employers in healthcare, aged care, and engineering still report shortages.
– Government settings channel most migration places toward those pressure points.
– Reductions in the skilled independent stream while lifting employer-sponsored quotas ties arrivals more directly to jobs.

Law enforcement and community concerns:
– Policing the rallies presents the challenge of mixed crowds: families, first-time protesters, and committed extremists could be in the same spaces.
– Organizers insist they want peaceful marches under Australian and Eureka flags, but some community and faith leaders fear migrants may face harassment, especially if far-right contingents claim the spotlight.
– Police have not publicly detailed crowd-control plans; lessons from the August 9 event in Melbourne will influence operations.

Practical advice for migrants and applicants:
1. Check your occupation against the new combined list and confirm points or salary thresholds in your stream.
2. Gather proof of funds and English scores that meet the latest rules for your visa category.
3. For skilled workers: align skills with priority roles and secure a sponsor where possible.
4. For temporary visa holders and families: consider regional moves or employer-backed pathways as steadier routes to permanence than relying on the independent stream.

What the August 31 rallies could change

The demonstrations alone won’t change migration law, but they could shape public debate and policymaking.

  • If turnout is small, public pressure may ease.
  • If large numbers attend — and extremists dominate the narrative — expect louder calls in Parliament and state capitals for firmer responses on public order and immigration settings.

Either outcome, however, is unlikely to alter the immediate policy levers: migrants and employers will continue to work within existing settings that focus arrivals on roles Australia identifies as needed.

VisaVerge.com
Learn Today
Permanent migration ceiling → Annual cap on permanent visas granted; 185,000 places set for 2024–25 in Australia.
Skilled stream → Portion of migration places allocated to skilled workers; 71% equals 132,200 places in 2024–25.
Employer-sponsored visas → Visas requiring job offers and employer backing; lifted to 44,000 places for 2024–25.
Skills in Demand visa → New temporary skilled visa replacing TSS, with specialist and core streams covering 450+ occupations.
DAMA → Designated Area Migration Agreement for regional employers; now higher age limit (55) and flexible English thresholds.

This Article in a Nutshell

August 31, 2025’s March for Australia mobilises protests amid visa rule changes, fee hikes and skilled migration shifts, raising public safety and migrant-protection concerns nationwide.

— VisaVerge.com
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Oliver Mercer
ByOliver Mercer
Chief Editor
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As the Chief Editor at VisaVerge.com, Oliver Mercer is instrumental in steering the website's focus on immigration, visa, and travel news. His role encompasses curating and editing content, guiding a team of writers, and ensuring factual accuracy and relevance in every article. Under Oliver's leadership, VisaVerge.com has become a go-to source for clear, comprehensive, and up-to-date information, helping readers navigate the complexities of global immigration and travel with confidence and ease.
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harry
harry
30 days ago

it’s time we stopped immigration the department does not screen these people enough letting in criminals and trouble makers to this great nation of ours the government does nothing about it and can’t see that we are on the edge of a civil war in this country of ours if they are so concerned about what is happening in there country go back there and protest over there we don’t want or need it it here get rid of them. Trump has the right idea send all these criminals back to there country they will not assimilate all these head scarfs and alike politics and religion starts wars not solves them we are the dumping ground for all these criminals and we don’t want them here all they do is cause problems for our country it’s not our war it is there’s

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Colin Weeks
Colin Weeks
Reply to  harry
24 days ago

While I am in agreement with most of your comments I am buoyed by comment coming out of Iran that many people from their normally docile and religious accepting group within their population now want far more removal of fundamentalist controls instituted by the policy makers attuned to the Ayatollah’s out of date fanatical views.
Objections to continuing with their nuclear development ambitions and the removal of the thought police from their policing structures are a real advancement to a country that might prosper, with far less religious control, and far more progressive western capitalistic improvements.
The removal of assistance to Hamas and similar religious groups, the better the prospects will be for the scattered groups throughout the world that are still too highly controlled through the utterances of the Ayatollah being conveyed to the believers through their representatives in Mosques located wherever their faithful are allowed to assemble throughout the world.
Our migration must be limited from this country until they become more attuned to our way of life.
I support those marching that want to retain our previous very succesful standard of living that never had the problems being experienced today.

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