Liberal's Election Suicide: A MAGA (Make Australia Great Again) Call to Sink Globalists and Vote One Nation/Conservative Parties and Independents By James Reed

Tomorrow, May 3, 2025, Australia's Liberal Party, led by the spineless Peter Dutton, is set to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory, losing an election they should've won in a landslide. George Christensen's Nation First (April 29, 2025) hits the nail on the head: the Liberals' failure to confront Labor's mass immigration disaster, the crippling accommodation crisis, and universities turned migration mills for Chinese and Indian students, has betrayed conservative voters. Dutton's weak-kneed pandering to globalists, mimicking Canada's suicidal embrace of Mark Carney, proves the Liberal Party is a rotting husk, beyond repair. From a MAGA perspective, it's time to teach these sellouts a lesson—vote One Nation or other minor conservative parties to burn the Liberal corpse to the ground. Let Labor go full communist, exposing their red colours, so Australians wake up and fight for a nation-first future.

Under Anthony Albanese's Labor government, Australia's been flooded with migrants, spiking net overseas migration to 535,000 in 2022–23—double the pre-Covid decade's average (Guardian, March 27, 2025). This isn't prosperity; it's sabotage. The accommodation crisis is a direct result, with rents soaring and Australians priced out of homes. Nation First warns of Canada's parallel disaster, where mass immigration fuelled housing chaos, yet Labor doubles down, ignoring the pain of families sleeping in cars or tents. X post from @actualAlexJames (April 29, 2025) slams the Liberals for not capitalising on this, letting Albanese skate free.

International students, especially from China and India, are a key driver. Universities, acting as glorified migration agents, enrolled over 700,000 foreign students by April 2024, pushing temporary entrants to 2.8 million (Guardian, June 19, 2024). These "students" aren't here to study—they're backdoor migrants, clogging housing markets in Sydney and Melbourne. Solidarity Online (June 22, 2023) notes single households are rising, needing 533,300 more homes by 2033, but migration's role is undeniable, especially in urban centers. Labor's refusal to cap student visas—failing to pass legislation in 2024—shows they're in bed with university profiteers and globalist elites (ABC News, May 25, 2024).

Public resources are buckling. Hospitals, schools, and roads can't cope with the influx. X user @pepedownunder (May 1, 2025) claims 82% of Australians want Christianity as the official religion to counter "extreme Islam," reflecting fears of cultural erosion from unchecked migration. Albanese's Labor, like Canada's Liberals, prioritises World Economic Forum (WEF) agendas—Net Zero, digital IDs, WHO treaties—over Aussies' needs.

Peter Dutton had a golden chance to channel Trump's MAGA fire, slashing migration, banning foreign property buyers, and calling out universities' migration scams. Instead, he's flopped. Nation First (April 29, 2025) rips the Liberals for "focusing on the opposite of what they should be," aping Canada's Conservatives who lost by playing nice. Dutton's migration stance is a mess: in 2022, he urged more migration to fix labour shortages (ABC News, May 25, 2024), then flipped to a 25% cut (140,000 annually) in 2024 to "fix" housing (ABC News, May 17, 2024). Crikey (January 13, 2025) calls him "badly confused," with his own pamphlet contradicting itself on workforce needs.

His housing plan—tax-deductible mortgages for first buyers, superannuation withdrawals—is half-baked. Guardian (March 27, 2025) doubts it'll deliver the 100,000 homes promised, and David Pocock slams both parties for dodging tax reform to treat housing as a right, not an investment (Guardian, April 15, 2025). Dutton's anti-woke jabs, like criticising Acknowledgement of Country rituals, are too little, too late (Nation First). His One Nation preference deal, meant to siphon Right-wing votes, backfired, alienating metro voters in seats like Cowper (Guardian, April 30, 2025).

Dutton's no Trump. Trump's 145% tariffs crushed China, but Dutton's too scared to defy globalists. His AUKUS loyalty and soft stance on China's naval drills (February 2025, per Reuters) show he's a WEF puppet in disguise (Reuters, May 1, 2025). The Liberals' campaign, aping Trump's style without substance, collapsed under global uncertainty from Trump's tariffs, with polls slipping from a 52–48 lead in February to Labor's 53–47 edge (Reuters).

Universities are a national disgrace, turning education into a visa factory. Guardian (June 19, 2024) reports 700,000 international students, mostly Chinese and Indian, drive migration surges, with Labor's failed visa caps exposing their complicity. ABC News (May 25, 2024) notes both parties considered caps, but Dutton's "nationwide cap" idea lacks teeth, letting universities rake in billions while Aussies lose housing. Solidarity Online (June 22, 2023) ties this to rent hikes, as students compete for scarce rentals. X user @actualAlexJames (April 29, 2025) fumes at Liberals for not hammering Labor on this, missing a populist slam-dunk.

This isn't education—it's betrayal. Universities prioritise foreign cash over Aussie students, degrading standards and fuelling social tensions. Universities' financial mismanagement—$400 million in wage theft, bloated executive salaries—shows they're corporate leeches, not public goods. Labor and Liberals both let this fester, serving globalist agendas over national interest.

The Liberal Party's done—rotted by globalist rot, just like Canada's Conservatives under Poilievre's loss. Nation First urges conservatives to vote minor parties like One Nation to "teach Liberals a lesson." Pauline Hanson's One Nation, with 10% first-preference support (Guardian, April 30, 2025), is the MAGA antidote: anti-immigration, anti-WEF, pro-Aussie. Their preference flows could've helped Liberals in tight seats like Hunter, but Dutton's botched deal risks losing metro voters (Guardian).

Clive Palmer's Trumpet of Patriots, slamming Labor and Liberals as "Dumb and Dumber" (ABC News, April 19, 2025), is another option, pushing migration cuts and export boosts. Conservatives must ditch the Liberals, who've betrayed their Menzies-era roots of nationalism (Jacobin, April 16, 2025). Let the party sink. A Labor rout, unleashed in its "insanely Left" glory—think Canada's Carney with carbon taxes and deficits—will expose their red colours, waking Aussies to fight back.

From a MAGA lens, Australia's Liberals are a cautionary tale, like Canada's suicide pact with Carney. Trump's tariffs, border walls, and energy dominance show what nation-first looks like. Australia needs that, not Dutton's limp globalism. Jacobin (April 16, 2025) mocks the Liberals' "flat pack Trump kit," failing to grasp Australia's rejection of American-style myths. X post from @pepedownunder (May 1, 2025) signals hunger for Christian nationalism, a base Dutton ignored.

Vote One Nation tomorrow. Let the Liberals crash, forcing Labor to overreach. Proverbs 14:34—"Righteousness exalts a nation"—demands we reject globalist chains. Sink the traitors, expose Labor's communism, and build a new conservative movement. Australia's not Canada yet, but it's close. Fight now, or lose everything!

https://nationfirst.substack.com/p/a-canadian-lesson-for-conservatives

"Let me say it straight: Pierre Poilievre was supposed to be Canada's great white hope. A conservative firebrand. A bulldog against globalist overreach. A man who once knew how to say what every working-class voter was thinking—but then? He folded. He blinked. He tried to please the media, the elites, the so-called "moderates." And what did he get in return?

Defeat. Humiliation. A left-wing Liberal majority.

(Quick note: In Canada, the major left-wing party is called the Liberal Party, whereas in Australia, the major centre-right party is called the Liberal Party).

Poilievre lost because he stopped fighting and started appeasing—Canada's Conservatives stayed home, and the Liberals cruised in.

Australia's Coalition is making the same mistake, offering soft tweaks instead of hard opposition just three days out from the election.

Voters don't want safer versions of Labor—they want a reckoning on immigration, climate hysteria, and radical gender ideology.

The base is bleeding to minor parties because they see the Coalition as weak, fake, and afraid to stand for anything real.

If the Coalition won't draw a line in the sand now, they'll deserve the humiliation that's coming—but the country will suffer for it.

The lesson of the Canadian election? When conservatives run from the fight, they lose. When they try to appease instead of lead, they hand victory to the enemy. And right now—this very week—Australia's Liberal-National Coalition is walking the exact same suicidal path.

Three days out from our own election, the Coalition is out there smiling, avoiding conflict, and offering scraps on power prices while leaving Labor's climate cult agenda untouched. No fight on mass immigration, no stand against radical gender ideology in schools, no full-throated rejection of Welcome to Country virtue-signalling before every blasted event. They're just hoping a few minor tweaks will win back the voters.

It won't.

Because voters don't want better management of Labor's agenda. They want a reckoning.

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Let's go back to Canada. Poilievre, once a man who rattled the globalist cage, decided to "tone it down." He shook hands and played nice with Liberal leader Mark Carney. Avoided the words "immigration crisis." Dodged talking about "woke". And guess what? The base stayed home. Turnout in Alberta—conservative heartland—plummeted. The Liberals didn't win by converting new hearts. They won because conservatives didn't bother showing up.

Why should they? Poilievre gave them no reason to believe.

It's déjà vu in Australia. Dutton's team is being labelled "Labor-lite" by the very people they need to energise. Conservatives are going over to minor parties such as Pauline Hanson's One Nation, Gerard Rennick People First Party, the Libertarians, and Clive Palmer's Trumpet of Patriots. Disillusioned voters are muttering that it's all rigged, all the same. Can you blame them? Where is the bold promise to permanently slash immigration to protect local jobs and the Australian way of life? Where is the vow to ban gender transition surgeries for kids? Where is the uncompromising rejection of climate hysteria that's destroying our energy independence?

We're getting platitudes. Poll-tested slogans. Policies that could've been written by a focus group in Sydney's north shore.

We're three days out, and the Coalition still hasn't drawn the line in the sand.

Here's what they need to do—today—if they want to avoid the same fate as Canada's conservatives:

1. Rip up the globalist script. Ditch the 2030 net-zero goals. End the UN climate agenda. Bring manufacturing home. Sovereignty first—every time.

2. Crush the woke virus. Promise to defund the ABC, end DEI mandates in government, and strip gender ideology out of our schools and hospitals.

3. Slash immigration. Make it net-zero immigration right away and immediately seek public consensus on what the annual intake should be. Prioritise Australian citizens. End the housing crisis by stopping the flood, not subsidising the fallout.

4. Say no to fake reconciliation. Scrap Welcome to Country rituals, end race-based policy creep, and declare once and for all: one flag, one people, one law.

5. Speak directly to the people. Ditch the legacy media lapdogs. Hit TikTok. Hit X. Go live. Get raw. Be human. Because voters are crying out for someone real.

If the Coalition does none of this, then they deserve the loss that's coming. Because people don't want more middle managers in suits. They want warriors. They want clarity. They want conviction.

This election isn't just about power prices or budgets. It's about our national soul. Are we going to surrender to progressive rot and bureaucratic creep, or are we going to fight like hell for the Australia we love?

The Liberals and Nationals have just three days to decide whether they stand for something—or fall for everything. If they choose the latter, they'll get what Poilievre got:

A hiding to nothing.

And you and I? We'll be left to pick up the pieces.

Share this. Speak out. Demand more.

And this Saturday—vote for the candidates who actually believe in what you believe in. Because "Labor-lite" in Australia and "Liberal-lite" in Canada is just another name for surrender.

On a final note, Poilievre found out yesterday that he had not only lost the election but also his seat in parliament. In an eerie sign of how the Australian election is paralleling the Canadian election, reports in the Australian media have circulated in the past few days that polling in Liberal leader Peter Dutton's seat of Dickson shows it is close to falling to Labor. I hope that's wishful thinking, but something tells me it isn't."

Electoral/political comment authorised by Arnis J. Luks

13 Carsten Court Happy Valley South Australia

 

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Sunday, 04 May 2025

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