Since the last federal election, the global community has made remarkable strides in health technology; breakthroughs in malaria, HIV, and certain cancer vaccines. AI-driven disease prevention, and renewable energy innovations have changed millions of lives and have inched us closer to the possibility of eradicating preventable disease. Australia has contributed to this progress with significant investments in health research and technology.
Alongside this, the Federal Government increased their intake of refugees, humanitarian aid to people like the Rohingya, and in Sudan, as well as becoming a global leader in renewable energy. These actions reflect our values, but they also serve our national interest. A stable, healthy, and cooperative global environment is essential for Australia’s security and prosperity.
Yet, global instability is rising, and we are in a far worse situation than in 2022 driven by an interplay of escalating conflicts, climate-related disasters, and systemic fear. Globally, there are over 360 million people in need, 110 million people experience forced displacement – an all-time high – and we have observed some of the highest burdens of diseases such as cholera, measles, and malaria, as exacerbated by climate change. The next Australian government will have to confront these realities and put humanity first, or risk becoming a bystander to greater human suffering.
These trends will not remain “over there”. They are already affecting Australia, straining our border policies, testing our disaster response capability, and impacting our economy. Whilst we increased the humanitarian intake to 20,000 places, we have maintained policies that marginalise some of the world’s most vulnerable people. Offshore processing, indefinite detention, and boat turn-backs continue to cause immense physical and psychological harm. These policies perpetuate a cycle of suffering and fail to uphold Australian values of fairness, respect, tolerance and compassion.