Taylor may have just sent scores of voters to Labor

The trick at the heart of Angus Taylor’s budget reply is that it punishes a group that cannot vote.

Strip the NDIS, Jobseeker, Youth Allowance and Family Tax Benefit from non-citizens, including permanent residents and you have, on paper, a free political hit.

No retaliation at the ballot box. Just the warm applause of a One Nation primary you have decided to chase.

I have written about the household mechanism that makes this miscalculation severe even on its own terms.

The citizen daughter who does her parents’ Services Australia paperwork. The citizen nephew watching his cousin lose a therapist. Mixed-status households vote for the people in their family who cannot, and they have done so in this country since the 1950s.

But there is a second mechanism, and it is the one Liberal strategists appear to have entirely failed to model.

Threaten a population large enough and concretely enough, and a significant share of that population will respond by becoming voters.

There are roughly 4.5 to 5 million non-citizen residents in Australia in 2026. About 1.5 to 2 million of those are permanent residents who have not yet taken citizenship, eligible in most cases but deferring.

Australian Bureau of Statistics settlement data showed that even by 2021, only 59 per cent of permanent migrants had taken citizenship. The rest are sitting on the question, often for years.

That deferral is the door Taylor has just kicked open.

The 2021 census provides the cleanest national-origin breakdown of the non-citizen pool.

Scaled to 2026 using known growth patterns, India, Nepal and the Philippines are expanding fastest,........

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