Why Labor has banned far-right influencer and Trump supporter Candace Owens from entering Australia

Why Labor has banned far-right influencer and Trump supporter Candace Owens from entering Australia

Outspoken American commentator Candace Owens has been blocked from visiting Australia ahead of a planned speaking tour.

Immigration Minister Tony Burke cancelled her visa this weekend, stating her proposed trip to Australia for a set of five live shows across November had to capacity to ‘incite discord in almost every direction’.

‘From downplaying the impact of the holocaust with comments about Mengele through to claims that Muslims started slavery, Candace Owens has the capacity to incite discord in almost every direction,’ Mr Burke said.

‘Australia’s national interest is best served when Candace Owens is somewhere else.’

Across podcasts, interviews and social media posts, Ms Owens has spread wild and bizarre anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, including suggesting Israel was behind the assassination of former US President John F Kennedy.

She has also called Judaism a ‘pedophile-centric religion that believes in demons … child sacrifice,’ according to the Anti-Defamation League.

The influencer split from mainstream US conservative commentator Ben Shapiro’s news outlet The Daily Wire in March this year.

She counts 5.8 million followers on Twitter and some 5 million on Instagram.

Controversial American political commentator Candace Owens (pictured) has been banned from entering Australia ahead of a planned tour of live shows of her podcast

Ms Owens and her British husband George Farmer have three children. She rose to fame for her outspoken commentary during Donald Trump's presidency

Ms Owens and her British husband George Farmer have three children. She rose to fame for her outspoken commentary during Donald Trump’s presidency

The Candace Owens Live tour was set to kick off in Melbourne on November 17, with tickets selling at $95 for reserved seating and up to $1500 for a pre-show VIP dinner with Owens herself.

‘Join us for an electrifying evening with Candace Owens, the outspoken and fearless American conservative social commentator, author, activist, and YouTube sensation,’ the promoters state on the tour website.

‘Known for her controversial takes and unwavering stance, Candace is set to light up stages across Australia and New Zealand with her bold and unfiltered perspectives.’

Mr Burke flagged concerns about her arrival on Australian shores for weeks.

‘Tickets to these events are selling for $100. I hope she has a good refunds policy,’ Mr Burke said in August.

‘There hasn’t been an application for a visa but if there is the brief will come to me personally.

‘My opposition to anti-Semitism and Islamophobia has always been on the record.

‘I have clear legal powers to knock back a visa to anyone who would incite discord.’

Australia's Home Affairs Minister, Tony Burke (pictured) personally oversaw Ms Owens' application for a planned tour of her live podcast

Australia’s Home Affairs Minister, Tony Burke (pictured) personally oversaw Ms Owens’ application for a planned tour of her live podcast 

Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Peter Wertheim called on Mr Burke to cancel Ms Owens’ visa, arguing she failed the character test under the Migration Act.

‘At a time of unprecedented strains on the cohesiveness of Australian society, which is very largely the outcome of ignorant and malicious comment on social media, the last thing we need to be importing into our country is yet another so-called celebrity who has made racist and bigoted comments about Jews and other vulnerable groups,’ he said.

Coalition immigration spokesman Dan Tehan also backed blocking Owens from Australia.

‘There is no place in Australia for people who spread hateful messages and undermine social cohesion,’ he said.

Ms Owens has thrown her support behind Trump in his campaign for re-election (pictured together at a Judicial Watch event)

Ms Owens has thrown her support behind Trump in his campaign for re-election (pictured together at a Judicial Watch event)

A wave of anti-Semitism has washed over Australia since the Hamas terror attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

On October 13, the shopfront window of Avner’s, a Jewish bakery in inner-city Sydney, was marked with an upside down red triangle.

The triangle is a Nazi symbol that was used to mark out individuals in concentration camps and it has been used by terror group Hamas to identify Jewish targets.

A note was also left for the owner, TV chef Ed Halmagyi, reading ‘be careful’.

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