World January 25, 2026

Australia Day Sees 'Invasion Day' Rallies and Separate Anti-Immigration Protests

Sydney’s Hyde Park hosts Indigenous-led demonstrations while anti-immigration march draws hundreds nearby

By Priya Menon
Australia Day Sees 'Invasion Day' Rallies and Separate Anti-Immigration Protests

Thousands gathered on Australia Day for 'Invasion Day' events supporting Indigenous Australians and urging unity, while separate anti-immigration protests drew smaller crowds. Speakers at Hyde Park highlighted land repatriation, deaths of Aboriginal people in custody and warned against rising nationalism as political currents shift. Authorities also noted record-high immigration and public debate over the holiday date.

Key Points

  • Thousands attended 'Invasion Day' rallies in support of Indigenous Australians and to demand recognition of historical mistreatment; Indigenous people make up about 4% of Australia’s roughly 27 million population.
  • Speakers at Sydney’s Hyde Park raised issues including land repatriation, the high number of Aboriginal deaths in police custody, and warned against rising nationalism amid shifts in the right-wing opposition and One Nation gaining in polls - political dynamics that could affect social cohesion.
  • Separate anti-immigration protests staged by March for Australia drew hundreds, highlighting tensions around record-high immigration, which exists alongside soaring living costs and a housing shortage - factors with potential implications for housing and consumer sectors.

SYDNEY, Jan 26 - Thousands of people marked Australia’s national day by attending "Invasion Day" rallies that called for recognition of Indigenous experiences and a united response to social and political pressures, while separate anti-immigration demonstrations attracted a smaller but visible turnout.

Australia Day commemorates the establishment of the state of New South Wales as a British penal colony with the arrival of convict and colonist ships to Sydney. For many Indigenous Australians - who represent about 4% of the country’s population of roughly 27 million - the date is observed as "Invasion Day," a day that many say signifies the disruption and destruction of Aboriginal cultures by European settlers.

At Hyde Park in central Sydney, the annual "Invasion Day" rally began at 10 a.m. (2300 GMT) with a moment paying tribute to victims of a shooting carried out last week by a gunman in a rural town in New South Wales. Indigenous speakers took the platform to address a range of issues, including calls for land repatriation and concern over the high number of Aboriginal deaths in police custody.

Speakers at the rally also urged unity in the face of a changing political landscape, warning of growing nationalism. They referenced the fractured state of the mainstream right-wing opposition and noted that Pauline Hanson’s populist One Nation party has been rising in the polls, an element they said made cohesion among communities more important.

Demonstrators and speakers referenced wider social tensions in Australia, where immigration has increased in recent years. The country - where one in two people is either born overseas or has a parent born overseas - has experienced record-high immigration, a development that has stirred discontent among some voters amid sharp rises in the cost of living and a persistent housing shortage.

At the Hyde Park rally, Aboriginal woman Gwenda Stanley addressed the crowd and condemned Hanson directly, saying: "We need a coalition of all new Australians because if it wasn’t for immigrants, Australia would have perished. So don’t just stand with us today. Stand with us every day."

Each Jan. 26, protesters across the country gather to denounce the historical mistreatment of Indigenous people and to press the government to abandon the Australia Day celebrations or to change the date. Despite these annual calls for change, a survey published by the Sydney Morning Herald on Sunday found a record number of Australians prefer to keep the holiday on its current date.

Close to Hyde Park, an anti-immigration demonstration organized by a group called March for Australia began at noon. Local media estimated attendance in the hundreds, with participants carrying Australian flags mounted on poles. March for Australia has faced criticism for alleged links to neo-Nazi groups, according to reporting on the event; the organisation was the stated organiser of the demonstration.

Events similar to the Hyde Park rally and the March for Australia protest took place in other cities and towns across the country on the same day.

Earlier in the day, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, while presiding over an Australia Day citizenship ceremony, called for unity rather than division in his remarks to new citizens and attendees.

Risks

  • Rising nationalist sentiment and political fragmentation - noted by speakers and linked to polling gains for a populist party - could increase social tensions and affect political stability.
  • Public discontent over record-high immigration combined with high living costs and limited housing supply may exert pressure on the housing market and consumer spending patterns.
  • Ongoing protests and counter-protests carry the risk of heightened public unrest around national events, with potential short-term impacts on local services and urban activity in affected areas.

More from World

U.S. Olympic hospitality site renamed 'Winter House' after protests over ICE shootings Feb 2, 2026 Greenland’s premier says U.S. still aims for control despite ruling out military action Feb 2, 2026 Kremlin says Russia has long offered to process or store Iran’s enriched uranium Feb 2, 2026 Long-Awaited Rafah Reopening Prompts Hope and Anxiety Among Palestinians Stranded Across Border Feb 2, 2026 Rafah Reopens but Core Questions Persist Over Implementation of Trump’s Gaza Blueprint Feb 2, 2026