Australian minister cited US influencerâs public comments downplaying the Holocaust and making Islamophobic remarks.
Published On 15 Oct 2025
Far-right American influencer Candace Owens has lost a legal bid to be allowed to enter Australia after a court ruled with the government that granting her a visitor visa could âincite discord in the Australian communityâ.
The High Court of Australia said in its ruling on Wednesday that the governmentâs decision to refuse Owens a visa in 2024 âwas not invalidâ and ordered her to pay the governmentâs legal costs in the case.
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The court âunanimouslyâ ruled that the article in Australiaâs Migration Act used by the government against Owens âapplies where, in the event that the person were allowed to enter or to remain in Australia, there is a risk that the person would stir up or encourage dissension or strife in the Australian community, or a segment of that communityâ.
Owens, a well-known right-wing podcast host and political pundit who has built a large online following for controversial views and conspiracy theories, applied for an Australian visa to undertake a commercial speaking tour in November 2024.
Australiaâs Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke â who has the powers to deny noncitizens entry based on a âcharacter testâ â rejected Owensâs application in October 2024 due to the risk of her views âleading to increased hostility and violent or radical actionâ.
Burke had cited her public comments on the Holocaust and other Islamophobic remarks.
âFrom 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,â the minister said last year, according to Australiaâs Herald Sun news outlet, referring to Josef Mengele, the Nazi physician who conducted experiments on Jewish prisoners at Auschwitz.
The High Court of Australia has delivered its ruling in the battle between Immigration Minister Tony Burke and a controversial American right-wing influencer. > https://t.co/Caf2KV6zMQ pic.twitter.com/Gyi8l6kkKm
â Herald Sun (@theheraldsun) October 15, 2025
Owens appealed the ministerâs decision to the High Court on the grounds that refusing her a visa infringed on freedom of political communication, though in Australia â unlike the United States â there is no express constitutional right to free speech.
âThe implied freedom is not a âpersonal rightâ, is not unlimited and is not absolute,â High Court Judges Stephen Gageler, Michelle Gordon and Robert Beech-Jones said in their joint judgement on the case.
The judges noted that Burke had denied Owens a visa after examining her views and comments on areas including antiracism, Black Lives Matter, anti-Semitism, womenâs and LGBTQ rights, COVID-19 and anti-vaccination.
Burke had found her views to be âextremist and inflammatory comments towards Muslim, Black, Jewish and LGBTQIA+ communities which generate controversy and hatredâ, and the minister concluded that she had failed the âcharacter testâ required for a visa and that allowing her into the country would not be in the national interest, the judges said.
Owensâs âsubmissions should be emphatically rejectedâ, High Court Judge James Edelman said in a separate judgement.
In July, Australia also cancelled the visa of US rapper Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, over concerns he would have promoted Nazi ideologies in his song âHeil Hitlerâ.
