So ..... in the mid 2010s the Liberals and Nationals government - which Peta Credlin was at the heart of - ripped out and defunded language programmes that successfully taught English to migrants for 70 years and defunded community language programmes and 
now she's got the cheek to turn around and criticise the result of that?  Unbelievable.
Oh, and in case you're wondering:
Migrant language service budget cuts | The Saturday Paper
 
https://scanloninstitute.org.au/site...arrative-3.pdf
"Australia has a long and proud record of teaching Englishto migrants and refugees. It was the first – and, for many years,only – country to provide newcomers with fully funded English language teaching. The Adult Migrant English Program (AMEP),established soon after World War II and after the first post-warmigrants learnt English on the first boats to Australia, has been theflagship amongst a range of government services that try to ensurethat migrants and refugees quickly find their feet, and their voice, intheir new land.Delivery of these services in employment, health, housing, education, psychologicalsupport, and English language learning has been so effective overall, that it promptedformer Immigration Department Secretary John Menadue to say in 2016 that “nocountry has integrated newcomers as well as we have.” 
In 2009, the then UnitedNations High Commissioner for Refugees, Antonio Guterres, said that Australia had“one of the best refugee resettlement programs in the world.”Language learning has been at the heart of these services because the government,Australians, and new migrants themselves all believe that proficiency in Englishprovides the road to making Australia home. In an Australian National University pollin 2015, 92 per cent of Australians considered that the ability to speak English wasimportant or very important to ‘being truly Australian’. Having been born in Australiawas seen as much less important.8 Scanlon Institute | Narrative #3SCANLON INSTITUTE FOR APPLIED SOCIAL COHESION RESEARCH
It’s a vital issue, because as migrant numbers have increased in thetwenty-first century, so has the share of the population that does not speak English asits first language. Today, 28 per cent of the population was born overseas, the highestproportion in a hundred years. Nearly a quarter of Australians speak a language otherthan English at home. Moreover, many refugees who have migrated this century underthe Refugee and Humanitarian Program come from societies that provide little accessto schooling, or their schooling has been severely disrupted by war, trauma, or long waitsin refugee camps. Teaching English to these newcomers can be a formidable task.Over 71 years, Australia’s main answer to these challenges has beenthe AMEP. About two million migrants have studied in it. The program islegislated and demand-driven, meaning that funding rises or falls with thenumber of students, not the whims of politics – a rare beast in cost-consciousCanberra. In 2019-20, the government expects to spend $259 million on theprogram, more than half of all the money it will spend this year on targeted servicesfor refugees and migrants. Over the years, the AMEP has produced materials,teaching methods and research that have led the world. Students have been able toaccess a personal counsellor to help them with educational and vocational pathwayswhile getting free childcare as they study. No wonder that in May 2017, eight MPs,divided equally between both main parties and including a former AMEP teacher, DrAnne Aly, lined up in the House of Representatives to praise the program’s part in thesuccess of Australian multiculturalism. Yet even as they did, the AMEP was about toexperience perhaps its greatest period of difficulty since its founding.