Zac de Silva and Tess Ikonomou
AAP
Major hate speech reforms in response to the Bondi massacre are expected to pass parliament after Labor reached an agreement with the opposition leader.
Attorney-General Michelle Rowland confirmed the government will on Tuesday introduce the draft laws to the lower house after “constructive engagement,” indicating a deal had been struck after politicians held late night meetings.
Sussan Ley is expected to announce the coalition’s position later this morning, with the proposal heading to the party room.
“I don’t want to pre-empt any of those conversations, and particularly since they have been undertaken in good faith,” Ms Rowland told ABC Radio.
“I will point out that the removal of the serious vilification provisions do mean that these remaining provisions in the prohibited hate groups section do need to do a lot of work.”
Changes include cracking down on groups that voice hate against people of other faiths, bringing in stronger background checks for firearm owners, and setting up a national gun buyback scheme.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has previously said he wants the reforms to pass on the same day, and that he would walk away from reforms this term of parliament if they failed to garner support.
Labor originally planned to introduce the gun and hate speech reforms in a single package, but was forced to split the bill due to fierce opposition to proposed racial vilification laws from the coalition and the Greens.
After the prime minister and Ms Ley discussed the reforms on Monday morning, Liberal MPs met in the evening to formalise their position ahead of a joint partyroom meeting with their coalition partner the Nationals on Tuesday.
Liberal sources told AAP on Monday night their party had put forward a series of technical amendments which had been accepted by Labor.
But opposition education spokesman Julian Leeser, who is Jewish, wouldn’t confirm what details had been decided on.
“We want to see extremist organisations busted up. We want to see people brought to justice,” he said.
“That’s what we want to see. We want to see powers given to authorities to deal with those issues.”
Nationals MPs still have concerns about the impact the reforms could have on free speech, with Queensland senator Matt Canavan raising issues with the framework for hate group listing, arguing its too broad.
Senator Canavan said he could not support the bill drafted in its current form.
“Giving a power to a government to ban an entire group is an extremely serious change to our laws,” he told ABC Radio.
The bill tightens the definition of a preacher or religious leader, introducing mandatory two-year reviews of the legislation and requiring consultation with the opposition leader when listing an extremist organisation.
The Greens have said they will not back the hate speech legislation due to the effect it could have on political commentary including protests, leaving the coalition as the only viable partner to pass the bill through the Senate.
While provisions making it illegal to vilify someone based on their race have been dropped, the watered-down legislation would still allow the government to effectively outlaw groups that promote hatred, likely including neo-Nazi organisation the National Socialist Network and radical Islamist collective Hizb ut-Tahrir.
The proposed laws would also allow the government to refuse or revoke the visas of people who hold extremist views.
Comments (27)
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Cassie Jay
Tue, 20.01.26
22.35 AEDT
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Dale
Tue, 20.01.26
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Amy Remeikis
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Dale
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Amy Remeikis
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Michael Cowan
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Jen Gourley
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Phil
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Andrew
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Amy Remeikis
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shoe
Tue, 20.01.26
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Amy Remeikis
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shoe
Tue, 20.01.26
13.59 AEDT

Are 30 People a Day Really Being Arrested for Online Speech in the UK? Breaking down the viral claim - and what the law actually says about “offensive” messages. monkdebunks.substack.com
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Amy Remeikis
Tue, 20.01.26
14.04 AEDT
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shoe
Tue, 20.01.26
13.29 AEDT
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Diana Yallop
Tue, 20.01.26
12.17 AEDT
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Fiona
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George
Tue, 20.01.26
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Daniel
Tue, 20.01.26
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Andrew
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Fiona
Tue, 20.01.26
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Fiona
Tue, 20.01.26
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Andrew
Tue, 20.01.26
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Jo B
Tue, 20.01.26
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Fiona
Tue, 20.01.26
07.36 AEDT
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Fiona
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Amy Remeikis
Tue, 20.01.26
07.01 AEDT
Join the conversation
Women never feel safe from men in this country. Why is the most pervasive destructive hateful ideology of misogyny being ignored?
Questions about the hate laws that I hope are answered. Are they retro-active and is that up to state or federal police? Is there a case study we can look at? Is liking a post from the UN about a genocide considered supporting hate speech or put me on a list?
So from the legislation, it applies to groups. And once a group has been declared a hate group, then supporting that group from that point on (donations, recruiting, supporting in protest, joining etc) would be illegal. In terms of being retrospective, the example used was of a group which had once been seen to incite violence, but now says it doesn't do that. The AG has said that a 'reasonable person' test would apply through the authorities, where they could use past behaviour as a predictor of potential future behaviour and say it meets the criteria and then recommend it be listed. So from an individual point of view, not retrospective. From a group point of view, potentially retrospective (based on previous behaviour)
Thanks Amy. This still feels bad and very problematic in the wrong hands, wish I could be blissfully ignorant.
Knowledge is power
ScoMo is still trying to defend his political legacy that was destroyed beyond repair with his 5 “shadow” ministries.
Thanks for all your hard work covering Parliament today, Amy. It's a big job! Much appreciated.
Coalition votes for NRA like Pauline
What are the specific provisions in the hate speech laws that will criminalise criticism of Israel but allow abuse of the LGBTQI community?
Nothing in the laws, but reading between the lines it is the 'incitement of violence' which has some civil libertarians and lawyers worried - given the debate around some of the phrases used at protests etc, there are questions over how that would be applied in reality.
amy city journal is the blog of a right-wing us policy shop that is currently honouring ben shapiro with an award, not sure its the most reputable citation
That they are also reporting on the laws is the point
here's a good article breaking down all the problems with the statistics youre citing, and how they've been misused by malicious far right actors
https://monkdebunks.substack.com/p/are-30-people-a-day-really-being
Thank you shoe. I take your point, and probably should have been more explicit in mine.
the line 'even silent prayer near abortion clinics' didnt twig to you that this may serve an agenda and not be a sober reporting of facts?
Thank you Amy for bringing immediate commentary from our Parliament at this hugely significant (and worrying ) time for our democracy. IMO Anthony Albanese is hell bent on selective advice re this Hate Speech Bill, and its not the advice of those with expertise, AHRC , religious leaders, Prof Anne Twomey, . This is becoming a pattern of his leadership eg social media ban where he ignored Australian and global youth mental health expertise over NewsCorp campaign & Jonathan Haidt who has been discredited. As a Labor voter I'm so demoralised and have let my new ALP MP in Menzies know about it. The haste which this Bill is being introduced with disrespect for input from the electorate and expertise sends big red flags for Albanese's leadership
I see Big Dan voted for the bill like a good little labor boy after saying they were rushed and too strict
"Talk of a Greens–Liberal deal reminds Canberrans they have a power-sharing parliament"
Interesting concept and one that should send a shiver up the hubristic ALP.
I wonder how the new laws would have affected the communications which Ita Buttrose became so tired of during the ABC's Antoinette Lattouf affair?
Could the ACL be prescribed as a hate group due to their rhetoric against the LGBTIA+ community? Not likely, right?
can't they just die off already
" the Queensland government look like they will be rejecting setting up the collection sites for the guns"
not a gun person so no idea, but would it even be legal to take your guns to NSW to have them bought back?
Malcom 'Tinfoil' Roberts, looks positively enamoured!
Very anxious about the Gov hooking up with the Libs to pass hate speech laws. This is very dangerous to democracy.
I know there's just going to be more teaming up with Ley over the next little bit to try to sideline One Nation since Albo loves his two party system so much
Seems more likely than not doesn't it :/
Good morning everyone! Hope you enjoy having a chat. I now have coffee number three on the stove x