Australians want tougher visa screening, half in favour of royal commission after Bondi attack

11 hours ago 2

Other popular measures in the Resolve poll included tougher hate speech laws (70 per cent support, 8 per cent oppose) and heavier penalties for those who incite violence against Jewish people (67 per cent support, 8 per cent oppose).

Federal government departments are working over the new year to draft laws that will create new offences for hate preaching, vilification based on race and adults who radicalise children.

Loading

While legislating tougher guardrails around free speech has spawned extensive debate in the past – Coalition MPs spent much of the last decade campaigning to water down elements of Australia’s Racial Discrimination Act that protect people from offence or insult – the opposition is now backing tougher hate laws.

The polling suggests the voting public is also prepared to restrict free speech after the Bondi attack.

The Resolve poll shows that 56 per cent of people surveyed backed stronger hate speech laws based on faith or religion in March last year, dipping to 49 per cent in May 2024. But support rose to 66 per cent – or two-thirds in favour – this month for tougher hate speech laws.

This is strongest among Coalition voters (74 per cent support), followed by Labor voters (70 per cent), One Nation voters (69 per cent) and the Greens (65 per cent).

Opposition to these laws has also declined: while 19 per cent disagreed with changing the law to ban hate speech based on religion or faith last March, and this rose to 28 per cent last May, only 9 per cent of voters now oppose tougher laws.

“Australians regard freedom of speech and action as core individual rights, but recent events have reinforced that they come with a reciprocal responsibility to society at large,” said Resolve director Jim Reed.

“The challenge is to strike the right balance so that the settings maximise legitimate expression and fair behaviours on the one hand, while ensuring public safety on the other. “So close to an event that is still raw in people’s minds, it would be all too easy to cut too deeply in an attempt to remove the cancer of extremism.”

This fear has been raised by a chorus of Greens, activist groups and civil liberties advocates in a debate over protests since the Bondi attack – the most controversial element of the way governments are cracking down on freedom of expression.

The NSW government’s Terrorism and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2025 was passed on Wednesday, outlawing phrases such as “Globalise the intifada” being chanted during pro-Palestine protests, and limiting protest rights after terrorism incidents. Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan is also proposing laws that will grant police new powers to shut down protests after terrorist attacks.

Loading

Minns has defended the action, saying: “I don’t apologise for the fact that we don’t have the same free speech laws that they have in the United States … I would argue that, in 2025, within our community, with people from different races and religions from all over the world, we need a set of rules that’s good for us.”

Critics argue the restriction goes too far.

“The Minns government is trying to strip away the right to peacefully protest for everyone … potentially for up to three months at a time,” Palestine Action Group convener Josh Lees said.

“No one denies the fact that the Palestine movement, for the last two years and for many years before that, has been a peaceful protest movement protesting against the horrific violence and genocide playing out in Gaza. Those are the rights we’re fighting to defend.”

The Resolve poll shows a narrow majority (53 per cent) would support banning the pro-Palestine marches, while 16 per cent oppose that measure and 31 per cent are unsure or neutral.

There is also mixed support for compulsory Holocaust education in schools: 46 per cent in favour, 21 per cent opposed, and 32 per cent neutral or undecided. The Albanese government has established an antisemitism taskforce to probe the education system over the next 12 months.

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter.

Read Entire Article
Koran | News | Luar negri | Bisnis Finansial