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Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke has committed to continuing efforts to “disband organisations that harbor anti-Australian sentiments.”
The leadership of the National Socialist Network (NSN) has announced its decision to disband in an effort to protect its members from being arrested or charged under impending legislation. Although the group has never been officially designated as a terrorist organization, it has not met the necessary criteria, such as evidence of planning or promoting terrorist acts.
In a Telegram post, leader Thomas Sewell, along with other senior figures, stated that if the proposed laws are enacted, there would be no means for their group—known for promoting a white ethno-state inspired by Nazi ideology—to avoid a ban.
Minister Burke had previously suggested that the NSN, alongside Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir, might be targeted under the new reforms.
“That’s positive, that’s good news.”
But he cautioned that while the laws would make it harder for them to organise, it did not mean “the hate in these individuals goes away”.
Efforts to build ‘community’
“I think they perhaps naively and wrongly believe that by not existing by Sunday night, they’ll escape being proscribed. I think Tony Burke’s going to proscribe them anyway, and that will stymie their efforts to form a new political structure.”
“They were moving into a new stage of populism and building,” Ross said. “Hopefully this sets them back quite significantly, but I think they will re-emerge”.

National Socialist Network leader Thomas Sewell addressed thousands of people at the anti-immigration March for Australia rally in August last year. Source: Getty / SOPA Images / LightRocket / Ye Myo Khant
Labor MP Josh Burns said it was a “fundamentally good thing” the NSN had said it would disband in the wake of the draft legislation, but that the group and its members would continue to be monitored.
Opposition home affairs spokesperson Jonathon Duniam has also expressed concern the group could avoid accountability by “tearing down a banner and re-emerging under a different name”.
‘Definitely a headache for them’
Notably, one of the “co-projects” the organisation said would shut down in its announcement was the White Australia Party — the planned political party it spent much of last year seeking to bolster support for in its efforts towards legitimacy.