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“Three women have been killed this week by men in Australia. Where is the outrage? Where is the urgency?” said Tara Hunter, director of clinical and client services at Full Stop Australia.
“There is tremendous appetite and expectation in the community for our leaders to address the crisis — yet before [this week], there had been virtually no mention of this issue during the election campaign,” he told SBS News.
What the parties are promising
Ripper said that while politicians show “deep commitments” to ending family violence, this hasn’t translated into new funding or strategies.
At a recent forum hosted by No to Violence, representatives from Labor, the Coalition, the Greens and Independents shared their views.
- Labor: Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth said the Albanese government’s focus is on prevention and early intervention, especially online misogyny and abuse. Ending gender-based violence also featured in the March women’s budget statement — but the budget itself included little new funding. The Albanese government invested $4 billion in 2022 to support the National Action Plan.
- Coalition: In his address to the Liberal Party at the election campaign launch this week, Opposition leader Peter Dutton briefly touched upon the issue and said his government will “toughen Commonwealth bail laws to stop domestic violence offenders”. Senator Kerrynne Liddle, whose sister was killed in a domestic violence incident, said a Coalition government would establish a royal commission into sexual abuse in Indigenous communities. It has also flagged a focus on children and early intervention, but not broader sexual violence reform.
- Greens: Senator Larissa Waters criticised the underfunding of frontline services, calling for legal and justice system reform to reduce victim-blaming and retraumatisation. The party has committed to piloting alternative, survivor-led justice approaches. In November 2024, the Greens announced a $15 billion costed election policy package to address family, domestic and sexual violence.
- Independents: MP Zoe Daniel is pushing for guaranteed, multi-year funding, especially for services supporting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women. She has described the high rates of violence against Indigenous women as a national failure.
Hunter added there has been a “deafening silence” from both sides — on the campaign trail and in the most recent budgets.
The cost of violence
“There has been a focus on housing and community safety — but not on safety within people’s homes.”
“The rate of female intimate partner homicide went up by nearly 30 per cent in a single year. Frontline services are stretched well beyond capacity — with wait times of up to a year to access specialist sexual assault services, and women and children forced to sleep in their cars or remain unsafe with their abusers, because refuges do not have enough beds.”
What experts say needs to happen
“It’s beyond overdue that the crisis of sexual, domestic and family violence receives the investment it deserves.”