logo
48th Australian parliament to include record-breaking number of women following 2025 election

48th Australian parliament to include record-breaking number of women following 2025 election

Perth Now05-05-2025
A record number of women will represent Australians in the next term of government, with female MPs set to soar between 66 and 74 out of a total 150 seats.
The figure is a considerable uptick from the then record-breaking 58 women who were elected to the 47th parliament, while just 40 women were elected under the Morrison-led 46th parliament in 2019.
In the House of Representative, Labor has increased its female representation to 47 MPs out of a confirmed 87, meaning the number of female MPs outnumbers male MPs (40).
New faces set to enter parliament this year include Barton's Ash Ambihaipahar, who retained the seat of former Indigenous minister Linda Burney for Labor, Claire Clutterham, who flipped the Adelaide seat of Sturt, and Ali France, who defeated Liberal leader Peter Dutton in Dickson.
Camera Icon
Labor increased its representation of female candidates, with Queensland Labor welcoming Emma Comer, Madonna Jarrett, Kara Cook, Ali France, Renee Coffey and Julie-Ann Campbell. Lachie Millard/ NewsWire
Credit: News Corp Australia
Meanwhile, the Coalition has seven female MPs out 39, a decrease from its 2022 result of nine.
The drop in numbers is largely due to the election losses of former Hughes MP Jenny Ware and Bass MP Bridget Archer, and the retirements of McPherson MP Karen Andrews and Forrest MP Nola Marino.
While the safe Liberal seats of McPherson and Forrest were retained by the Coalition, candidates preselected for the seats were both male.
Seven of the 10 confirmed independents set to enter parliament this term are also women, including Fowler MP Dai Le, Mackellar MP Sophie Scamps, Warringah MP Zali Steggall, Wentworth MP Allegra Spender, Mayo MP Rebekha Spender, Indi MP Helen Haines and Curtin MP Kate Chaney.
Camera Icon
Teal independents Sophie Scamps and Allegra Spender have both been elected for a second term. NewsWire / Gary Ramage
Credit: News Corp Australia
While the current count for confirmed female MPs is 62, four of the nailbiting races for the 14 seats still in doubt are being contested between two women, meaning the 48th parliament will have at least 66 female MPs.
However, that number could increase to near parity at 74, depending on the final results in Bean, Bendigo, Longman, Melbourne, Goldstein, Monash, Bullwinkel, and Fremantle.
Speaking to the ABC, retired Liberal senator Linda Reynolds said a lack of gender diversity – a long-running issue in the party – was one of the reasons for the Liberals' crushing loss.
'You can see through successive reviews in federal and state in terms of where we have taken the wrong turn, but we haven't comprehensively understood those lessons and we certainly haven't implemented the reforms that are needed,' she said.
'Ten years ago I was part of a review into gender … and we recommended targets and how to get there without quotas. That's been the Liberal Party policy for 10 years, but it's just sat on a shelf.
'We do have to have the hard conversations now about how we become more gender-balanced but also a broader diversity.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inaction on pokies harm is gambling with lives
Inaction on pokies harm is gambling with lives

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Inaction on pokies harm is gambling with lives

The pokies article by Peter FitzSimons (' MPs servants to 'predatory' pokies ', July 27) emphasises the most important point of the pokies disaster. It can't be fixed because both sides of politics are so dependent on pokies donations that once in power they realise the pokies lobby is in charge, not them. And fixing that by increasing campaign funding for political parties from the budget means increasing taxes. It's easy for the pokies lobby and its media backers to stoke public outrage when increased taxes are suggested. There even is a term for it, 'state capture'. Whoever wins the election, lobby groups are still in charge. It's relevant more widely, such as the fossil fuel lobby slowing down climate action. It's a pernicious problem and the Herald is to be commended for running an anti-gambling campaign. It's hard to see a solution until someone is brave enough to have a policy calling for higher taxes to tackle some of the bigger problems we face. Maybe braver politicians? Gary Barnes, Mosman Take my advice Senator James Paterson says 'Labor would be judged on the results of proposed consultant cuts' (' Labor's splurge on advice revealed ', July 27). That's rich coming from anyone in the Liberal party. It's not the spending of money on consultants that I mind so much as the pretence practised by the Liberals that ditching public service jobs to do it, while ignoring the alternate costs, is somehow saving money. Equally objectionable is the sneakiness of hiring people – using eye-watering amounts of public funds – to tell you what you want to hear instead of what you should be told, while claiming it's somehow a 'partnership'. Driven by their own 'ideological obsession' of antipathy towards the public service dating as far back as the Howard era, the Liberals were avid practitioners of an identical reverse bias. And while Labor's pot so far seems decidedly tarnished at keeping its promise to negate it, they've got a long way to go to match the blackness of the Liberals' kettle. Adrian Connelly, Springwood The criticism of the Albanese government's use of consultants is misplaced. They have pledged to rebuild the capacity of the public service, laid waste by the previous Coalition. Does anyone really believe this will happen overnight? While there are green shoots, it will take years to restore an objective, expert public service. The damage wrought to good government by the previous Coalition administration, venal in its attempts to politicise the public service, promote mates and create a supine culture (remember robo-debt?), nearly destroyed it. As Labor rebuilds, of course consultants will be needed, especially as this government wants to achieve something. Hopefully, the best can be encouraged into an invigorated public service for the national good. Wayne Duncombe, Lilyfield False piety America likes to think of itself as a God-fearing nation of Christians, yet it puts up with Trump (' America's shame: Despite all the evidence Trump remains shameless ', July 27). There seems to be no shame that their president breaks all those Christian ideals they hold so dear. Their sin is not their lack of shame. It is their hypocrisy. Neville Turbit, Russell Lea Fertility lifeline The importance of IVF to many families cannot be underestimated, but to those with life-threatening genetic conditions it is especially important (' There have been 17 million IVF babies. Rebecca was one of the first ', July 27). For these families IVF can allow the possibility of a mutant gene to be isolated and sidelined and ultimately dismissed from the family line, allowing hope for a more positive future. We can only be grateful for the process. Janice Creenaune, Austinmer So fertility rates are 'nosediving'? Perhaps a truer word has never been used. It's well known that modern perfumes contain hormone disruptors such as phthalates, isn't it? And to say that perfumes are pervasive is an understatement. We live and move in a sea of fake scent. You can't even walk down a bush track without being nasally assaulted by the smell of the person (man or woman) 10 minutes ahead of you, whom you may not actually ever see. It must drive the wildlife, well, wild. Ironically, perfume formulas are designed to make the wearer more attractive, but may in fact result in lower fertility. Pass the nose peg, please. Carolyn Little, Mortdale

Sussan Ley: Opposition Leader tells Anthony Albanese he needs to ‘walk the walk' on Indigenous issues
Sussan Ley: Opposition Leader tells Anthony Albanese he needs to ‘walk the walk' on Indigenous issues

West Australian

time5 hours ago

  • West Australian

Sussan Ley: Opposition Leader tells Anthony Albanese he needs to ‘walk the walk' on Indigenous issues

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley has slammed Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's lack of action for Indigenous Australians since the failed Voice to Parliament, saying he has shied away from the issue since the failed referendum. Speaking from Wyndham in the Kimberley on Saturday, Ms Ley said the Prime Minister needed to walk the walk after talking the talk at successive Garma Festivals — one of the largest gatherings for Indigenous Australians in the country. 'It's so disappointing to see this plan that the Prime Minister calls a plan for economic empowerment is failing in these critical areas,' she said. 'Now he had the same announcement at last year's Garma, I believe there was a plan for economic empowerment released. 'This is the fourth year of an Albanese government and we're seeing these critical indicators go backwards, that is not good enough. 'It's not good enough to be there for the photo op, Australians are expecting the follow up.' Ms Ley said key issues facing Indigenous Australians were not being addressed. 'The scale of the challenges in Indigenous Australia are much bigger than the scale of the response that I have heard from Prime Minister Albanese today,' she said. 'We have 19 indicators in Closing the Gap — four of those are going backwards and what really concerns me is that they are indicating a lack of progress, in fact, a retreat in critical areas relating to children and education and youth incarceration.' While Ms Ley attacked Mr Albanese's approach, she elected not to attend the Garma Festival herself, instead sending shadow Attorney-General Julian Leeser and defended her travel to WA. 'This visit to the Kimberley was planned so that soon after the recent Parliamentary sitting, I could come with two of my senior colleagues and listen to the voices of regional Indigenous Australians here in a really important part of Australia,' she said. 'It's vital that we do that, it's what I said I would do when I became leader.' Ms Ley kicked off her tour of WA's north-west on Friday, landing in Kununurra before heading an hour north-west on Saturday morning to Wyndham. Ms Ley said she was looking to reach Indigenous Australians where they were. 'We've seen programs that work, we've seen job initiatives that are doing well, we've also seen things that are failing,' she said. 'We've heard from so many people about what works and what doesn't work and it's important that we look at the detail, that we listen and that we closely examine how we might construct policies in the future to address the sense of disappointment . . . that is here in so many of the communities that we are visiting now.' Ms Ley spent the first two days of her tour in Kununurra and Wyndham, meeting with local Indigenous groups and businesses. Issues ranged from funding challenges being a border town, needing an on-country incarceration system and housing shortages. Not every meeting took as serious a tone however, with Ms Ley proving a popular figure that evening among the akubra-wearing pub patrons, with multiple people asking for selfies with the politician and she attended a Saturday footy game in Kununurra. The trip also comes a week after a public spat blew into the public sphere between State leader Basil Zempilas and WA Federal frontbencher Andrew Hastie over the party's net zero position. Ms Ley said she wasn't concerned. 'I barely looked at those reports,' she told The Sunday Times before her trip. Ms Ley will also visit Broome, meeting with youth services, health programs and Indigenous-led businesses.

AUKUS and Palestine tensions flare within Labor
AUKUS and Palestine tensions flare within Labor

The Advertiser

time6 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

AUKUS and Palestine tensions flare within Labor

Victorian Labor has voted to act against "military occupation, siege and genocide" in Palestine and suspend Australia's participation in the three-nation AUKUS defence agreement. While non-binding on the state or federal government, the grassroots motions passed at the party's state conference in Melbourne on Saturday highlight tensions on international policy within the Labor movement. Two successful AUKUS motions included calling for an inquiry into the defence agreement, suspending Australia's participation in it and urging a federal government review into its ongoing participation. The vote to "act against military occupation, siege and genocide" in Palestine was passed with strong support and to a standing ovation from some members of the Moonee Valley Racecourse audience after unsuccessful amendments to change the wording. The motion called for immediate recognition of a Palestinian state, comprehensive sanctions on members of Israel's Netanyahu government and improved military trade transparency and tracking laws. A similar resolution on Palestine passed at the state conference in 2024 after the terror attack on Israel by Hamas on October 7, 2023, and the nation's subsequent military campaign in Gaza. Labor's official platform backs Palestinian statehood but Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has not set a timeline for implementing the policy and recently declared it not imminent. Premier Jacinta Allan said Victoria's policy was to follow the federal government and stressed the importance of a strong defence industry for national protection. Friction within the party over the Middle East flared earlier in the day when a handful of members staged a silent protest against Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, which involved them holding up images of Palestinian flags on phones and devices. During his address, Mr Marles thanked the crowd for helping secure a thumping federal election win and increased seats in Victoria, while Ms Allan's speech was firmly focused on the 2026 state election. She promoted her newly unveiled plan to legalise the right to work from home while ramping up language favoured by Labor leaders, including referring to the opposition as "Tories" and "just Liberals". Housing Minister Clare O'Neil, Transport Minister Catherine King and Skills Minister Andrew Giles were among the federal MPs to join state colleagues, party members and union officials at the gathering. A coalition of several dozen activists marched the area outside the racecourse, opposing the "genocide in Gaza", forced administration of the CFMEU and incoming state protest laws. Police were on standby and security was heightened for the event after pro-Palestine protesters stormed the venue in 2024, with attendees this year forced to show tickets multiple times and tarps used to shield public view. The 2024 security breach led to the conference floor being locked down and delayed speeches by Mr Albanese and Ms Allan. Mr Albanese didn't attend in person this year, instead heading to the Garma Festival in the Northern Territory's remote Arnhem Land. Victorian Labor has voted to act against "military occupation, siege and genocide" in Palestine and suspend Australia's participation in the three-nation AUKUS defence agreement. While non-binding on the state or federal government, the grassroots motions passed at the party's state conference in Melbourne on Saturday highlight tensions on international policy within the Labor movement. Two successful AUKUS motions included calling for an inquiry into the defence agreement, suspending Australia's participation in it and urging a federal government review into its ongoing participation. The vote to "act against military occupation, siege and genocide" in Palestine was passed with strong support and to a standing ovation from some members of the Moonee Valley Racecourse audience after unsuccessful amendments to change the wording. The motion called for immediate recognition of a Palestinian state, comprehensive sanctions on members of Israel's Netanyahu government and improved military trade transparency and tracking laws. A similar resolution on Palestine passed at the state conference in 2024 after the terror attack on Israel by Hamas on October 7, 2023, and the nation's subsequent military campaign in Gaza. Labor's official platform backs Palestinian statehood but Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has not set a timeline for implementing the policy and recently declared it not imminent. Premier Jacinta Allan said Victoria's policy was to follow the federal government and stressed the importance of a strong defence industry for national protection. Friction within the party over the Middle East flared earlier in the day when a handful of members staged a silent protest against Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, which involved them holding up images of Palestinian flags on phones and devices. During his address, Mr Marles thanked the crowd for helping secure a thumping federal election win and increased seats in Victoria, while Ms Allan's speech was firmly focused on the 2026 state election. She promoted her newly unveiled plan to legalise the right to work from home while ramping up language favoured by Labor leaders, including referring to the opposition as "Tories" and "just Liberals". Housing Minister Clare O'Neil, Transport Minister Catherine King and Skills Minister Andrew Giles were among the federal MPs to join state colleagues, party members and union officials at the gathering. A coalition of several dozen activists marched the area outside the racecourse, opposing the "genocide in Gaza", forced administration of the CFMEU and incoming state protest laws. Police were on standby and security was heightened for the event after pro-Palestine protesters stormed the venue in 2024, with attendees this year forced to show tickets multiple times and tarps used to shield public view. The 2024 security breach led to the conference floor being locked down and delayed speeches by Mr Albanese and Ms Allan. Mr Albanese didn't attend in person this year, instead heading to the Garma Festival in the Northern Territory's remote Arnhem Land. Victorian Labor has voted to act against "military occupation, siege and genocide" in Palestine and suspend Australia's participation in the three-nation AUKUS defence agreement. While non-binding on the state or federal government, the grassroots motions passed at the party's state conference in Melbourne on Saturday highlight tensions on international policy within the Labor movement. Two successful AUKUS motions included calling for an inquiry into the defence agreement, suspending Australia's participation in it and urging a federal government review into its ongoing participation. The vote to "act against military occupation, siege and genocide" in Palestine was passed with strong support and to a standing ovation from some members of the Moonee Valley Racecourse audience after unsuccessful amendments to change the wording. The motion called for immediate recognition of a Palestinian state, comprehensive sanctions on members of Israel's Netanyahu government and improved military trade transparency and tracking laws. A similar resolution on Palestine passed at the state conference in 2024 after the terror attack on Israel by Hamas on October 7, 2023, and the nation's subsequent military campaign in Gaza. Labor's official platform backs Palestinian statehood but Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has not set a timeline for implementing the policy and recently declared it not imminent. Premier Jacinta Allan said Victoria's policy was to follow the federal government and stressed the importance of a strong defence industry for national protection. Friction within the party over the Middle East flared earlier in the day when a handful of members staged a silent protest against Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, which involved them holding up images of Palestinian flags on phones and devices. During his address, Mr Marles thanked the crowd for helping secure a thumping federal election win and increased seats in Victoria, while Ms Allan's speech was firmly focused on the 2026 state election. She promoted her newly unveiled plan to legalise the right to work from home while ramping up language favoured by Labor leaders, including referring to the opposition as "Tories" and "just Liberals". Housing Minister Clare O'Neil, Transport Minister Catherine King and Skills Minister Andrew Giles were among the federal MPs to join state colleagues, party members and union officials at the gathering. A coalition of several dozen activists marched the area outside the racecourse, opposing the "genocide in Gaza", forced administration of the CFMEU and incoming state protest laws. Police were on standby and security was heightened for the event after pro-Palestine protesters stormed the venue in 2024, with attendees this year forced to show tickets multiple times and tarps used to shield public view. The 2024 security breach led to the conference floor being locked down and delayed speeches by Mr Albanese and Ms Allan. Mr Albanese didn't attend in person this year, instead heading to the Garma Festival in the Northern Territory's remote Arnhem Land. Victorian Labor has voted to act against "military occupation, siege and genocide" in Palestine and suspend Australia's participation in the three-nation AUKUS defence agreement. While non-binding on the state or federal government, the grassroots motions passed at the party's state conference in Melbourne on Saturday highlight tensions on international policy within the Labor movement. Two successful AUKUS motions included calling for an inquiry into the defence agreement, suspending Australia's participation in it and urging a federal government review into its ongoing participation. The vote to "act against military occupation, siege and genocide" in Palestine was passed with strong support and to a standing ovation from some members of the Moonee Valley Racecourse audience after unsuccessful amendments to change the wording. The motion called for immediate recognition of a Palestinian state, comprehensive sanctions on members of Israel's Netanyahu government and improved military trade transparency and tracking laws. A similar resolution on Palestine passed at the state conference in 2024 after the terror attack on Israel by Hamas on October 7, 2023, and the nation's subsequent military campaign in Gaza. Labor's official platform backs Palestinian statehood but Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has not set a timeline for implementing the policy and recently declared it not imminent. Premier Jacinta Allan said Victoria's policy was to follow the federal government and stressed the importance of a strong defence industry for national protection. Friction within the party over the Middle East flared earlier in the day when a handful of members staged a silent protest against Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, which involved them holding up images of Palestinian flags on phones and devices. During his address, Mr Marles thanked the crowd for helping secure a thumping federal election win and increased seats in Victoria, while Ms Allan's speech was firmly focused on the 2026 state election. She promoted her newly unveiled plan to legalise the right to work from home while ramping up language favoured by Labor leaders, including referring to the opposition as "Tories" and "just Liberals". Housing Minister Clare O'Neil, Transport Minister Catherine King and Skills Minister Andrew Giles were among the federal MPs to join state colleagues, party members and union officials at the gathering. A coalition of several dozen activists marched the area outside the racecourse, opposing the "genocide in Gaza", forced administration of the CFMEU and incoming state protest laws. Police were on standby and security was heightened for the event after pro-Palestine protesters stormed the venue in 2024, with attendees this year forced to show tickets multiple times and tarps used to shield public view. The 2024 security breach led to the conference floor being locked down and delayed speeches by Mr Albanese and Ms Allan. Mr Albanese didn't attend in person this year, instead heading to the Garma Festival in the Northern Territory's remote Arnhem Land.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store