Skip to content
Political

Abolish the Australian Human Rights Commission says Family First

Family First Party < 1 mins read

The Australian Human Rights Commission is anti-parental rights and anti-child welfare and should be abolished, says Family First.

 

The taxpayer-funded commission this week issued a statement opposing the Queensland Government’s pause on providing off-label puberty blockers and cross sex hormones to children.

 

This followed revelations a Cairns clinic was allegedly injecting the powerful drugs in 12-year-olds without parental consent.

 

Family First Victorian lead Senate candidate Bernie Finn said:

 

“Parents’ taxes should not go to an organisation which does not believe a parent should have a say in whether a child takes drugs that can sterilise them, leave them without sexual function and damage their bone density.”

 

The AHRC’s Sex Discrimination Commissioner Dr Anna Cody’s statement raised “concerns on the pause in Stage One and Two hormone therapies for people under 18 years through the Queensland’s public health system while an independent review is undertaken”.

 

Cody said: “We must ensure we are putting the wellbeing of trans and gender diverse children and young people first”.

 

Family First believes parents should be the primary decision-makers when it comes to taking drugs which can damage them forever.

 

“Parents should be free to warn their children of the dangers of gender-fluid ideology and to teach them the truth about gender – that there are just two,” Mr Finn said.

 

“Children cannot consent to puberty blockers and cross sex hormones and the AHRC should butt out.”

 

Family First’s Senate team of Katie Lush (Qld), Lyle Shelton (NSW), Bernie Finn (Vic) and Christopher Brohier (SA) is fighting for a return to commonsense on gender.

 

Media contact: [email protected]

More from this category

  • Political, Union
  • 23/01/2026
  • 13:37
Monash University

Unshackled exhibition to bring Australia’s convicts to life at historic Woolmers Estate

Media kit including imagery and videos available here Thousands of English, Scottish, Welsh and Irish convicts transported to Australia, as well as people resisting colonial invasion and forced into the convict system, will be brought back to life in a groundbreaking digital exhibition revealing a new understanding of the convicts’ contribution to the struggle for Australian democracy. The Monash University‑led exhibition, titled UNSHACKLED: The True Convict Story, will be officially launched by Federal Assistant Minister, former Tasmanian Labor Leader and local MP Rebecca White at the Woolmers Estate, Longford on Friday 30 January. The UNESCO World Heritage-listed convict site will…

  • General News, Political
  • 23/01/2026
  • 07:00
Future Super on behalf of Clothing The Gaps

Poll: Majority of Australians want a long weekend, not January 26

Key Facts: 54% of Australian voters prefer an Australian Long Weekend,created by a public holiday, that occurs on the 2nd last Monday in January,…

  • Contains:
  • Political
  • 22/01/2026
  • 10:36
Monash University

Monash expert: Coalition splits

The Coalition has split for the second time with Nationals Leader David Littleproud confirming the party’s alliance with the Liberal Party has ended. A Monash expert is available to speak about the split and the implications for the two parties. Available for comment: Associate Professor Zareh Ghazarian, Head of Politics and International Relations, Monash School of Social SciencesContact: +61 402 851 224 or [email protected] The following comments can be attributed to Associate Professor Ghazarian: “The acrimony between the Liberal and National Parties is the latest challenge the two parties have faced since the Coalition suffered a devastating loss in the…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.