Skip to content
Gambling, General News

wo years on from Murphy Report: Federal Government silent on gambling reform while gambling harm continues to wreak havoc

Wesley Mission 2 mins read

Media Statement                                                                              27 June 2025

Two years on from Murphy Report: Federal Government silent on gambling reform while gambling harm continues to wreak havoc

Tomorrow marks two years since the tabling of the ‘Murphy Report’, the most significant Federal inquiry into online gambling and the harm it causes in Australian communities. Chaired by the late Peta Murphy MP, the committee’s report issued 31 unanimously supported recommendations to reduce harm, protect children and apply a long overdue public health approach to gambling in this country.

Two years later, the Federal Government has failed to act on any of the report’s recommendations.

Ms Murphy warned, “Gambling advertising and simulated gambling through video games is grooming children and young people to gamble and encourages riskier behaviour. The torrent of advertising is inescapable. It is manipulating an impressionable and vulnerable audience.”

The Committee called for a phased, comprehensive ban on online gambling advertising within three years, a crackdown on illegal betting platforms and stronger consumer protections — including mandatory identity checks, a legislated duty of care and bans on inducements.

Despite growing public concern and worsening harm, there has been no meaningful reform. Instead:
• Gambling ads continue to flood sports broadcasts, social media feeds and gaming platforms
• Children are being groomed into gambling before they finish school
• Support services are stretched and families are bearing the cost of industry profits
• Billions of dollars have been lost, along with lives, relationships and community well being

Wesley Mission CEO, Rev Stu Cameron, says the Government’s failure to act is deeply disappointing.

“The Murphy Report laid out a bipartisan road map to tackle gambling harm. Two years on, the silence from Canberra is deafening. While the government hesitates, lives are being torn apart. We urgently need leadership not lobbying, to protect Australians from the destructive impact of online gambling.

“It is time to put people before profit. The recommendations are ready. The evidence is overwhelming. What we need now is moral courage and political will translated into real and proportionate action.”

Wesley Mission continues to advocate for systemic gambling reform to minimise gambling harm, including a national ban on gambling advertising and stronger protections for children and vulnerable people.

ENDS
Interviews: Wesley Mission CEO, Rev Stu Cameron is available for interview

Media contact: Anne Holt [email protected] or 0418 628 342

Media

More from this category

  • General News, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 11/07/2025
  • 07:00
La Trobe University

La Trobe researchers awarded $4.5 million in ARC Future Fellowships

LaTrobe University researchers have secured almost $4.5 million in Federal Government funding to further studies into areas such as immune cell development, Australian history and agriculture. Four researchers received an Australian Research Council (ARC) Future Fellowship 2025. The prestigious Future Fellowships support high quality research in areas of national and international benefit, including in national research priorities. Dr Lisa Mielke, from the School of Cancer Medicine, the La Trobe Institute of Molecular Science (LIMS) and the Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute (ONJCRI), received $1.13 million to identify new molecules for future drug and vaccine development to improve gut health in…

  • General News
  • 11/07/2025
  • 06:00
eSafety Commissioner

Latest eSafety research reveals social media use is widespread among kids – and so are the harms

Social media use among Australian children aged 10 to 15 is almost universal and accompanied by high rates of exposure to online harms on a wide range of platforms and services, according to eSafety’s latest research report. The report shows 96 per cent of children in this age group had used at least one social media platform, with 7 in 10 saying they had encountered content associated with harm online. This included exposure to misogynistic or hateful material, dangerous online challenges, violent fight videos, and content promoting disordered eating and suicide. Three quarters of these children said they most recently…

  • General News, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 10/07/2025
  • 19:00
Breast Cancer Network Australia

Count Us In. From Australia to the World: Global Leaders Unite to End the Invisibility of Metastatic Breast Cancer

MEDIA RELEASE Count Us In. From Australia to the World: Global Leaders Unite to End the Invisibility of Metastatic Breast Cancer BCNA in London, United Kingdom – 10 July 2025 Today, three of the world's leading breast cancer organisations have united in a groundbreaking global call to action that could transform cancer care worldwide—demanding that people living with metastatic breast cancer are finally counted, recognised, and supported. Breast Cancer Network Australia (BCNA), Breast Cancer Now (UK), and Rethink Breast Cancer (Canada) launched the historic 'Advancing Global Visibility for Metastatic Breast Cancer' Advocacy Pledge at the Australian High Commission in London,…

  • Contains:

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.