Skip to content
Political

Inquiry into the standing orders relating to petitions

Department of the House of Representatives 2 mins read

The Standing Committee on Petitions has today launched an Inquiry into the standing orders relating to petitions.

The Committee will inquire into and report on the work of the Standing Committee on Petitions in the 48th Parliament, including the suitability of the current provisions of the standing orders governing the form, submission, and consideration of petitions and e-petitions;

the impact of emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence and automated systems, on the integrity and authenticity of the petitions process; and potential amendments to the standing orders or administrative practices to ensure the petitions process remains accessible, credible, and sustainable.

The Chair of the Committee Ms Jodie Belyea MP, commented “petitions enjoy a long history in the Western parliamentary tradition, dating back to the 12th century. Today, petitions remain one of the few ways for Australians to raise their concerns directly with parliament, and their popularity has only continued to grow.”

“The e-petitions system was introduced in 2016 at the start of the 45th Parliament. There has been a remarkable growth in e-petitioning from the days of paper petitions, when fewer than 300 petitions were typically presented over the course of a parliament. In the 47th Parliament the number of petitions presented to the parliament was 1,706, with the vast majority of these being e-petitions.  Next year will mark the 10th anniversary of the e-petitions system, and this inquiry is timely”. ​

Submissions from interested individuals and organisations are invited by Friday 6 February 2026. The preferred method of receiving submissions is by electronic format lodged online using a My Parliament account.

Further information about the Committee’s inquiry is available on the Committee’s website.

Media inquiries

Office of Ms Jodie Belyea MP (Member for Dunkley)
Ph: (02) 6277 4370; Email: [email protected]

For background information

Committee Secretariat
02 6277 2152
[email protected]

For more information about this Committee, you can visit its website. On the site, you can make a submission to an inquiry, read other submissions, and get details for upcoming public hearings. You can also track the Committee and receive email updates by clicking on the blue ‘Track Committee’ button in the bottom right hand corner of the page.

More from this category

  • Political, Transport Automotive
  • 01/04/2026
  • 22:34
Sustainable Cities - Better Buses Campaign

Albo says ‘Catch the bus,’ but fuel crisis exposes broken bus network in Melbourne’s west

PM urges Australians to use public transport in the current fuel crisis, but in Melbourne’s West, the broken bus network leaves families with no choice. This evening, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese addressed the nation, interrupting television and radio broadcasts to announce measures to tackle the worsening fuel crisis as a result of the war in the Middle East. In his speech, he urged Australians to reduce fuel use, stating “if you can switch to catching the train or bus or tram to work, do so.” While inner-city communities have access to frequent trains, trams and buses, in the outer suburbs…

  • Political, Transport Automotive
  • 01/04/2026
  • 22:25
Sustainable Cities - Better Buses Campaign

Fuel crisis exposes broken bus network in Melbourne’s west

PM urges Australians to use public transport in the current fuel crisis, but in Melbourne’s West, the broken bus network leaves families with no choice. This evening, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese addressed the nation, interrupting television and radio broadcasts to announce measures to tackle the worsening fuel crisis as a result of the war in the Middle East. In his speech, he urged Australians to reduce fuel use, stating “if you can switch to catching the train or bus or tram to work, do so.” While inner-city communities have access to frequent trains, trams and buses, in the outer suburbs…

  • Community, Political
  • 01/04/2026
  • 09:00
ACOSS

ACOSS calls for measures to help people most at risk, and to support critical community services

Australia’s community services sector is experiencing direct impacts from fuel supply disruption and price increases combined with extreme weather incidents, prompting ACOSS to urge the government to work collaboratively towards cohesive, targeted action. An emergency consultation undertaken by ACOSS with national members has found a significant increase in calls for help from people most at risk, and pressure on frontline services particularly in regional and remote areas. Amidst fuel shortages and grocery prices rising, frontline services are hearing increasing reports of people on lower incomes having to make impossible choices and going without necessities like food and medicine to get…

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.