House debates

Wednesday, 26 November 2025

Motions

Gambling Advertising

11:56 am

Photo of Rebekha SharkieRebekha Sharkie (Mayo, Centre Alliance) Share this | Hansard source

It's a privilege to second this motion from the member for Clark. I've stood in this place for nearly a decade and talked about the harms of gambling. I've stood in this place for nearly a decade and talked about the families that have been torn apart and the people who have taken their lives. We are in this last week of parliament. Surely now is the time to do something right by the Australian people, so I urge the government to look at this motion, to follow this motion and to simply just allow a free vote on an issue that your government presented a unanimous report in support of—the ending of gambling advertising.

It's not saying: 'Ban gambling.' We know that's not going to happen in this nation. We know that this is a legal thing to do. It's like what we did with smoking. Decades ago we banned advertising because we recognised that there were inherent harms in smoking. It's a legal product, but there are inherent harms, and gambling is exactly the same.

It has been 29 months since the Murphy report, called You win some, you lose more, was released. Every day, when I walk into this place, I go through the House of Reps gardens. There is a bank of roses, and those roses, which have plaques in front of them, are for members who passed away while they were in this place. And Peta Murphy's name is there on that plaque. I often stop and look at the roses—they're all in bloom at the moment—and I think about Peta Murphy. I think about her courage and I think about how she gave so much of her last months of life to this place and, in particular, to this report. She wanted to make sure that she finished this report to the absolute best that she possibly could, and there are recommendations from that report that the government hasn't even bothered to formally respond to. One of the most important recommendations on there was to ban gambling advertising, because it is pernicious, it is saturated, and it is everywhere. There is not a young person in Australia, I would say, that hasn't seen that advertising. We're banning social media because we recognise that, for under-16s, there is an inherent harm there. But, once you're 18, it's open slather. You can be targeted with advertising from Sportsbet, BetStop, Ladbrokes and the whole list. You can't even watch a game—you can't go to a game—without seeing it everywhere. We have normalised this so much in Australia.

I would say to the Prime Minister—really, I plead with the Prime Minister. You love your Rabbitohs, and you love a sports game. Think of what it was like when you were 20 and you were going and watching your beloved Rabbitohs or think of what it was like when you were watching them on television—you were not bombarded like a 20-year-old is bombarded today. They can't get away from it. This advertising is being targeted particularly at young men. We know that, between now and Christmas, there are going to be people who can't escape the advertising, who are so triggered by the advertising, who feel that there is no hope in their lives and who will not be here at Christmas. How awful is that! We have the power in this place to do something about it, yet, here we are, nearly 900 days later, and the government is really saying: 'This is not an issue for us. This is not a priority for us.'

I've stood here, I've given speeches before, and I've been really cranky; now, I'm heartbroken. I'm heartbroken that we are doing nothing about something that is affecting so many young people in our nation. It's our last sitting week of the year, and we could do so much better. We could do so much more. So, please, Prime Minister, allow a free vote for your backbench. They desperately want this leadership from you.

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