Defend Dissent: write to your MP

Ask your MP to protect our democratic right to dissent and demonstrate.

MAPW is joining with the Australian Democracy Network and other civil society organisations to protect Australian’s protest rights. Protest is an essential tool for protecting rights and freedom, making social change, and holding power to account.

A 2024 report from the Australian Democracy Network and Grata Fund has found that protest rights in Australia are being severely restricted through corporate clampdown on opposition, criminalisation of peaceful protest, over-policing, government misuse of emergency powers and the use of notification systems as approval regimes for protests. Click here to download the report

Ask your MP to commit to protecting our rights to dissent and demonstrate.

  1. Click here to go to heymp and find your MP: enter your postcode 
  2. Use the text below as a template, or write your own email
  3. Send!
  4. No response from your MP? Don’t forget to follow up. 
Template text
 
Dear  – 
 
I’m writing to share a new report about the state of protest rights in Australia and ask what actions you’re taking to ensure our democratic rights are adequately protected. 

 

A report from Australian Democracy Network and Grata Fund has found that protest rights in Australia are being severely restricted through corporate clampdown on opposition, criminalisation of peaceful protest, over-policing, government misuse of emergency powers and the use of notification systems as approval regimes for protests. 

Key findings include:

  • Imprisonment sentences for civil disobedience have increased ten-fold in the last five years, with nine activists engaged in civil disobedience have been sentenced to a combined total of 50 months imprisonment
  • Police appear to be engaging in over-policing, particularly at protests by marginalised groups including protests carried out by First Nations communities and South West Asian and North African (SWANA) communities. Communities peacefully engaging in protest have been increasingly subject to heavyhanded militarised policing, including more frequent deployment of dangerous police weapons such as OC spray (pepper spray), tear gas, batons, rubber bullets and flash-bang grenades
  • The use of OC spray has increased in the last year, having been used at 11 protests in 2023-24, compared to seven in the five years prior.
  • People with physical disabilities and children are being seriously impacted by heavy-handed, militarised policing. For example, three incidents involved people with disabilities, with police removing a person from their wheelchair in one instance, and forcefully moving and damaging a wheelchair in another. Four involved children, including four children aged 16 and under being pepper sprayed and a child in a pram caught up in a police kettle, a controversial police tactic also known as containment or corralling.
  • Protest notification and pre-approval regimes are increasingly operating as de facto ‘authorisation’ systems, which runs counter to Australia’s democratic obligations under international law. The use of permit systems as de-facto authorisation regimes has had a particular influence on First Nations groups, with a First Nations group in the NT having been required to pay for their own traffic control in January 2024 as a precondition to obtaining authorisation from police to carry out protests when there are no recorded instances of other groups having to do so. 

I am concerned about this increasing restriction on our democratic right to protest, particularly in a global context of threats to democracy. I would appreciate hearing about what measures you’re taking to ensure our right to protest is adequately protected.

Warm regards,

 

 

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