Experts calling on the government to abandon Schedule 5
of the Social Security and Other Legislation Amendment (Technical Changes No. 2) Bill 2025
Last updated on 24 November 2025. A list of public statements from the below organisations can be found at the end of this page.
Schedule 5 was added as a late amendment to the Social Security and Other Legislation Amendment (Technical Changes No. 2) Bill 2025, introduced by Minister Plibersek on 28 October 2025. It is unrelated to the original bill and does away with the right to due process for welfare recipients accused of a serious violent or sexual offence by granting police and ministers new powers to stop Centrelink payments before a person has had access to legal assistance or appeared before a court. More background information is available here.
The below civil society organisations representing welfare recipients, First Nations people, survivors of family violence, disabled people and legal advocates support the call for the government to remove Schedule 5 from the bill:
ACT Mental Health Consumer Network
Anglicare Australia
Antipoverty Centre
Anti-Poverty Network SA
Australian Autism Alliance
Australian Council of Social Services
Australian Federation of Disability Organisations
Australian Unemployed Workers’ Union
Basic Income Australia
Children and Young People with Disability
Community Legal Centres NSW
Community Mental Health Australia
Community Restorative Centre
Consumers of Mental Health WA
Council of Single Mothers and their Children
Disability Advocacy Network Australia
Down Syndrome Australia
Economic Justice Australia
Everybody’s Home
First Peoples Disability Network
Health Justice Australia
Human Rights Law Centre
Inclusion Australia
Justice and Equity Centre
Justice Reform Initiative
Law Council of Australia
Mental Health Legal Centre
Mental Health Lived Experience Peak Qld
National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Services (NATSILS)
National Advocacy Collective - including 22 additional organisations supporting the rights of parents with intellectual disability
National Ethnic Disability Alliance
National Mental Health Consumer Alliance
NSW Council for Civil Liberties
People with Disability Australia
Physical Disability Australia
Queensland Advocacy for Inclusion
Single Mother Families Australia
Social Responsibilities Commission of the Anglican Diocese of Perth
South-East Monash Legal Service
Tenants’ Union of New South Wales
Western NSW Community Legal Centre
Wirringa Baiya Aboriginal Women’s Legal Centre
Women with Disabilities Australia
To add your organisation to this list or for media enquiries contact media at antipovertycentre.org
Public statements
Welfare rights and community sector advocates, 30 October
Australian Council of Social Services and Economic Justice Australia, 3 November
Aboriginal legal services, 4 November
Law Council of Australia, 5 November
Joint statement from disability peak organisations, 6 November
Australian Federation of Disability Organisations, 6 November
Anti-Poverty Network South Australia, 7 November
Antipoverty Centre responding to comments from Minister Plibersek, 7 November
National Advocacy Collective - supporting the rights of parents with intellectual disability, 21 November
Joint statement from 116 academic and legal experts, 24 November
National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Services (NATSILS), 24 November
Economic Justice Australia, 24 November
Australian Council of Social Services, 24 November
Joint statement from ACOSS and EJA responding to comments from Minister Gallagher, 24 November
