Stop Crime

We have had enough of crime. Successive governments have gone light on those ruining our lives. It's time to get tough, and find the solutions that will make our communities safe once more. There was a time in Australia when we would let our kids play on the street, walk to neighbours, or collect mail from the letterbox. Parents are in such fear that they're only feeling at ease if their children are under constant supervision. We are not meant to live like this, enough is enough.

Our homes are being invaded, our cars stolen, people killed, all the while governments sit on their hands and go 'blah, blah, blah'. 

Something has to change, we are not meant to live like this. 

 


To the Honourable President and Members of the Senate in Parliament assembled

The petition of the undersigned shows:

Communities across Australia are living in fear of escalating crime, and their governments seem unable or unwilling to meet their primary responsibility to the people which elect them: to keep the Australian community safe from harm. The undersigned call for a better approach to deter crime in Australian communities – stronger penalties (especially for repeat offenders), stronger bail regimes, effective youth intervention programs that emphasise responsibility and consequences, and greater police resources for more effective law enforcement and crime prevention.

 

 

197 signature
Goal: 10000 signature

Will you sign?

Showing 198 reactions

  • Rosa Nativo
    signed 2026-06-16 09:24:37 +1000
  • Geffrey Aitcheson
    signed 2026-06-12 16:41:16 +1000
  • Maria Skarparis
    signed 2026-06-06 06:53:16 +1000
  • Deborah Henry
    signed 2026-05-28 12:23:55 +1000
  • Joshua Baldwin
    signed 2026-05-27 03:24:39 +1000
    Mandatory adf service should be a requirement for the youth in today’s society it changed my whole outlook on life from housing commission in Ipswich to army service and now I’m a qualified heavy vehicle mechanic in the mining sector
  • Tim Bartlett
    signed 2026-05-18 11:52:05 +1000
    And scammers – yes they operate within our borders.
  • Mark Taylor
    signed 2026-05-16 06:27:53 +1000
  • Donna Shanahan
    signed 2026-05-15 18:37:12 +1000
  • John Earle
    signed 2026-05-14 15:08:49 +1000
  • Paul Campion
    signed 2026-04-06 12:20:49 +1000
  • Victoria Robertson
    signed 2026-03-29 18:51:13 +1000
  • Kthryn Bondoc
    signed 2026-03-28 10:48:44 +1000
  • Jaiden Rohan
    signed 2026-03-15 20:56:42 +1000
  • Peter Jeffery
    signed 2026-03-13 16:43:07 +1000
  • Trudy Thomas
    signed 2026-02-18 16:28:07 +1000
  • Kered Voges
    signed 2026-02-17 16:58:21 +1000
  • Kimberley Kelly-street
    signed 2026-02-08 19:15:18 +1000
  • Leslie Holbrook
    signed 2026-02-05 10:40:41 +1000
  • Casey Murdoch
    signed 2026-02-02 14:50:57 +1000
  • Anthony Coso
    signed 2026-01-17 19:43:52 +1000
  • Peta Sleeman
    signed 2026-01-13 11:05:17 +1000
  • Ngoc Huynh
    signed 2025-12-20 16:51:26 +1000
  • Stefan Karotkavitch
    signed 2025-12-19 08:24:03 +1000
    This labor coalition has to go and quickly
  • Rachel James
    signed 2025-12-19 00:28:41 +1000
  • Trevor Stephens
    signed 2025-12-18 16:29:05 +1000
  • Grace Treloar
    signed 2025-12-09 18:55:20 +1000
  • Zachary Parker
    signed 2025-12-02 01:19:23 +1000
  • Sharon Allen
    signed 2025-11-28 19:32:48 +1000
  • Dean Stirling
    signed via 2025-11-26 19:15:09 +1000
  • Wayne Morellini
    signed 2025-11-23 18:57:52 +1000
    I agree. But, some early release regimes are a trap to default produce prisoners in repeated expensive, public paid, private prison lockup of otherwise innocent people failing to keep up, using unreasonable expectations of travel and access, hurting indigenous people. All it does is produce a lot of profit for dufferent colours of bums of seats (not that most parties would realise this). Is it really worth an extra $60,000+ a year (or however much it is now) of private prison payments, versus a taxi to work, and some sorry time? Yes, we are wasting 10x or so the price making institutionalised prisoners out of those who would not be going back again. The governments and departments are unbalanced, when leaning either way.