Prime Minister rejects royal commission plea from Bondi shooting victims' families
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In a letter, 11 out of 15 families of the victims urged Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to address the “rapid surge of antisemitism in Australia,” along with examining the failures in law enforcement, intelligence, and policy that contributed to the tragic Bondi Beach massacre.

Prime Minister Albanese has already dismissed the idea of a commonwealth royal commission, arguing it would take years to complete and could delay necessary actions.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has again knocked back holding a commonwealth royal commission. (Edwina Pickles)

Plans are underway for a state-level inquiry and the Richardson review, which will scrutinize government agencies.

However, some of the victims’ families believe these measures are insufficient.

“The federal government’s responses to the Bondi massacre are far from adequate,” the families expressed in a letter that appeared in Nine newspapers.

Prime Minister Albanese remarked this afternoon, “My heart breaks for the families affected by the Bondi terrorist atrocity. I extend my deepest sympathies during this incredibly traumatic time.”

“My job as the Australian Prime Minister is to act in the national interest,” he added.

“It is in the national interest for us to do the Richardson review on national security, on any gaps which are there in the conduct of our agencies, including the AFP, ASIO, ASIS, the interaction between the Commonwealth and state jurisdictions, any gaps which are there.”

A royal commission is an independent public inquiry.

In Australia, royal commissions are the highest form of inquiry on matters of public importance.

Bondi shooting
Rabbi Yossi Friedman speaks to people gathering at the flower memorial by the Bondi Pavilion at Bondi Beach on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025, following Sunday’s shooting in Sydney, Australia. (AP Photo/Mark Baker) (AP)

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke also said it would not be in the interest of national security to have a commonwealth royal commission.

“No one can tell me that that is in the interest of unity to re-platform some of the worst voices, but a royal commission, by definition, does that and does that publicly,” he said.

“Now, I understand why families and different people would call for it. But when you then look at, is it the right way to deal with national security? The answer is no. Is it the right way to deliver unity? The answer again is no.”

The Richardson review will look at aspects including the effectiveness of government agencies, the information agencies had about the alleged gunmen before the attack, the information sharing between federal and state agencies, judgments made and actions taken by agencies.

Also examined will be other preventative measures agencies could have taken, any restrictions of the current legal framework, measures to prevent similar attacks, the effectiveness of warrants and data access and any legal changes.

Thousands paid tribute to the 15 victims at Bondi. (Jessica Hromas)

The review will finalise a report by April.

Albanese promised the government would act on recommendations.

“The government is committed to making sure that we can’t wait years for answers we need to get on with any changes that are required,” he said. 

The Prime Minister is set to recall parliament early in January to introduce a series of reforms in the wake of the Bondi attack.

They will include hate speech laws, a landmark gun buyback scheme, a new offence targeting the radicalisation of children, and more powers for the home affairs minister to cancel or refuse visas if a person is suspected of promoting violence or hate or is associated with a terrorist organisation.

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