Family First Party
The Family First Party is a conservative Australian political party that prioritizes policies reinforcing traditional family structures and Judeo-Christian ethical foundations in governance.[1] Originating in South Australia, it gained federal representation through the election of Senator Steve Fielding for Victoria in 2004 via preference flows.[2][3] The party later secured another Senate seat with Bob Day for South Australia in 2013, amplifying its influence on issues like marriage and life protections despite modest primary vote shares.[4][5] Core to its platform are commitments to defining marriage as between one man and one woman, affirming biological sex distinctions, and safeguarding human life from conception to natural death, positions it maintains against prevailing secular policy shifts.[1] After the original party's deregistration in 2017, a successor entity revived the name around 2021, continuing grassroots efforts to elevate family primacy in public policy while contesting recent elections.[6] Its parliamentary tenures highlighted tensions with mainstream parties on cultural matters, often positioning it as a countervoice to progressive agendas in areas such as euthanasia and religious freedoms.History
Founding and Early Development (2002–2006)
The Family First Party was co-founded in South Australia in 2001 by Pastor Andrew Evans, a Pentecostal church leader who had previously served as national president of the Assemblies of God in Australia from 1977 to 1997 and as senior pastor of Paradise Community Church (now Futures Church) for three decades. Evans established the party to promote policies centered on traditional family structures, Christian ethics, and opposition to social liberalism, drawing from his religious background while positioning it as a secular entity open to broader conservative support. The party was registered in time for the South Australian state election on 9 February 2002, marking its debut in electoral politics.[7][8][9] In the 2002 election, Family First achieved immediate parliamentary representation by electing Evans to the Legislative Council on preferences from minor parties and independents, becoming the first MP from the new party in South Australian history. This outcome reflected the party's appeal to voters seeking alternatives to the major parties on issues like family policy and moral values, with Evans subsequently using his position to advocate against euthanasia legislation and for protections around marriage and child welfare. The success in South Australia prompted organizational expansion, including establishment of state divisions in other jurisdictions and preparation for federal contests.[10][11][12] By the 2004 federal election, Family First had grown to field candidates nationwide, securing a significant breakthrough with the election of Steve Fielding to the Senate in Victoria, where he attained office via preference flows exceeding one quota despite modest primary support. Fielding's victory highlighted the party's strategy of leveraging optional preferential voting and conservative voter mobilization, though it drew scrutiny for the role of church networks in directing preferences. Nationally, the party polled around 1-2% in key seats but established a foothold for future campaigns. In parallel, internal development focused on policy formulation emphasizing family primacy over state intervention.[13] The 2006 South Australian state election on 18 March further consolidated early gains, with Family First increasing its Legislative Council representation to two seats—retaining Evans and electing Dennis Hood—on a primary vote of approximately 5%, up from prior levels. This result positioned the party as a crossbench influence in the upper house, where it negotiated on bills related to gambling, abortion, and education to align with its core principles. Through these years, the party maintained grassroots funding and volunteer-driven operations, avoiding reliance on major donor influences while critiquing both Labor's social policies and Liberal inconsistencies on family issues.[14]Growth and Federal Breakthroughs (2007–2013)
During Steve Fielding's Senate term for Victoria (2005–2011), Family First consolidated its federal foothold as the party's sole parliamentary representative, with Fielding acting as its leader in Canberra. The party contested the 2007 federal election nationwide, launching its campaign in Melbourne on November 11, where Fielding positioned Family First as a proponent of "common sense" policies prioritizing family welfare over market-driven agendas critiqued in major parties.[15] Fielding's presence amplified the party's voice on social conservatism, including opposition to expansions in government intervention on family matters.[16] Fielding exerted influence in the Senate crossbench amid the Rudd Labor government's (2007–2010) legislative agenda, notably blocking aspects of the proposed emissions trading scheme through climate skepticism, which contributed to delays alongside opposition from the Liberal-National Coalition.[17] This period saw Family First's federal visibility grow through Fielding's committee roles and public stances, though primary vote shares remained modest at under 2% nationally in House contests, reflecting niche appeal among voters disillusioned with major parties on moral issues.[18] The 2010 federal election marked a setback, with Fielding defeated in Victoria, temporarily ending Family First's Senate seats as the party garnered around 1% of the national House first preferences.[19] Recovery followed in state arenas, bolstering organizational capacity. A key federal breakthrough occurred in the 2013 election, when Bob Day secured a Senate seat for South Australia on September 7, leveraging preferences in a fragmented crossbench to represent Family First until 2014.[20][21] Day's win, amid Liberal gains under Tony Abbott, underscored the party's strategic preference deals and appeal in conservative states, restoring federal leverage on bioethics and family policy.[22]Challenges and Merger with Australian Conservatives (2014–2017)
Following the 2013 federal election success, where Family First secured one Senate seat held by Bob Day, the party encountered significant setbacks in subsequent state elections. In the 2014 Victorian state election held on November 29, Family First received approximately 1.8% of the upper house vote statewide but failed to secure any seats, narrowly missing out in several regions due to preference flows favoring major parties and competitors like the Australian Christians.[23] Similarly, in the March 15, 2014, South Australian state election, Family First's primary vote in the Legislative Council fell to 2.4%, down from previous highs, though incumbent Robert Brokenshire retained his seat amid tight multi-member contests dominated by Labor and Liberal preferences.[24] These results highlighted the party's vulnerability to vote fragmentation on the conservative right, exacerbated by the rise of micro-parties and the Liberal Party's consolidation of traditionalist support. The 2016 federal election compounded these difficulties, with Family First's national Senate vote dropping to 1.29%, insufficient for quota in most states except a recount in South Australia following Day's departure. Bob Day, the party's sole federal parliamentarian, resigned from the Senate on November 1, 2016, after his construction firm Home Australia entered liquidation in October, amid allegations of financial mismanagement and conflicts of interest involving government-subsidized housing projects.[25] [26] Day's exit triggered a special count, elevating Lucy Gichuhi to the vacancy on November 9, but it damaged the party's reputation and finances, as Day had personally funded much of its operations.[27] Internal disarray followed, with debates over Day's ongoing influence and the party's direction, further eroding donor confidence and grassroots momentum.[28] Facing existential threats from declining polls and competition from Senator Cory Bernardi's newly formed Australian Conservatives—launched February 2017 after his defection from the Liberal Party—Family First opted for merger to consolidate the socially conservative vote. On April 25, 2017, party leaders announced the integration into Australian Conservatives, dissolving Family First as a distinct entity effective April 26, while transferring assets, membership, and state parliamentarians like Brokenshire.[29] [30] Gichuhi declined to join, sitting as an independent, citing policy alignment concerns.[31] The move aimed to pool resources for the 2018 South Australian election but reflected Family First's inability to sustain independent viability amid a polarized right-wing spectrum.[29]Post-Merger Revival and Recent Activities (2018–2025)
Following the 2017 merger into the Australian Conservatives, which yielded limited electoral success including no seats in the 2019 federal election, the Family First Party re-emerged as an independent conservative entity in the early 2020s, reclaiming its focus on family primacy, Christian values, and opposition to progressive social policies.[32] The revival gained organizational momentum with the party's first national conference held on September 7, 2023, where delegates emphasized grassroots mobilization to advance policies prioritizing family structures over state intervention.[33] In state-level engagements, Family First contested the 2024 Queensland election, nominating candidates in 59 of 93 legislative seats to promote platforms centered on traditional family ethics and resource management.[34] It also fielded candidates in the Australian Capital Territory ahead of the 2024 election, incorporating figures like Elizabeth Kikkert after her expulsion from the Liberal Party.[35] The party's federal re-entry culminated in the May 3, 2025, election, where it nominated 100 candidates across House and Senate races, achieving visibility as a "green shoot" amid broader conservative setbacks despite securing no parliamentary seats.[36][37] This marked the end of a nine-year absence from national contests, with the party attributing its persistence to voter dissatisfaction with major parties on family-related issues.[37] Additional activities included adopting a formal policy in April 2025 urging federal recognition of the Armenian Genocide, reflecting alliances with diaspora communities aligned with the party's emphasis on historical truth and national moral clarity.[38] Ongoing advocacy through the party website and social media targeted economic pressures on families, such as rising power bills under Labor policies, positioning Family First as a voice for conservative resurgence.[39]Religious and Philosophical Foundations
Christian Roots and Influences
The Family First Party traces its origins to Pentecostal Christian circles in South Australia, where co-founder Pastor Andrew Evans, who served as National Superintendent of the Assemblies of God in Australia from 1977 to 1997, established the party in 2002 following his retirement from church leadership in 2000.[7][11] Evans, who pastored Paradise Community Church (later renamed Influencers Church) for 30 years, drew upon charismatic and evangelical networks to launch the party as a vehicle for advancing conservative social policies rooted in biblical principles.[40] These roots provided early organizational support, including volunteer bases and ideological framing from Pentecostal congregations emphasizing moral absolutes on family and life issues. While lacking formal denominational affiliation, the party's foundational influences remain evident in its explicit endorsement of the Judeo-Christian ethic as the bedrock of Australian freedoms, tolerance, and democratic values—applicable to believers and non-believers alike.[1] This ethic informs core policy pillars of faith, life, and freedom, aligning with Christian doctrines that uphold human dignity from conception to natural death, traditional marriage as between one man and one woman, and religious liberty against state encroachments.[41] Evangelical emphases on personal responsibility, forgiveness, and self-control further shape the party's vision of virtues enabling true liberty, distinct from secular relativism. The Pentecostal heritage manifests in practical advocacy, such as prioritizing family subsidiarity—empowering households over centralized government—which echoes Christian social teachings on community self-governance and echoes Assemblies of God priorities for holistic societal renewal.[41] Evans's tenure as a South Australian Legislative Councillor from 2002 exemplified this fusion, where religious convictions translated into parliamentary defenses of unborn life and parental rights, though the party frames its platform as broadly principled rather than confessional.[42] This approach sustained influence despite mergers and electoral shifts, maintaining Christian-inspired stances amid Australia's secularizing trends.Emphasis on Family Primacy and First-Principles Values
The Family First Party posits the nuclear family—comprising a married mother, father, and their children—as the foundational unit of society, advocating for public policies that prioritize and strengthen this structure over alternative arrangements. This emphasis stems from the party's view that healthy families underpin community stability and national prosperity, with extended family networks also recognized for support roles. Policies proposed include tax incentives for monogamous heterosexual marriages, income splitting for families, and measures to enhance housing affordability and a living wage benchmarked to support a family of five, such as the historical Harvester Judgment standard.[41][43][1] These positions derive from foundational principles rooted in Judeo-Christian ethics, which the party identifies as the ethical framework most conducive to individual freedoms, tolerance, and governance by consent, applicable to Australians of all faiths or none. The party upholds biological realities, such as the binary nature of human sex (male and female), as objective truths informing policy on marriage, child-rearing, and bioethics, rejecting ideologies that conflate gender with subjective identity. Subsidiarity is a key principle, empowering families and local communities to address issues before escalating to government intervention, thereby minimizing state overreach while fostering self-reliance and virtue-based freedoms like speech and religion.[41][1] In practice, this manifests in uncompromising stances on life issues, asserting that human life begins at conception and merits protection until natural death, opposing abortion (especially late-term), euthanasia, surrogacy, and puberty blockers for minors. Parental primacy is defended through demands for transparency in schools regarding gender ideology exposure and bans on pornography access for children via age verification. The party critiques both leftist anti-family agendas and libertarian excesses, arguing that policies must align with empirical outcomes favoring child development in stable, biological-parent households to ensure societal flourishing.[43][41][1]Political Ideology and Policy Positions
Family, Bioethics, and Social Values
The Family First Party advocates for policies that prioritize the traditional nuclear family as the foundational unit of society, emphasizing incentives for monogamous heterosexual marriage and parenthood through tax reforms and financial support.[43] The party supports measures to protect children, including banning puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and gender affirmation surgeries for minors, as well as removing materials promoting LGBTQA+ gender fluid ideology from school and early childhood curricula.[43] It also seeks to restore parental authority by imposing penalties on educators or social workers who conceal a child's gender transition from parents and by eliminating compulsory diversity training and mandatory use of preferred pronouns in public sector employment.[43] On bioethics, the party maintains a pro-life position, calling for bans on late-term abortions, sex-selective abortions, and surrogacy, while criminalizing coercion of women into abortions.[43] It opposes voluntary euthanasia and advocates repealing existing euthanasia laws across Australian jurisdictions, redirecting resources instead toward enhanced palliative care to support end-of-life dignity without hastening death.[43] In the realm of social values, Family First promotes protections for women and girls by endorsing the Nordic model to criminalize the purchase of prostitution while decriminalizing sellers, and by barring biological males from female-only sports, prisons, and private facilities.[43] The party opposes the expansion of gender ideology in public institutions, including age verification for online pornography to shield minors, and has pledged to withhold public funding from events like the Sydney WorldPride Festival that it views as contrary to family-oriented values.[43] These positions align with the party's core commitment to subsidiarity, empowering families and communities over centralized state intervention in personal and ethical matters.[32]Economic and Employment Policies
The Family First Party advocates for an economy structured to prioritize family prosperity, emphasizing free enterprise, reduced government intervention, and policies enabling single-income households to afford home ownership and child-rearing. Drawing from principles like the 1907 Harvester Judgement, the party supports wages sufficient to sustain a family of five on one income, while promoting business freedom to foster job creation and growth.[41] Government intervention is viewed as necessary to curb corporate excesses but primarily to steward resources sustainably for the common good, rejecting excessive regulation that stifles small and family businesses.[41] Fiscal policies focus on responsibility and debt reduction, critiquing major parties' spending—such as projections of $1 trillion in Commonwealth debt and ballooning state deficits in Victoria and Queensland—as inflationary and unsustainable, particularly in areas like NDIS and aged care. The party proposes shrinking government size, defunding non-essential programs, and cutting red tape to combat inflation, alongside boosting energy production and housing supply.[44] [43] Tax reforms aim to lighten family burdens, including income splitting between parents and exploring incentives like Hungarian-style breaks for mothers of three or more children.[43] In employment and resource sectors, Family First emphasizes job generation through expanded gas exploration and supply to drive industry, while maintaining coal-fired power for baseload reliability until viable alternatives emerge. It calls for pausing net zero commitments and exiting the Paris Agreement pending rigorous cost-benefit analysis, arguing these policies inflate energy costs—evident in electricity bills rising by approximately $1,000 despite government promises of relief—and hinder economic competitiveness. Nuclear energy pursuit and regulatory easing are prioritized to ensure affordable, reliable power supporting employment in resource-dependent regions.[43] [44] Housing affordability ties into employment by advocating land release and deregulation to lower prices, enabling family stability and workforce participation.[43]Environment, Climate Change, and Resource Management
The Family First Party prioritizes energy affordability, reliability, and economic pragmatism in its environmental and climate policies, advocating a pause on net zero emissions targets until a rigorous cost-benefit analysis evaluates their engineering and economic feasibility.[43] The party calls for Australia to exit the Paris Climate Agreement, viewing such international obligations as detrimental to domestic energy security and household costs.[43] This stance reflects skepticism toward policies perceived as ideologically driven, with the party arguing that net zero pursuits by major parties have resulted in skyrocketing electricity prices and risks to the national grid as of 2025.[45] On resource management and energy production, Family First supports retaining coal-fired power stations for baseload electricity until viable alternatives emerge, while promoting expanded gas utilization to prevent blackouts, firm up supply, and lower retail prices.[43] They propose lifting exploration restrictions to access untapped gas reserves, thereby boosting industry, manufacturing, and employment opportunities.[43] Nuclear energy development is endorsed as a future-oriented option for sustainable, dispatchable power generation.[43] In broader environmental stewardship, the party favors streamlined land release and reduced regulatory barriers to enhance housing supply and affordability, balancing development with practical resource allocation.[43] Family First also backs controlled hunting to manage invasive animal pests, citing its role in protecting ecosystems, supporting agriculture, and improving animal welfare outcomes.[43] These positions underscore a commitment to evidence-based interventions over expansive regulatory frameworks, with criticisms directed at net zero's potential to encroach on prime agricultural land and exacerbate energy vulnerabilities.[46]Education and Youth Policy
The Family First Party advocates for an education system that prioritizes foundational academic skills, parental authority, and the exclusion of what it terms ideologically driven content. Its policy platform calls for centering school curricula on "reading, writing and arithmetic," while restoring emphasis on "Western Civilisation and the Australian achievement" and eliminating teachings associated with critical race theory and gender queer theory.[43] The party supports the continuation of school chaplaincy programs to provide pastoral care aligned with traditional values.[43] In line with its commitment to parental rights, Family First opposes government interventions that undermine family-directed education, including any restrictions on homeschooling or private schooling. It pledges to defend homeschooling "at every opportunity" and resist moves to limit or ban non-government education options, particularly in response to perceived threats from state Labor policies.[47] The party also seeks to protect religious schools' autonomy, advocating for their freedom to hire staff and operate according to their ethos without federal overreach, such as proposed anti-discrimination law changes.[43] This stance extends to critiquing initiatives that discourage binary gender terms like "boys" and "girls" in schools, with commitments to defund activist groups promoting such shifts.[48] On youth policy, Family First emphasizes shielding children and adolescents from influences it views as harmful, particularly in educational and early childhood settings. It proposes removing "LGBTQA+ gender fluid ideology" from school and preschool curricula, alongside banning puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and gender affirmation surgeries for minors.[43] To enforce transparency, the party would criminalize teachers or social workers concealing a child's gender-related decisions from parents.[43] Additional measures include mandating online age-verification to block youth access to pornography and reviewing programs like Victoria's "Consent and Respectful Relationships" to excise gender ideology, framing these as protective against psychological and social risks.[43][49] These positions reflect the party's broader prioritization of family primacy over state or institutional ideologies in shaping young people's development.Immigration, Indigenous Affairs, and National Identity
The Family First Party advocates for controlled immigration levels to ensure sustainable integration with Australia's housing and infrastructure capacity. It proposes slowing immigration intake to prevent strain on resources, emphasizing planned migration that aligns with national needs rather than mass inflows.[43] The party critiques reliance on immigration to offset low birth rates (currently 1.4 children per woman, below the replacement level of 2.1), arguing instead for policies that bolster family formation, such as reducing living costs through cheaper energy and easing housing restrictions.[50] This approach prioritizes "a future that’s built on Australian families, not permanent dependence on mass migration," viewing high immigration as a symptom of failing domestic population policies rather than a primary solution.[50] On indigenous affairs, the party supports practical measures focused on personal responsibility, education, and economic self-reliance over symbolic or racially differentiated policies. It endorses Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price's vision, which rejects a "black armband" view of history and critiques romanticized pre-colonial narratives, acknowledging colonisation's introduction of democracy, freedom, and prosperity alongside past injustices like the Myall Creek massacre, where British authorities prosecuted and executed seven perpetrators.[51] Family First opposes the "racism of low expectations" that excuses dysfunction through victimhood, advocating instead for equal standards, local employment initiatives, and an "advancement movement" for true reconciliation without guilt-driven politics.[51] The party rejects indigenous sovereignty claims, citing legal precedents like Coe v Commonwealth that affirm no pre-existing Aboriginal nations held sovereignty, and views practices like "Welcome to Country" as divisive rituals implying perpetual separatism rather than promoting equality under law.[52] Regarding national identity, Family First seeks to reinforce a unified Australian ethos rooted in Western civilisation and shared citizenship, countering trends of erosion through identity politics. It calls for restoring the "primacy of Western Civilisation and the Australian achievement" in education, eliminating divisive ideologies like critical race theory to focus on foundational skills and historical contributions.[43] The party promotes unity by defining national belonging through equal citizenship rather than race or ethnicity, opposing narratives that fracture society along group lines and erode collective identity.[52] This stance aligns with broader conservative emphasis on cultural cohesion, where respect for indigenous heritage coexists with rejection of separatism to foster a singular Australian narrative.[52]Housing, Poverty Alleviation, and Drug Policy
The Family First Party proposes addressing housing unaffordability by releasing additional land for development and slashing regulatory "red tape" to boost supply and reduce prices, viewing these as essential to counter the crisis where median home prices in cities like Sydney exceed $1 million and affordability has deteriorated from 2.8 years of average income in 1960 to 10.4 years in 2021.[43][53] It identifies high immigration levels as a key driver exacerbating supply shortages alongside inadequate planning, advocating reduced immigration to ease demand pressures on housing stock.[49] Further, the party calls for expediting approvals, minimizing environmental and bureaucratic hurdles ("green tape"), and incentivizing higher-density options like townhouses to enable young families to achieve home ownership, which it links to broader social benefits including family formation and birth rates.[53] For poverty alleviation, Family First emphasizes a generous welfare safety net paired with mechanisms to promote self-reliance and escape dependency, such as tax reductions, family income splitting to benefit parents (especially mothers) staying home with children, and deregulation to foster small and family-owned businesses.[43] These measures aim to combat inflation and elevate living standards without expanding government intervention, critiquing over-reliance on welfare as counterproductive to long-term upliftment.[43] The party also supports initiatives like phasing out poker machines and providing nightly communal shelters for the homeless tied to long-term housing services, framing poverty reduction as intertwined with family stability and economic freedom.[43] On drug policy, the party pledges unwavering opposition to illicit substances, demanding closure of supervised injecting centres and stricter enforcement against supply and possession to deter use.[43] It favors diverting users, particularly youth facing first offenses, into mandatory rehabilitation over incarceration, while rejecting legalization of cannabis or other drugs on grounds that it escalates addiction, consumption, and societal costs.[43][49] Family First has praised state-level bans on pill testing at events, arguing such harm-reduction approaches undermine deterrence and enable risky behavior.[54]Electoral Performance
Federal Elections and By-Elections
The Family First Party first contested the 2004 Australian federal election, fielding candidates in the House of Representatives and Senate across multiple states. Its most notable success came in the Victorian Senate race, where candidate Steve Fielding secured the sixth seat through a combination of primary votes and preferences, marking the party's entry into federal parliament.[2] Fielding, a manufacturing business owner, served from July 1, 2005, to June 30, 2011.[3] The party did not win any House seats nationwide.[55] In the 2007 federal election, Family First retained visibility by contesting seats but failed to secure additional parliamentary representation beyond Fielding's ongoing term.[18] The party emphasized family policy issues in its platform, though primary vote shares remained modest, typically under 2% nationally. No House seats were won, and no new Senate positions were gained. Fielding's Senate term ended following defeat in the 2010 federal election, where Family First's Victorian Senate primary vote proved insufficient to retain the seat amid stronger competition from major parties and Greens preferences.[56] The party again contested House divisions without success, receiving scattered support in conservative-leaning electorates but falling short of quotas.[19] Family First achieved a second federal Senate victory in the 2013 election when Bob Day, a South Australian businessman and party financier, was elected for a term beginning July 1, 2014.[57] Day's campaign benefited from over $1 million in personal funding, bolstering the party's Senate quota in South Australia.[57] However, Day resigned in November 2016 amid financial controversies involving his construction firm, leading to a countback that elected Lucy Gichuhi as his replacement; she later joined the Liberal Party.[58] No House seats were secured. The party did not contest the 2016 federal election effectively and deregistered federally in 2017. After an absence from federal contests, Family First re-entered the 2025 federal election on May 3, registering candidates in select House divisions and the Senate.[37] It garnered localized support, such as 4.75% primary votes in Holt (Victoria) and 3.74% in Hawke (Victoria), but won no seats amid dominance by Labor and Coalition.[59][60] The resurgence highlighted persistent minor-party appeal on family-centric issues, though insufficient for parliamentary breakthrough.[37] The party had negligible involvement in federal by-elections, contesting few and achieving no victories or significant vote shares that altered outcomes.| Federal Election Year | House Seats Won | Senate Seats Won | Notable Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | 0 | 1 (VIC: Fielding) | Breakthrough Senate win via preferences[2] |
| 2007 | 0 | 0 | Retained visibility; no gains[18] |
| 2010 | 0 | 0 | Fielding defeated[56] |
| 2013 | 0 | 1 (SA: Day) | Day elected; later resigned[57][58] |
| 2025 | 0 | 0 | Re-emergence; minor vote shares[37][59] |