Speak the truth, pay the price: Australia’s broken whistleblower laws

For Australia’s whistleblowers, the personal cost can be devastating – retaliation at work, legal threats, even prosecution.

Feb 27, 2026, updated Feb 27, 2026

Whistleblowers have exposed some of Australia’s biggest scandals – from Robodebt and misconduct in the banking sector, to alleged war crimes in Afghanistan.

They are stories that often come to light only because someone inside decides to speak up.

But for the people who do, the personal cost can be devastating – retaliation at work, legal threats, even prosecution. That fear keeps others silent, leaving wrongdoing to fester.

The Albanese government came to office in 2022 promising a stronger integrity agenda, including “immediate improvements” to whistleblower laws and broader reform to follow.

But years on, what’s actually changed for whistleblowers, and why do so many still feel unprotected?

Today, Human Rights Law Centre’s Whistleblower Project lawyer Kieran Pender discusses creating Australia’s first specialist legal service for whistleblowers, and what’s wrong with our laws.

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Guest: Lawyer at the Human Rights Law Centre’s Whistleblower Project, Kieran Pender

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