Business Daily Media

Men's Weekly

.

Expressing strong opinions can put your job at risk. Clearer laws would help

  • Written by Giuseppe Carabetta, Associate Professor of workplace and business law, UTS Business School, University of Technology Sydney
Expressing strong opinions can put your job at risk. Clearer laws would help

Within days of American conservative Charlie Kirk[1]’s assassination, people posting on social media or commenting on his death – including TV host Jimmy Kimmel[2], teachers[3], pilots[4], a football team employee[5], and a US Secret Service employee[6] – were being censured, suspended or sacked.

Whether you support or oppose those decisions, it’s striking they occurred in the United States, which has strong constitutional protections for free speech. But even those rights don’t necessarily shield people from workplace consequences when reputational harm or breach of conduct is alleged.

Australians don’t have a constitutional right to free speech[7]. Instead, we rely on a narrow, implied freedom of political communication, which offers limited protection and rarely applies to employment disputes.

Recent high-profile disputes have tested the boundaries of what Australians can say at work and outside it. Think journalist Antoinette Lattouf[8], rugby player Israel Folau[9] and pianist Jayson Gillham[10].

Without clearer legal guidance in Australia, disputes over workplace speech — especially on social media — are likely to keep ending up in court.

Lattouf vs the ABC

The Fair Work Act[11] is Australia’s main legislation outlining the rules for employee and employer relationships.

But it offers only limited protection for political opinion. It also lacks a direct or general mechanism for balancing employees’ rights to express personal views with employers’ legitimate interests.

That legal ambiguity has been at the heart of several high-profile cases, most recently a Federal Court decision involving the ABC and Lattouf[12].

Lattouf was dismissed mid-contract in 2023, after the ABC claimed she breached its social media guidelines and ignored a direction not to post about the conflict in Gaza.

However, in June this year the Federal Court found no such direction had been issued and no actual breach identified. It held her dismissal was unlawful under section 772[13] of the Fair Work Act, which prohibits termination based on political opinion.

This ruling didn’t break new legal ground. But it was significant for highlighting the fragility of employee protections, when codes of conduct are vague or inconsistently applied.

Other high-profile Australian cases

Lattouf’s case joined a growing list of disputes with a common thread: the lack of consistent standards and guidance on workplace speech.

Israel Folau’s dismissal by Rugby Australia for posting religious views on Instagram sparked national debate on freedom of religion and expression in 2018. His case, settled out of court[14] the following year, left unresolved how far codes of conduct can override statutory protections.

Similarly, pianist Jayson Gillham’s dispute[15] with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra — centred on political expression during a performance last year[16] — reflects the same tension.

Read more: Who really gets fired over social media posts? We studied hundreds of cases to find out[17]

It’s unclear what ‘political opinion’ even means

Codes of conduct serve legitimate purposes: preventing harassment or discrimination, ensuring impartiality, and managing safety.

But when used to suppress dissent or punish unpopular views, they risk undermining democratic values.

A person holding up a sign at a climate protest in Sydney that reads:
Does peaceful protest count as ‘political opinion’? The law’s unclear. Tiff Ng/Pexels, CC BY[18][19]

In the Lattouf vs ABC case, Justice Darryl Rangiah pointed out that section 772[20] of the Fair Work Act reflects Australia’s international human rights obligations – specifically Article 26 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights[21]. It was a reminder that our employment laws don’t exist in a vacuum.

Yet the Fair Work Act does not define “political opinion”, and courts elsewhere have struggled to apply it.

Does it include attending rallies? Sharing memes? Criticising policy? The answer remains unclear.

Legal solutions could clear up confusion

Legislative reform would help.

One option would be to amend the Fair Work Act to define “political opinion” more clearly. This definition could include not just party membership or views on government policy, but also civic participation – such as protests or petitions – and moral or ideological beliefs with political dimensions.

It could also clarify that political expression includes both verbal and non-verbal acts, such as social media posts or peaceful protest attendance.

But definition alone isn’t enough.

Currently, the Fair Work Act offers limited protection. Employers can often justify disciplinary action by pointing to breaches of workplace policy or failure to follow lawful directions, effectively sidestepping the issue of political belief.

Provisions like section 772 of the Fair Work Act offer no clear framework for weighing an employer’s right to protect its reputation and maintain a safe workplace against an employee’s right to express personal views.

A federal Human Rights Act could offer a more robust solution. There’s also a strong case for an independent oversight body — perhaps a Workplace Rights Commissioner or an expanded Fair Work Ombudsman — to offer guidance, mediate disputes early, and help balance the rights of employees with the needs of employers and others affected.

Legal scholars Joellen Riley Munton and Therese MacDermott have proposed[22] expanding the Fair Work Commission’s unfair dismissal and bullying jurisdictions to handle such disputes.

Reform won’t be easy. But unless we want more workplace conflicts playing out in court for years to come, a clearer legal framework is urgently needed — for everyone’s sake.

References

  1. ^ Charlie Kirk (theconversation.com)
  2. ^ TV host Jimmy Kimmel (www.abc.net.au)
  3. ^ teachers (www.keranews.org)
  4. ^ pilots (www.star-telegram.com)
  5. ^ football team employee (www.wral.com)
  6. ^ US Secret Service employee (www.cbsnews.com)
  7. ^ constitutional right to free speech (www.alrc.gov.au)
  8. ^ Antoinette Lattouf (theconversation.com)
  9. ^ Israel Folau (theconversation.com)
  10. ^ Jayson Gillham (www.theguardian.com)
  11. ^ Fair Work Act (www.fairwork.gov.au)
  12. ^ the ABC and Lattouf (www.uts.edu.au)
  13. ^ section 772 (www5.austlii.edu.au)
  14. ^ settled out of court (www.abc.net.au)
  15. ^ Jayson Gillham’s dispute (www.fedcourt.gov.au)
  16. ^ a performance last year (www.abc.net.au)
  17. ^ Who really gets fired over social media posts? We studied hundreds of cases to find out (theconversation.com)
  18. ^ Tiff Ng/Pexels (www.pexels.com)
  19. ^ CC BY (creativecommons.org)
  20. ^ section 772 (www.austlii.edu.au)
  21. ^ International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (www.ohchr.org)
  22. ^ proposed (www.unsw.edu.au)

Authors: Giuseppe Carabetta, Associate Professor of workplace and business law, UTS Business School, University of Technology Sydney

Read more https://theconversation.com/expressing-strong-opinions-can-put-your-job-at-risk-clearer-laws-would-help-265085

From Check-in to Touchdown: How AI and smarter systems are transforming the travel industry

Richard Valente, VP of Customer Experience Strategy at TP in Australia, explores how IT-BPM outsourcing is revolutionising the travel sector throu...

Online Christmas shoppers fund climate and biodiversity projects via HealthPost's Click Sphere for Good initiative

Online shoppers with HealthPost’s Flora & Fauna have made 11,000 contributions towards climate and biodiversity projects when ordering parcel ...

US landmark settlement protects SMEs, highlighting flaws in the RBA's proposed blanket card surcharging ban for Australia

Aussie SMEs warn RBA not to ignore global trends, with the current sledgehammer approach threatening business viability and increasing inflation ...

Thryv Australia named Employer of Choice for third consecutive year at Australian Business Awards

Thryv® (NASDAQ: THRY), Australia’s provider of the leading small business marketing and sales software platform, has been awarded the Employer of ...

RogersDigital.com Announces the Launch of TheBulletin.au, a Destination for Business, Policy and Financial Insight

RogersDigital.com has announced the launch of TheBulletin.au, a new national digital publication designed to deliver sharp, data-driven reporting ...

Controlling business spend is helping finance leaders to forecast with confidence

Forecasting has always been central to financial planning; however, traditional methods based on historical trends are no longer enough. Economic ...

hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink หวยออนไลน์betsmovejojobethttps://vozolturkiyedistributoru.com/Pusulabet Girişสล็อตเว็บตรงgamdom girişpadişahbetMostbetenjoybetkavbetcarros usadospin upMostbetdizipalholiganbet girişnn888kiralık hackerultrabetjojobet girişDeneme Bonusu Veren Sitelervaycasino girişjojobet girişpradabetBets10jojobetjojobetjojobetholiganbet色情casibomnakitbahisholiganbetcasibom girişcasibom girişcasibom girişJojobet Girişyakabet1xbet girişjojobetgrandpashabet girişzbahis güncel girişgobahisbetofficeenjoybetselçuksportscasibom girişgiftcardmall/mygiftcasibommatbetbets10kingbettingmamibettürk ifşacasibom girişmeritkingsekabetslot spacemancasibomcasino sitelericasibomJojobetselçuksportsjustin tvPorno İzlecasibom girişkolaybetmeritkingbetoviscasibomcasibom girişmasterbettingmasterbettingyakabetartemisbetbetpuanmeritkingartemisbet girişdinamobetbetnanovdcasinoSekabet girişmarsbahis girişbetkolikcasibom girişbetsmovekingroyalbetsmovemeritkingbets10yakabetyakabetyakabetjojobetrinabetmasterbettingVenüsbetmr pachoaertyerCasibomcolor pickermavibetenjoybetligobet girişholiganbet girişholiganbet girişmavibetmavibetmavibetholiganbetcratosslot girişคลิปหลุดไทยCasibomCasibomholiganbetdeneme bonusu veren siteleronwin girişonwindiyarbakır escortcasibomeskişehir escortcasibom girişbahsegelcasibomcasibom girişcasibomcasibom girişholiganbetholiganbet girişbets10matbetcasibomRoyal Reelsroyal reelskolaybetKayseri Escortjojobet girişjojobetsweet bonanzaNişantaşı EscortbetvolebetvolebettiltStreameastcasibomKalebetpadişahbetfixbetaviator gameÜsküdar Evden Eve Nakliyatsetrabettimebettimebettimebetbahisoistanbul escort telegramcasibombetparkpantheraproject.netcasibom girişbetsmovejojobet girişcasibomultrabetcasibomstreameast한국야동meritkingสล็อตjojobet girişholiganbet girişpornopadişahbetBetigmabetparkBetigmaBetlora girişgiftcardmall/mygiftgaziantep escorteb7png pokiesbest online casino australiabest online pokies australiareal money pokies online australiabcgame96 casinocrown155 hk casinohb88kh casinopadişahbetjojobetmarsbahisgalabetjojobet girişjojobetcasibombets10bets10betasusjojobetolimposcasinobetbabaholiganbetholiganbetolabahis girişjojobetdeneme bonusu veren siteler rehneriblooketasyabahis girişpinbahis girişdumanbet girişxslotStreameastmostbetjojobetdaftar situs judi slot gacor hb88 indonesiaJojobet 1113mostbetmostbetmostbetgalabetkingroyalbahis siteleri 2025matadorbetcasinowon girişjojobetjojobetgiftcardmall/mygift check balance visajojobetjojobetซื้อหวยออนไลน์grandpashabetcasibomcasibomsadfasdfsdfasdasdasdasdkonya escortjojobetroyalbetsweet bonanzapin up uzbekistanSlot Heart Casinomamibet logincasinomedklarna.sebetworld96 online casino cambodiaholiganbetwww.giftcardmall.com/mygiftwww.giftcardmall.com/mygiftCasibom Giriştm menards loginceltabetkingbettingsekabet girişe wallet casino australiajojobetplay aristocrat pokies onlinesweet bonanzaholiganbetmaltcasino girişcanlı maç izleklasbahisVenüsbetcasibomcasibomcratosroyalbetci girişjojobet girişcasibomcasibomdeneme bonusu veren sitelerPinup AZjokerbetjojobetvdcasinomostbetcasibomsitus slot gacormatbetJojobetmigliori casino non aamsasyabahis girişgoogle hit botujojobetCasibomdizipalrealbahisrealbahisperabetperabetbetwoonmatbetjojobet