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Jacinta Allan unveils ‘Multicultural Victoria,’ pledging stronger anti-hate action and winding up the Victorian Multicultural Commission

Premier Jacinta Allan; The Australia Today

Premier Jacinta Allan; The Australia Today

Victoria is embarking on a major reset of its multicultural governance and community support, with Premier Jacinta Allan and Minister for Multicultural Affairs Ingrid Stitt unveiling the Victorian Multicultural Review.

The Review charts a path for stronger social cohesion, more responsive policy-making, and greater empowerment of Victoria’s diverse communities.

With the theme “A Multicultural Victoria Is A United Victoria”, the Review seeks to counter division and build trust. It was led by George Lekakis AO alongside an expert advisory group, and involved more than 640 Victorians in 57 consultation sessions, plus over 150 peak bodies and community organisations.

Premier Jacinta Allan emphasised the importance of togetherness, “We are one Victoria and we’ll never be divided. Multiculturalism isn’t the problem – it is the solution.”

“This is our vision for a united Victoria – strong anti-hate laws, strong values, and a strong society, with multicultural organisations as our stable partners and multicultural people as our champions of cohesion.”

Key Reforms & Immediate Actions

In its initial response, the Allan Labor Government has committed to the following:

The Review responds to concerns about rising divisions, public discourse that has edged into hateful rhetoric, and a sense among some multicultural communities of not being heard or adequately supported.

In particular, the reforms are designed to:

Minister Ingrid Stitt added, “The Review is just one part of addressing social cohesion – but it’s the most important part of all, because a vision for a united Victoria starts by listening to multicultural communities and empowering them to lead.”

“Multicultural Victoria will strengthen leadership of the sector and reset the agenda after such a challenging five years, and our new capacity grants will make organisations stronger so they can be a part of the change.”

Challenges & What to Watch

This Review represents one of the most comprehensive efforts in recent years by a state government in Australia to strengthen multicultural governance, promote social cohesion, and uphold inclusion. It comes at a critical moment, as communities across Victoria and Australia increasingly voice concerns about discrimination, identity politics, and public safety.

If successful, the reforms have the potential to make multicultural organisations more resilient, ensure that diverse voices are not only heard but acted upon, and help foster a Victoria where diversity is celebrated, not fractured.

The full text of the Lekakis Review and details of the government’s initial response are available at the Victoria state government site. The outcomes of these reforms will likely become a key test of Victoria’s ability to deliver inclusive governance—and to affirm that multiculturalism can be both celebrated and operationalised as a core part of modern society.

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