By Rachael Wong
The ABC’s decision to end its relationship with trans lobby group ACON and its Pride in Diversity program marks a significant and welcome development.
For years, concerns have been raised about the national broadcaster’s entanglement with a powerful activist organisation promoting a radical ideology around sex and gender. The decision to withdraw signals an acknowledgment – whether explicit or not – that such a relationship was incompatible with the ABC’s duty to remain impartial and independent, and raised serious concerns about bias in its coverage of gender issues.
This decision did not happen in a vacuum.
It follows the tireless efforts of advocates, journalists, and principled politicians who have worked to expose the extent of ideological capture within one of Australia’s most influential public institutions. Investigative reporting, sustained public pressure, and the courage of those willing to speak against the prevailing orthodoxy have all contributed to this outcome.
But while this development is significant, the key question remains: will it lead to meaningful change, or is it simply a surface-level reset?
Why this matters
Media institutions have played a central role in the rapid rise and entrenchment of gender ideology. For years, coverage of gender issues across much of the Australian media landscape – especially the ABC – has been characterised by one-sided narratives, a lack of critical scrutiny, and the marginalisation of dissenting voices.
Perspectives grounded in biological reality, child safeguarding concerns, and women’s sex-based rights have too often been excluded or misrepresented. In their place, audiences have been presented with a singular, affirming narrative that frames gender ideology as settled fact rather than a contested set of claims.
This has had real consequences. Media institutions do not simply reflect public opinion, they shape it. And in this case, they have played a central role in normalising an ideology with far-reaching implications for women, children, free speech and our broader society. Issues such as women’s sport, single-sex spaces, youth gender medicine and the legal harassment of those who speak out against gender ideology, have frequently been reported through a narrow lens, with limited space for debate.
The ABC, as the taxpayer-funded national broadcaster, carries an even greater responsibility. Its pursuit of “Platinum” status in ACON’s Pride in Diversity Program raised serious concerns about independence, impartiality, and editorial integrity, borne out by it's unbalanced reporting on gender issues including puff pieces on child 'transitioning', trans-identified males in women's prisons and sports, and a failure to report on key developments in this space.
ACON is not a neutral body. It is a well-resourced activist organisation receiving millions of dollars in government funding that has played a leading role in advancing gender ideology across Australian institutions. Its Pride in Diversity Program goes beyond promoting respectful workplaces. It embeds a particular worldview about sex and gender, one that prioritises self-declared gender identity over biological reality, and which has caused grave harm – especially to women and children.
Participation in such programs often requires organisations to adopt specific language, policies, and training frameworks that reflect this worldview. In doing so, they risk sidelining legitimate dissenting perspectives, including those grounded in science, child safeguarding concerns, and women’s sex-based rights.
For the ABC, this presented a clear conflict. As Australia’s public broadcaster, it has a duty to remain accurate, impartial, and independent. Aligning itself with an activist group promoting one side of an ongoing public debate inevitably undermines that obligation. It also raises broader questions about transparency. For a publicly funded broadcaster, the existence and influence of such partnerships should have been clearly disclosed and open to scrutiny.
A potential turning point
The ABC’s withdrawal echoes developments overseas, where the BBC withdrew from Stonewall’s Diversity Champions program amid similar concerns about impartiality.
In that context, the decision was widely seen as a turning point – a recognition that institutional alignment with activist accreditation schemes undermines editorial independence and public trust.
Crucially, the BBC’s move was not treated as an endpoint, but as the beginning of a broader recalibration.
How deep does the change go?
Ending formal participation in ACON’s programs is one thing. Undoing their influence is another.
In reporting on the decision, both the ABC and ACON have sought to downplay the significance of their relationship, with the ABC stating that a review of its partnerships found it is “meeting [its] obligations of editorial independence and impartiality”. This framing is difficult to reconcile with the well-documented influence of ACON’s programs, which extend beyond workplace culture into content, language, and editorial framing.
Serious questions remain about how deeply ACON-aligned frameworks have been embedded within the ABC:
- Have staff been trained under these programs, and will retraining be required?
- Do internal policies and editorial approaches still reflect the assumptions of gender ideology?
- Why does the ABC continue to promote initiatives such as “ABCQueer” that advance one side of this debate?
- Will the ABC commit to ensuring that a genuine diversity of perspectives, including gender-critical views, is represented fairly in its coverage?
Until these questions are addressed, it is difficult to assess whether the change is substantive or merely symbolic.
Australians are entitled to a clear and transparent account of what has changed, and what has not.
What comes next?
If the ABC is serious about restoring trust, further steps are required.
This includes a thorough review of internal policies, editorial guidelines, and training programs. Staff retraining may be necessary to ensure that reporting on sex and gender is grounded in accuracy, balance, and respect for biological reality.
Moreover, while withdrawal from ACON is necessary, it is not sufficient. The ABC – and the media more broadly – must recommit to genuine impartiality. That means testing claims, examining evidence, and giving fair voice to a diversity of perspectives, including those grounded in biological reality, women’s sex-based rights and child safeguarding.
If the media has helped to normalise gender ideology, it must now be willing to scrutinise it. Anything less risks perpetuating the very imbalance this decision appears to acknowledge.
More fundamentally, the media must rediscover its core function: not to advocate, but to inform; not to enforce consensus, but to facilitate open and robust discussion.
A broader moment for reform
The implications of this decision extend beyond the ABC.
ACON’s influence is not confined to media organisations. Its programs are embedded across corporate, educational, and government institutions throughout Australia. If concerns about ideological capture are to be taken seriously, other organisations must also reconsider their involvement.
This decision should prompt a broader reassessment of the role activist organisations play in shaping public institutions.
A Cautious welcome
The ABC’s decision to withdraw from its partnership with ACON is an important and welcome step.
It reflects growing recognition that public trust depends on transparency and independence from activist groups.
But whether this moment proves to be a genuine turning point or a symbolic gesture will depend on what follows. Ending a partnership is easy. Rebuilding trust, restoring balance, and recommitting to truth is far harder.
If the ABC is truly prepared to disentangle itself from activist influence and the influence of gender ideology more broadly, this could mark a turning point in restoring balance to public debate.
If not, the risk is that little will change beneath the surface.
Australians will be watching closely.
Rachael Wong is the CEO of Women's Forum Australia
Women’s Forum Australia is an independent think tank that undertakes research, education and public policy advocacy on issues affecting women and girls, with a particular focus on addressing behaviours and practices that are harmful and abusive to them. We are a non-partisan, non-religious, tax-deductible charity. We do not receive any government funding and rely solely on donations to make an impact. Support our work today.
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