Broad national support for stronger animal welfare laws cuts across city, country and political divides
New national research reveals overwhelming and unexpected consensus among Australians on the need for stronger animal welfare laws — cutting across traditional divides between city and country, and even political lines.
The nationally representative survey of more than 1,000 Australians, conducted by BehaviourWorks Australia, shows strong majority support for key reforms, including recognising animal sentience in law, increasing government investment in animal welfare, and establishing independent oversight of policy development processes.
Alliance for Animals Policy Director Dr Jed Goodfellow said the findings challenge long-held assumptions about where the community stands.
“This research shows that support for better animal welfare isn’t confined to inner-city voters or particular political groups — it is broad, deep and national,” Dr Goodfellow said.
“Regional Australians are, if anything, slightly more supportive of reform than those in metropolitan areas. That turns the conventional narrative on its head.”
The research also reveals support across the political spectrum, including among voters who typically support conservative parties.
“That tells us this is not a partisan issue. It’s a mainstream expectation.”
Key findings include:
More than 70% of Australians support recognising animal sentience in law
Over 70% agree decision-makers should be legally required to reduce harm to animals
Nearly 80% want an independent authority to oversee animal welfare policy
Nearly 90% say it is important for governments to make and enforce animal protection laws.
The study also highlights decreasing and low trust in political parties and industries that use animals, and strong trust in animal welfare experts and organisations.
Political candidates with stronger animal welfare policies were also found to be more likeable, relatable and empathetic.
“These results send a clear message to governments: the community expects animal welfare policy to be independent, evidence-based and properly resourced,” Dr Goodfellow said.
“There is a clear mandate for reform — and it’s coming from all parts of the Australian community.”
QUICK FACTS
The research was commissioned by the Alliance for Animals and funded with the support of the Buddy Pet Insurance Giving Program.
The survey will be launched via an online event on Thursday 26 March 2026 at 12.30 pm. Registrations here.
The online Qualtrics survey of 1,000 Australian adults, representative of the broader Australian population by age, gender, state or territory, and location (metro vs. regional), was conducted in January-February 2026.
The Australian Alliance for Animals’ #FairGoForAnimals reform platform proposes a new framework for creating a modern and contemporary animal welfare governance system that better fulfils the community’s expectations.
NOTES FOR MEDIA
For all media, photo and interview inquiries, please contact 0407 237 492 or email media@allianceforanimals.org.au
Dr Goodfellow is available for interviews:
Dr Jed Goodfellow leads the Alliance’s law and policy reform agenda. He has over 20 years’ experience in animal welfare law, policy and advocacy. He completed his PhD in animal welfare regulation in 2015.
About the Australian Alliance for Animals
The Australian Alliance for Animals is a national charity leading a strategic alliance of Australia’s key animal protection organisations with a combined supporter base of over 2 million people. Core members include Animals Australia, Humane World for Animals Australia, World Animal Protection Australia, Compassion in World Farming, FOUR PAWS Australia, and Voiceless, the animal protection institute.
Website: www.allianceforanimals.org.au