National Conversation Discussion Paper Launched at Parliament House

EMBARGOED 6AM | WEDNESDAY 5 NOVEMBER 2025

National Conversation Discussion Paper Launched at Parliament House

Canberra, 5 November 2025 – Australia’s leaders gathered at Parliament House this morning

for the launch of The National Conversation Discussion Paper: Building the Australia We Want,

unveiled at a meeting of the Parliamentary Group for Future Generations. Co-chaired by

Senator Maria Kovacic, Dr Sophie Scamps MP and Ms Ash Ambihaipahar MP, the event

featured keynote remarks from leading demographer Bernard Salt AM, underscoring the

growing national focus on long-term policy and intergenerational opportunity.

The paper, spearheaded by Foundations for Tomorrow (FFT), captures the inputs of a broad

range of subject matter experts and many members of the Intergenerational Fairness

Coalition, to set out an ambitious proposal to engage Australians in shaping a shared vision for

the nation’s future. The paper asserts that this can be achieved through a National

Conversation, a large-scale, inclusive dialogue designed to rebuild trust, strengthen social

cohesion, and create a public mandate for ambitious, future-focused leadership.

Taylor Hawkins, Managing Director of Foundations for Tomorrow said,

“Following the Economic Reform Roundtable and amid renewed pressure for structural reform, Australia faces

compounding challenges, including slowing productivity, the housing crisis, climate pressures,

and rising public distrust. The Discussion Paper comes at a pivotal moment, highlighting that to

sustain ambitious reform, Australia needs more than economic tools or legislative action, it

needs shared civic purpose.”

Dr Sophie Scamps MP said, “It’s clear the way we make policy in this country is failing our

young people. They will be the first-generation in modern history that are worse off than their

parents - that should sound alarm bells for every leader in this country. We need to act now to

rebuild hope and opportunity for the next generation, and that will require moving beyond short

termism and siloed decision- making. It’s time for a National Conversation to develop long-term

vision that unites Australians to shape the kind of future we want to create together,

” shares Dr Sophie Scamps - Independent Federal Member for Mackellar.

Ms Ash Ambihaipahar MP said, “Reform only lasts when people can recognise themselves in

it. A National Conversation strengthens our democracy by making sure decisions about the

future are made with Australians, not for them.”

“The danger is not disagreement, the danger is disconnection. When people cannot see

themselves in the decisions made about them, trust in our democracy begins to fall away. A

National Conversation is how we make sure Australians are part of the big decisions that shape

their lives.”

Senator Kovacic said, “Our future generations should be at the forefront of our minds when

making decisions. I am particularly concerned about the future of young Australians as theynavigate challenges like housing affordability and security, social cohesion, and intergenerational fairness."

Bernard Salt AM said,

"Australia is one of the few developed countries that is expected to

continue to grow throughout the 21st century. This means that Australia must evolve to be

world's best practice at planning for the kind of growth and development that is compatible with

our national values.”

Following Dr Scamps’ recent introduction of the Wellbeing of Future Generations Bill 2025,

which was shaped by FFT’s For Our Future Policy Brief, the Discussion Paper represents the

next step in embedding intergenerational fairness and long-term thinking across Australian

decision-making. It outlines how a National Conversation will:

● Give everyday Australians a voice in shaping the country’s long-term vision;

● Rebuild trust and social cohesion across generations and communities;

● Create civic infrastructure that enables long-term leadership; and

● Strengthen democracy by renewing citizens’ confidence that their voices matter.

With the support of a growing alliance of civil society organisations, the Discussion Paper has

been released as an active draft, open for public input until January 2026. Australians are

encouraged to contribute at www.thenationalconvo.org.

The paper highlights successful international examples, including The Wales We Want (2015)

and Forward Singapore (2023), where national dialogues helped to shape enduring social

compacts and long-term policy frameworks.

The Discussion Paper is open for feedback, before being refined into a final report that will invite

partners across government, business, and civil society to help deliver the full National

Conversation process nationwide.

ENDS

About Foundations for Tomorrow

Foundations for Tomorrow is a youth-driven, non-partisan organisation committed to embedding

long-term thinking in Australia’s governance. FFT convenes diverse voices across civil society,

business, and politics to drive national initiatives that safeguard Australia’s future.

About the Parliamentary Group for Future Generations

The Australian Parliamentary Group for Future Generations, co-chaired by Senator Maria

Kovacic, Dr Sophie Scamps MP, and Ms Ash Ambihaipahar MP, brings together Members and

Senators committed to securing Australia’s long-term prosperity through cross-party

collaboration and intergenerational policy.

The Intergenerational Fairness Coalition

The Intergenerational Fairness Coalition (IFC) brings together more than 20 leading Australian

civil society organisations working to embed long-term thinking and intergenerational fairness

into Australian policymaking.

Media Contact

Taylor Hawkins

Managing Director, Foundations for Tomorrow

E: taylor@foundationsfortomorrow.org | P: 0404 969 933

Taylor is available for interviews or to provide further detail.

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