Grace Tame wears anti-Murdoch shirt to prime minister’s Australian of the Year morning tea | Grace Tame newsthirst.


Former Australian of the Year Grace Tame has used a morning tea with the prime minister for recipients of the 2025 awards to share strong criticism of billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch.

The 2021 winner wore a T-shirt that read “Fuck Murdoch” when she was greeted by Anthony Albanese and his fiancee, Jodie Haydon, at The Lodge in Canberra on Saturday.

The PM and Haydon smiled and greeted Tame, but there was no visible reaction to the statement on her shirt.

Anthony Albanese greeted Grace Tame on Saturday morning, and did not respond visibly to the message on her shirt. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

In 2022, the advocate for survivors of sexual assault also stirred controversy when she attended the same event as the outgoing Australian of the Year.

When Tame and her fiance, Max Heerey, arrived, they were greeted by the then prime minister, Scott Morrison, and his wife, Jenny, who congratulated them on their recent engagement.

But Tame remained sombre as they posed for photographs, which famously captured her giving Morrison a stony “side-eye” expression.

Grace Tame appears stony faced next to Scott Morrison during Australian of the Year photo op – video

She later addressed that moment on Twitter, now X, commenting that the survival of abuse culture “is dependent on submissive smiles, self-defeating surrenders and hypocrisy”.

“What I did wasn’t an act of martyrdom in the gender culture war,” she wrote.

“It’s true that many women are sick of being told to smile, often by men, for the benefit of men. But it’s not just women who are conditioned to smile and conform to the visibly rotting status-quo. It’s all of us.”

Tame had been highly critical of Morrison and his government’s response to allegations of sexual assault and toxic workplace culture in federal parliament.

The winners of the 2025 Australian of the Year awards will be announced at a ceremony in Canberra on Saturday.

More than 30 finalists are in the running to be named Australian of the Year, Senior Australian of the Year, Young Australian of the Year and Australia’s Local Hero.


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