2025 Federal Election: Profiling the Candidates From The Electorate of Sydney

2025 Federal Election: Profiling the Candidates From The Electorate of Sydney
Image: Photos: Supplied

As a part of 17c起草社区鈥檚聽series ahead of the 2025 federal election, we鈥檙e profiling the candidates running in the electorate of聽 Sydney.


As Sydney voters head to the polls, not just for policy, but for identity, visibility, and inclusion. From healthcare access to the protection of 17c起草社区IA+ spaces, this election will test how seriously candidates take the needs of 17c起草社区IA+ communities.

This year鈥檚 five candidates include: Luc Velez (Greens), Tanya Plibersek (Labor), Rachel Evans (Socialist Alliance), Alex Xu (Liberal) and Vedran Torbarac (One Nation).

Luc Velez – Greens for Sydney

 

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For Newtown local Luc Velez, Sydney isn鈥檛 just any electorate 鈥 it鈥檚 a living, breathing heart of queer life in Australia.

“The Sydney electorate is one of the queerest in the country,” says 25-year-old Velez, whose campaign is fuelled by fresh perspective and fiery activism.

“As a queer activist, I feel a strong sense of responsibility to make sure the fight for our rights doesn鈥檛 get lost in the noise,” says the law student and community organiser.

Velez doesn鈥檛 pull punches when it comes to rising queerphobia and trans hostility, accusing both major parties of refusing to confront bigotry head-on.

Determined to shift the agenda, Velez and fellow MP Stephen Bates have launched bold Greens initiatives: establishing an 17c起草社区IA+ Human Rights Commissioner and making PrEP and PEP free for everyone.

He鈥檚 also pushing for accessible gender-affirming healthcare nationwide鈥攊ncluding puberty blockers. “We know that for some, this kind of health care isn鈥檛 just life-changing, but also life-saving.”

Central to Velez鈥檚 vision is adamant legal protection for queer kids and workers: “We need to force the major parties to finally amend our anti-discrimination laws to make sure that everyone is protected.”

Velez isn鈥檛 campaigning for feel-good visibility. He鈥檚 fighting for structural change鈥攁nd he wants Sydney to lead the charge.

Tanya Plibersek – Labor

 

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Tanya Plibersek isn鈥檛 new to this fight. The long-serving Labor MP for Sydney has spent decades on the frontlines of Sydney鈥檚 17c起草社区IA+ rights鈥 and in 2025, she鈥檚 determined to ensure the community, and its rich history, is honoured and protected.

“For years, we鈥檝e campaigned together against discrimination, for safety and representation,” says the senior cabinet minister, pitching herself as the veteran still getting things done.

Plibersek鈥檚 advocacy is tangible. She鈥檚 backed a $1.5 million contribution to QTOPIA and is pushing for a National Heritage listing for the Mardi Gras Parade route, following her support in listing the iconic Imperial Hotel鈥攍andmarks essential to honouring queer history, she says.

Healthcare equity remains central to her re-election pitch. “All Australians should be able to see a doctor with just their Medicare card,” she says, highlighting Labor鈥檚 expanded bulk billing and urgent care clinics.

For 17c起草社区IA+ Australians facing health discrimination, Labor promises real change with the first 10-year National Action Plan for 17c起草社区IA+ health, a $44 million HIV elimination package, expanded access to PrEP and more safe, gender-affirming care.

“We know that many 17c起草社区IA+ Australians have found it hard to find adequate and respectful healthcare,” Plibersek says.

Labor, she insists, is taking those experiences seriously鈥攁nd vows to make change built on real investment.

In a crowded race, Plibersek is leaning on trust, stability, and proven policy鈥攏ot rainbow branding. Her message is clear: she鈥檚 not here to start over, she鈥檚 here to finish what鈥檚 been started.

Rachel Evans – Socialist Alliance

Sydney
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Rachel Evans doesn鈥檛 just talk about LGBQTIA+ rights鈥攕he lives and rallies for them. “We deserve a future built on equality, dignity and justice,” says the veteran activist, echoing the urgency of her campaign.

Organising with groups like Trans Justice Project and Pride in Protest, Evans demands action like LGBTIQA+ people counted on the census, ending religious exemptions, securing sex worker rights, affirming healthcare, and better-funded public services.

“We need visible, proud Rainbow Angels and Dykes on Bikes in our communities,” she says, calling for nothing short of a radical reimagination of queer justice.

鈥淨ueer-affirming messages and curriculum should be everywhere鈥攆rom early learning centres to buses and billboards. Pride and safety belong in every public space,鈥 adds Evans calling for greater celebration and protection of the trans community.

When it comes to gender-affirming care, Evans鈥檚 doesn鈥檛 shy from confrontation. “This care is under attack. We need to protest,” she declares, slamming major parties for failing to defend trans lives and 鈥渂eing beholden to the christian-right.鈥

Already, she鈥檚 moved Sydney Council to fund a trans-led housing co-op and grassroots protection groups like Rainbow Angels鈥攁nd she vows to keep going.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 just the start. I鈥檒l keep fighting for more because our communities deserve real support, not just rainbow flags during Mardi Gras.鈥

As for Drag Storytime events? Evans has been on the front and centre defending them 鈥 and says councils should fully fund and protect them in more places across Sydney.

On anti-discrimination laws, her stance is crystal clear: “We campaign to remove religious exemptions… to defend LGBTIQA+ people and other groups discriminated against.”

For Evans, the future of Sydney is not just inclusive 鈥 it鈥檚 radical, proud and ready to fight.


For more information on the 2025 federal election, your electorate, or to check your voting information is up to date, head to .

Alex Xu (Liberal) and Vedran Torbarac (One Nation) did not respond by the time of publication.

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