Petitioning the Assembly

Learn about the petition process in the Legislative Assembly, including how to create and sign petitions, petition rules, and what happens after petitions are tabled in Parliament.

Important information

The final sitting day of the Legislative Assembly before the 2027 General Election is scheduled for 26 November 2026. Petitions that close after the final sitting day will not be able to be presented to the House.

Please consider this date when creating your petition and selecting the open period (3, 12, or 24 weeks).

View the sitting day calendar

Information about petitions

Petitions allow members of the public to directly place their issues before the Parliament. A petition helps raise awareness of an issue in the community and lets Members of Parliament know what action the community wants the Parliament to take, but it does not compel the Parliament to take action. The Legislative Assembly accepts both paper petitions (where petitioners physically sign a petition) and ePetitions (where petitioners electronically sign a petition).

Requirements for petitions

​​How you create a petition will depend on whether you want to create an ePetition or a paper petition. The links above will give you details about each of these options. However, there are some general requirements.

Petitions must
  • be addressed to 'the Speaker and Members of the Legislative Assembly'
  • set out the facts which the petitioners are bringing to the attention of the Legislative Assembly (also called 'the grievance')
  • include a clear request

The undersigned petitioners therefore ask the Legislative Assembly to ........................................ [insert petitioner's request outlining the action that the House should, or should not, take – called 'the prayer'].

  • be presented by a member of the Legislative Assembly on behalf of the petitioners. It does not have to be your local member. A member presenting a petition must not sign the petition as a petitioner. While anyone can ask a member to present a petition, the member does not have to agree to do so. A member may agree to present a petition from local constituents even though they may not agree with or support the request of the petition.
Petitions must not
  • make reference to any debate in Parliament
  • have letters, affidavits or other documents attached
  • be signed (as a petitioner) by the Member presenting the petition. ​​

What happens after a petition is tabled?

More information

Nominate a membe​r of the Legislative Assembly​ to present a petition on behalf of the petitioners. 

Contact the team by emailing Table.LA@parliament.nsw.gov.au.

See the Legislative Assembly's Standing and Sessional Orders for more detail on the rules and processes for ePetitions and paper petitions.

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