The Australian government has ignored a senate proposal for stricter advertising and classification laws for sexualised music videos and ads aimed at children. The proposal came from a senate committee investigating the sexualisation of children in the media, who concluded that “the inappropriate sexualisation of children in Australia is of increasing concern.” On Friday the government decided to not to act on the report, stating that the “complaints statistics indicate a low level of community concern about music videos.”

Julie Gale, Generation Next speaker and founder of Kids Free 2B Kids, slammed the response, saying it “fails to address many of the concerns of child development professionals and increasing evidence from research.”

The Sydney Morning Herald is running a poll on the topic, which Julie Gale recommends all who are concerned to vote on.  “Free TV are under the impression that because they haven’t received many complaints, then there isn’t a problem,” she says. “We know that most people don’t bother to submit ‘official’ complaints because the system is too difficult or confusing – or they feel powerless to make a change. However we also know that research indicates that sexualised music video clips are impacting negatively on our kids.”

SMH poll: Are sexualised music clips too sexy for kids?

Writer Tristan Boyd, Editor Ramesh Manocha.