Victorian MP details sexual harassment inside parliament

Georgie Purcell says she was repeatedly sexually harassed and slut-shamed inside the walls of parliament.

Victorian Animal Justice MP Georgie Purcell says she was repeatedly sexually harassed inside the walls of parliament, becoming the latest of a string of female MPs to speak out about workplace experiences.

Purcell, 33, made the admission in front of upper house colleagues this afternoon whilst speaking in support of a bill that would forbid the use of non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) in cases of workplace sexual harassment.

The MP said she was first sexually harassed at Spring Street in her first year as a staffer, aged 26.

READ MORE: Highly infectious, deadly disease 'likely circulating' in Aussie capital

The upper-house MP said she was first sexually harassed at Spring Street in her first year as a staffer, aged 26.

"Someone came into my office for a discussion and I bent over to get something from the fridge and he remarked to me, in my member of parliament's office, 'if you do that again, I won't be responsible for what happens next'," Purcell said.

That was one of a "litany of examples" of harassment Purcell says she experienced inside parliament, which she said extended "beyond the physical precinct".

"In my experience with someone else in this place, it was the late-night messages, the harassing phone calls, the harassing texts, the bombardment of digital contact, the knocks on our doors when you can't see who is on the other side, and the demands to meet us under the guise of work," she said.

Once she reported the harassment, Purcell claims she was slut-shamed by colleagues in the hall, including comments calling her past as a stripper into question.

"What did she expect? Look how she dresses, look at the tattoos, look at her past, you can't sexually harass a stripper," Purcell said was the response to her sexual harassment claims.

"I know the slut shaming far too well. Members of this place are not beyond it and we need to reflect on that today."

Purcell says from the age of 14 she realised sexual harassment would be a feature of her working life, when leering and "ongoing comments" forced her away from customer-facing roles.

READ MORE: Bizarre twist as owner charged over death of Arnie the German shepherd

When she began a job at a pub aged 18, Purcell says she was groped, pulled onto laps, and received demeaning and sexualised comments.

"Once I was even followed out to my car by a customer, who threatened me after I turned down his advances," she said.

The crossbencher said she first reported sexual harassment in the workplace at age 20 when she was working in the legal profession.

"It really doesn't matter how senior or successful you become," Purcell said.

"Men will always see us as up for grabs."

During debate on the same legislation earlier this month, lower house MP Natalie Hutchins alleged she was harassed by Essendon Football Club players while working as a waitress in the early 1990s.

READ MORE: Aussies are being forced to accept jobs with no clue what they'll be paid

"People questioned if that could even be possible," Purcell said of Hutchins' claims.

"It creates this false narrative of a perfect victim, that you can only experience or endure this behaviour and, importantly, you can only speak out about this behaviour if you meet a certain, impossible criteria.

"It's all well and good to remove the gag on survivors of sexual harassment, but we need to start listening when people speak."

Shadow finance minister Bridget Vallence and Nationals MP Emma Kealy have also publicly detailed experiences with sexual harassment and stalking.

"It really doesn't matter how senior or successful you become," Purcell said.

"One thing I have learnt is that men will always see us as up for grabs."

Purcell's experiences were detailed under parliamentary privilege.

National Sexual Assault, Domestic Family Violence Counselling Service 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732).

DOWNLOAD THE 9NEWS APP: Stay across all the latest in breaking news, sport, politics and the weather via our news app and get notifications sent straight to your smartphone. Available on the Apple App Store and Google Play.

More from Latest News