An American citizen controls what Australians can say online.
No one voted for her. Three governments from both parties have protected her position. Her powers keep expanding.
Here’s what I’ve noticed about Julie Inman Grant.
Who She Is
Julie Inman Grant is Australia’s eSafety Commissioner. She’s an American citizen with a career built at Microsoft and Twitter – two of the largest tech companies on the planet.
She holds a position that can compel global technology companies to remove content posted by Australians. Think about that power for a moment. An unelected foreign national with the authority to determine what Australian citizens can say online.
She was appointed in 2016 under Malcolm Turnbull’s Liberal government. Scott Morrison’s Liberal government kept her. Anthony Albanese’s Labor government kept her.
When was the last time you saw Liberal and Labor governments agree on anything? Yet all three protected this position and the person in it.
How She Got There
I tried to find the public record of her appointment. The selection process. The competing candidates. The criteria used to decide Australia needed an American in this role.
I couldn’t find it.
Maybe I’m not looking in the right places. Maybe you’ll have better luck. But the absence of transparent documentation for a position with this much power over Australian speech should concern everyone.
No parliamentary oversight that’s publicly visible. No mechanism for removal. No public accountability for how she exercises these powers.
What the Position Actually Does
The eSafety Commissioner role was created in 2015. It started with something no one could oppose: protecting children online. Cyberbullying. Image-based abuse. Who would argue against protecting kids?
But watch what happened.
The powers expanded. Cyberbullying became “harmful content.” Harmful content became “misinformation.” Each expansion sounds reasonable in isolation. Together, they create comprehensive speech control infrastructure.
The office now has authority to:
- Compel removal of content from global platforms
- Issue takedown notices
- Levy fines for non-compliance
- Determine what constitutes “harmful” speech
And it’s all done in the name of safety.
The Pattern
Here’s where it gets interesting.
Julie Inman Grant is a Microsoft alumna. Microsoft is heavily invested in digital identity systems globally. The Australian government is pushing for digital ID implementation.
Her office partners with international bodies on “online safety” initiatives that look remarkably similar across Western democracies. The same language. The same framework. The same expansion from “child safety” to “misinformation control.”
I spent years in property. I learned to follow the money and see the extraction mechanism. This has the same pattern.
Create the position using fear. Expand the powers quietly. Use it to control information. Make sure the person running it can’t be removed.
The Constitutional Question
Here’s what I can’t find answered anywhere:
Where in the Australian Constitution does the Commonwealth have authority to control speech?
Section 51 lists specific Commonwealth powers. Speech control isn’t there.
The High Court has recognized an implied freedom of political communication. How does an eSafety Commissioner with content removal powers not violate that?
The Constitution exists. It just doesn’t seem to constrain government anymore. And no one stops them because most Australians don’t know what’s in it.
What This Means
I’m not telling you there’s a grand conspiracy. I’m telling you what’s documentable:
- A foreign national controls Australian speech
- The appointment process isn’t transparent
- Three governments from opposing parties protected the position
- Powers expanded from child safety to content control
- No constitutional authority is clear
- No mechanism for removal exists
- International coordination on identical frameworks
You can verify every one of those points.
When the people controlling information are unelected, unaccountable, and foreign – what do you call that system?
It’s certainly not democracy.
Full disclosure: I’m not an investigative journalist with FOI lawyers on speed dial. I’m just noticing patterns and asking questions. If there’s publicly available information that explains all this and makes perfect sense, please send it my way. I’d actually be relieved. But until someone shows me the transparent, constitutional, democratic process that put a foreign national in charge of Australian speech… I’m going to keep asking why.
The Questions That Need Answers
- Why is an American citizen in this position?
- Where are the appointment records?
- What constitutional authority does this office have?
- Why have three governments protected her specifically?
- Who does this position actually serve?
- What happens when “misinformation” becomes “criticism of government”?
I don’t have those answers. But I know enough to ask the questions.
Once you start noticing, you can’t stop.










