
Jewish leaders want the prosecution of hate speech and incitement to be prioritised as authorities vow to crack down on anti-Semitism.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke has pledged to lower the threshold for hate speech to the absolute legal limit to defeat any free speech challenge following Bondi's deadly terror attack.
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett says the expanded legislation will make it easier to prosecute offenders.
The push follows an eruption of Jewish community anger over what it says is a lack of prosecutions related to hate preachers and displays of Nazi symbols, in the wake of Sunday's atrocity.

The Australia/Israel and Jewish Affairs Council says enforcement should be prioritised and a crackdown waged on extremism, racial vilification and those causing harm to social cohesion.
"Police must be expected to rigorously enforce existing and new legislation that bans hate speech and terrorist or Nazi symbols," it said in a statement.
"State and federal governments must prioritise enforcement by ensuring police receive proper training, education and internal support to apply these laws effectively when laying charges."
The council also wants courts to apply the full force of penalties.
Ms Barrett said four people had been charged with anti-Semitism offences by federal investigators specifically tasked with tackling politically motivated violence and hate speech.
A boost to their numbers and the lowering of the legal threshold would mean police would act more quickly.
"It could be the difference between us just knocking on a door to warn an individual, to an individual being placed in handcuffs," she said.

Anti-Semitism education should be mandatory in schools with scrutiny applied to how the Israel-Palestine conflict is taught, the council said.
"Schools that teach hatred should lose funding.
"Anti-Semitism education should not equal Holocaust education since anti-Semitism neither began nor ended with the Holocaust."
An anti-Semitism education task force led by the author of a landmark review of school funding has also been convened.
Prominent Jewish community member David Gonski oversaw Friday's first meeting, as the task force conducts a 12-month education review to ensure the system adequately prevents and responds to anti-Semitism.
Data provided by the National Student Ombudsman reveals 231 complaints relating to discrimination, racism or inadequate support on Australia's university campuses since February.
Of them, 71 related to race or religion and 23 to experiences of anti-Semitism, with a formal investigation into one of the matters underway.
The Australia/Israel and Jewish Affairs Council has joined calls for the government to recall federal parliament to address the hate speech law changes as a matter of urgency.
Liberal frontbencher Angus Taylor says there's no reason this can't be done before Christmas.
"The government has no shortage of drafting resources to work through these issues," he told Sky News.
"We'll sit in the parliament and thrash out the issues ... with the government. We're very happy to do that and to do that as quickly as possible."
However Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has indicated this won't happen, as reforms including expanding hate speech laws are complex and need to be watertight to withstand High Court challenges.
Mr Taylor would not be drawn on whether the amended hate speech laws should target incitement or the threshold be lowered to take in vilification.