Larissa Joy Waters (born 8 February 1977) is an Australian politician and lawyer who is currently serving as the leader of the Australian Greens since May 2025. She has also served as a Senator for Queensland from 2011 to 2017, and again since 2018.
Waters was first elected as a Senator for Queensland in 2010 and taking up her seat in 2011, she was forced to vacate the Senate in July 2017 in the parliamentary eligibility crisis, due to her holding Canadian citizenship in violation of Section 44 of the Constitution of Australia. Having renounced her Canadian citizenship, Waters was re-appointed to the Senate in 2018 by the Queensland Government to fill the casual vacancy created by the resignation of Senator Andrew Bartlett. She served as Greens co-deputy leader from May 2015 to July 2017 and again from December 2018 to June 2022, and as her party's Senate leader from February 2020. In May 2025, Waters was elected leader of the Australian Greens, following loss of the seat of Melbourne by then leader Adam Bandt in the 2025 Australian federal election.
Waters attended a primary school in Rainworth and completed her secondary schooling at Kelvin Grove State High School.
She has a Bachelor of Science and a Bachelor of Laws from Griffith University and a Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice from the New South Wales College of Law. From 2000 to 2001, she was a legal researcher at the Queensland Land and Resources Tribunal (predecessor of the Land Court of Queensland), from 2001 to 2002 a lawyer at Freehills, and from 2002 to 2011 was a lawyer with the Environmental Defenders Office.
Waters was again placed first on the Greens' senate ticket at the 2010 federal election. She was elected with 12.8 per cent of the vote, an increase of 5.4 percentage points. In May 2015, Waters was elected to the Greens' "leadership triumvirate". She was made a "co-deputy leader" alongside Scott Ludlam, with Richard Di Natale replacing Christine Milne as the party leader. "Newly elected co-deputy Larissa Waters wants Greens to stick to environmental ethos", ABC News, 7 May 2015. Retrieved 1 December 2016. Waters was re-elected to the senate at the 2016 double-dissolution election, winning a three-year term with 6.9 percent of the vote.
On 8 August 2017, Waters announced that she had renounced her Canadian citizenship and declared her intent to stand for Greens preselection and return to parliament at the next federal election. The High Court handed down its decision on 27 October 2017 and ruled that Waters was invalidly elected.
Waters was re-elected as a Senator for Queensland at the 2019 federal election, where she received 9.9% of the state's vote, as well as a 3.12-point swing in her favour.
In February 2020, Greens leader Richard Di Natale resigned and was succeeded by Adam Bandt. Unlike his predecessors as Greens leader, including Di Natale, Bandt was a member of the House of Representatives and this resulted in Waters, as one of the co-deputy leaders, becoming the leader of the Greens in the Senate. This made her the second woman to lead the Greens in the Senate after Christine Milne.
In March 2021, Waters issued an apology to federal minister Peter Dutton for comments made on Twitter accusing him of being an "inhuman, sexist rape apologist". In her apology, Waters said that there was no basis for those allegations.
, Waters is second-longest serving Green in parliament, after Sarah Hanson-Young.
In October 2025, Waters said in an interview on the Insiders programme that she had condemned the Manchester synagogue attack. She said that Australia should stop selling weapons components to Israel and impose sanctions because of its Gaza genocide. Shadow finance minister James Paterson said Waters comments were insensitive and offensive. Jewish Labor MP Josh Burns said Waters comments suggested "'Jews across the world are legitimate targets because of the actions of the Israeli government.'"
Political concerns
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