If elected, Family First will introduce legislation guaranteeing parents' right to information about radical LGBTIQA+ agendas being run in schools.
South Australian Upper House candidate Deepa Mathew said the law needs to guarantee parents' right to know what is being taught in schools and penalties must be imposed on the education department for withholding that information.
The move follows the Renmark High scandal where year nine girls were exposed to a "LGBTIQA+ inclusivity" class which taught them about sex with animals, sex between siblings and transgender surgery involving girls having their breasts cut off.
The Victorian Education Department has a policy of secretly socially transitioning children at school without parental consent and Ms Mathew said she wanted to make sure this could never happen in SA.
"Family First wants to see all LGBTIQA+ indoctrination removed from schools but in the meantime we will introduce right to know legislation with tough penalties for keeping parents in the dark.
"In the midst of a cost-of-living crisis mums and dads have enough to worry about without having to second guess what busy body activists are smuggling into their children's schools," Ms Mathew said.
Renmark mother Nicki Gaylard is suing the SA Education Department in the District Court for robbing her 14 year-old daughter, Courtney, of part of her childhood.
The "LGBTIQA+ inclusivity" class was part of the so-called Respectful Relationships program and was run by a third-party provider, Berri Headspace.
Respectful Relationships began in Victoria in around 2015 under the guise of the so-called "Safe Schools" program which posed as an anti-bullying program buts whose real agenda was to indoctrinate children throughout the nation in radical LGBTIQA+ gender fluid ideology.