In a 2015 article for
The Sydney Morning Herald, Harmer described herself as a "tragic lefty". In a 2013 humorous piece for
The Hoopla, she described herself as an "old lefty". Harmer told the ABC
Q&A program in November 2015 that her politics sounded "like an old fashioned socialist", that she objected to trends towards privatisation of public assets, and that the
GST is not fair. In a 2014 piece for the
Herald, Harmer cautioned against being too dismissive of opposing political views: "right and left need each other to progress, we should be more humble about our supposedly deeply-held beliefs and not so quick to label our opponents as either carelessly ill-informed or purposefully evil. Although, don't expect any extremist wingnut or idiotic greenie near you to get that any time soon!" Harmer advocated against the election of Republican
Donald Trump at the
2016 United States presidential election.
Gender fluidity Harmer wrote in 2016 that acceptance of "
gender fluidity" could be one of the "best things" to happen in her lifetime, and that "I believe, with all my heart, that we exist on a dynamic spectrum of sexuality and that labels are at best useless, at worst tragically destructive."
Abbott-Turnbull government Following the first
Budget of the
Abbott government in 2014, Harmer wrote: "The government we have now confounds me. It seems it is oblivious to all advice, evidence and entreaties. I just cannot understand how Joe Hockey has come up with a budget that offers no joy. At all. No carrot, all stick. All punishment and threats. No reward he's able to articulate. No budget emergency that stands up to scrutiny."
Republicanism In 1993, she participated in a comic debate "Does Australia need the Royal Family", arguing the case for the negative alongside future
Liberal leader
Malcolm Turnbull and
Labor politician
Graham Richardson. In October 2015, Harmer tweeted that she is a member of the
Australian Republican Movement, and encouraged others to join.
The Greens Harmer described long term leader of the
Australian Greens Bob Brown as "a good man prosecuting the good cause...". She wrote in 2016 that her father was "a steadfastly non-religious man, a self-described humanist". Nevertheless, she wrote, "I've remained deeply attracted to the tale of suffering and resurrection at the heart of the Christian narrative. Endlessly fascinated by accounts of religion, belief, myth, legend and fairytales... I'm one of those pathetic non-believers philosopher Alain de Botton bangs on about. The sad, godless orphans who can't pass a church or temple without entering to light a candle or offer a flower." In an essay in
Destroying The Joint: Why Women Have To Change The World edited by Jane Caro, Harmer wrote that her two children have been confirmed into the Catholic Church. ==Personal==