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Scott Morrison's apology to women assaulted and harassed in federal parliament has copped a blistering rebuke from former Liberal staffer Brittany Higgins and sexual abuse survivor Grace Tame.

The duo spoke at the National Press Club on Wednesday in a highly anticipated address following the prime minister's apology on the floor of parliament.

Ms Higgins doesn't think Mr Morrison's "shocking" and "offensive" language about women's safety would matter if his actions measured up.

"What bothered me most about the whole 'imagine if it were our daughters' spiel wasn't that he necessarily needed his wife's advice to help contextualise my rape in a way that mattered to him personally," she said.

"I didn't want his sympathy as a father. I wanted him to use his power as prime minister.

"I don't care if the government has improved the way that they talk about these issues. I'm not interested in words any more. I want to see action."

Ms Tame dismissed the coalition's approach as "empty announcements", "placatory platitudes" and "superficial last-minute acknowledgements".

She recounted a call from a senior member of a government-funded organisation in August last year demanding she not disparaging about the prime minister at the next Australian of the Year Awards.

"I would rather go down as a disappointment to an institution than sell out as a pandering political puppet to the corrupt forces that coercively control it," Ms Tame said.

She reiterated her call for nationally consistent sexual assault laws, ages of consent and definitions of sexual intercourse following a meeting with the country's attorneys-general.

Mr Morrison apologised on the floor of parliament on Tuesday.

The statement was among 28 recommendations from Sex Discrimination Commissioner Kate Jenkins' review of its workplace culture.

It was triggered after Ms Higgins went public about her alleged 2019 rape in the office of then-defence industries minister Linda Reynolds.

Finance Minister Simon Birmingham attended the address alongside Minister for Women Marise Payne, Women's Safety Minister Anne Ruston and Women's Economic Security Minister Jane Hume.

Ms Jenkins and Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese were also present.

Senator Birmingham earlier insisted practical steps were being taken to change parliament's workplace culture.

"What you saw yesterday was a very sincere apology and that call for further action from the PM," he told the Seven Network.

Senator Payne labelled the apology a critical step forward.

"Most certainly, the government is committed to implementing all 28 recommendations," she told ABC radio.

"For (the apology) to be called a stunt is, of course, a matter for Ms Tame, but that is not my view."

The Jenkins review found one-third of staff surveyed across Commonwealth parliamentary workplaces had been sexually harassed.

Mr Morrison apologised for a parliamentary culture that had normalised bullying, abuse and sexual harassment.

"The place that should have been a place of safety and contribution turned out to be a nightmare ... but (Ms Higgins) had the courage to stand, and so here we are," he said.

"It is clear that practical and cultural changes are necessary to make our parliamentary workplaces safer."

© AAP 2022