A blanket ban will feature in any such negotiations after it was recommended by a landmark parliamentary inquiry, three teals have confirmed to AAP.
"My position has been clear and consistent, as the Murphy report unequivocally found, partial gambling bans do not work," Goldstein MP Zoe Daniel said.
Independent Member for Goldstein Zoe Daniel says partial gambling bans don't work. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)
"If we have a balanced parliament, I will want to see that the recommendations of that report are delivered."
It was having a major public health impact, Sophie Scamps added.
"We know that it increases people are losing their homes, domestic violence, losing their jobs it's having all sorts of public health implications, and we need to act," the member for Mackellar said.
Allegra Spender said it was disappointing the major parties hadn't backed the review's recommendations in full.
"People in my community back a ban on gambling ads and this will be one of a number of priorities I continue to pursue if I am re-elected," the Wentworth MP said.
"My community have told me to fight for economic reform, climate action, and a kinder community - these will be central to any negotiations after the next election."
Allegra Spender says her constituents want a ban on gambling ads. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)
Warringah MP Zali Steggall also put her name behind a full gambling ad ban but didn't comment on the prospect of negotiations, saying she would be true to her position on the issue and consider legislation on merit.
A leaked Labor policy would have banned gambling advertising during and after sports broadcasts and during children's programs as well as stop them advertising online and on social media.
Ads would have been limited to two an hour outside of these broadcasts, but the policy was never formally announced with the minister taking it back to the drawing board following backlash from betting companies over the digital ban.
Gambling companies argue it would only push Australians to offshore and unregulated gambling sites and favour an approach more targeted at reducing children's exposure to betting ads, such as age-gating technology.
The Greens will push legislation in the Senate on Wednesday to ban gambling ads before, during and after live sports broadcasts and during children's shows and capping it at two ads for programs outside that.
It would also ban online betting ads, including on social media.
Although it falls short of what the Greens and crossbenchers want, which is a full advertising ban recommended by a landmark parliamentary inquiry, it falls in line with a previously flagged Labor policy before the minister shelved it.
Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young said Labor should have no problems supporting a policy it came up with and that the minor party was willing to compromise to get something over nothing.
Michelle Rowland has shelved Labor's bill while she continues consultations on the issue. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)
But Communications Minister Michelle Rowland has put any legislation on ice while she continues consultations and a spokesperson for her office pointed specifically to the digital ad ban.
Betting companies came out against any blanket online ad ban, with Ms Rowland going back to the drawing board after the criticism to strike a balance that didn't come with "unintended consequences".
Independent senator David Pocock will on Wednesday push for an inquiry into any influence the betting industry has had over government policy after it failed to implement the cornerstone of the Murphy report.
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