Families of Jewish Australians killed in the deadly Bondi Beach shooting on December 14 have demanded Prime Minister Anthony Albanese order a federal royal commission. The attack claimed 15 lives during a Hanukkah event. In an open letter, relatives of 11 victims said Jewish people now feel unsafe at schools, workplaces, homes, and public spaces. "We demand answers and solutions," the letter said. It asked why warning signs were ignored and how antisemitic hatred and Islamic extremism grew unchecked. "Announcements made so far by the federal government in response to the Bondi massacre are not nearly enough." One accused shooter, Naveed Akram, charged with 15 counts of murder, was investigated by ASIO in 2019 for links to an Islamic State cell. His father later got a gun license. Opposition parties and Jewish groups also want a sweeping federal investigation into antisemitism, intelligence, law enforcement, and gun laws. Prime Minister Albanese has declined a federal royal commission, saying it would take too long. He has proposed a narrower inquiry led by former ASIO chief Dennis Richardson. Former treasurer Josh Frydenberg criticized this as "bullshit." The families argue that antisemitism is a national crisis needing a powerful federal response. "Prime Minister, how can you not support a royal commission into the deadliest terrorist attack on Australian soil?" Former Labor MP Mike Kelly said on ABC Radio, "It has to be done at the commonwealth level." NSW Premier Chris Minns supports a state royal commission with powers to get evidence from federal and state agencies. Nationals leader David Littleproud urged Albanese to listen. "At best, the prime minister is tone-deaf to a grieving nation. They deserve answers." As of Monday, nine patients are still in Sydney hospitals from the shooting, with three in critical but stable condition.