-About 20,000 people in Brisbane attended a rally in support of the ‘Voice to Parliament’ proposal, with similar events also held across other Australian cities
-The proposal, which aims to enshrine indigenous people in Australia’s constitution, appears on track for defeat, according to a recent poll
Thousands rallied in Australia on Sunday to support recognising the country’s indigenous people in the constitution, a proposal that is struggling ahead of a referendum next month.
If approved on October 14, the measure would enshrine indigenous people in the constitution and set up an advisory body to give Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people input on policies that affect them.
Indigenous Australians, who account for 3.8 per cent of the population, face disadvantages including discrimination, poor health and education outcomes and high incarceration rates.
But the “Voice to Parliament” proposal appeared on track for defeat, a poll showed last week, the fifth monthly survey in a row to find voters against the change.
Yes23, the group behind “Walk for Yes” events, said around 20,000 people attended in Brisbane, Australia’s third-biggest city.
In Melbourne, more than 10,000 supporters marched through the streets, some with banners reading: “You’re the voice, vote yes”. Thousands more gathered in Canberra, Perth, Brisbane, Darwin, Hobart and Alice Springs.
Many attendees wore T-shirts and held placards emblazoned “Vote Yes!”, Australian Broadcasting Corp (ABC) footage showed.
“I think we need a voice in parliament and I think it’s about time,” said Laurel Johnson, a 58-year-old retired indigenous community services worker who joined hundreds of people at the Sydney rally, many seeking shade during a spring heatwave.
Cameron Lum, a 34-year-old supporter of the Voice proposal, said he joined the Sydney rally to support “long overdue change in this country”.
“I think it opens doors to massive policy change led by first nations people,” he said.
To change the constitution, the referendum, backed by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Labor government, would require a national majority in favour and majorities in at least four of Australia’s six states.
Most indigenous people favour the referendum, but some, like prominent No campaigner Warren Mundine, say it is a distraction from achieving practical and positive outcomes and would not fully resolve the issues affecting them.
“If we can do just three things – accountability, jobs and education – then we’ll resolve most of the problems we’ve got,” Mundine told ABC.
To pass, the referendum needs majority support across Australia, but also a majority in at least four of the six states.
Voting is compulsory, with non-voters who do not have a valid reason liable to a fine of A$20 (US$13).
Voters will be asked: “A Proposed Law: to alter the Constitution to recognise the First Peoples of Australia by establishing an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice. Do you approve this proposed alteration?”.
Since Australian independence in 1901, only eight of 44 proposals for constitutional change have been approved.
Note that the voice to parliament is something being pushed by our centre-right Labor party, the business council of Australia (big business lobby group) and mining magnates.
There is a significant leftwing grassroots opposition to the voice. For example, the black people's union, which is the only Australia wide pan-Aboriginal grassroots organisation: https://www.blackpeoplesunion.org/articles/conning-us-into-recognition
Most progressives believe that if the referendum passes or fails it won't matter much. The legislation for a representative voice to parliament doesn't require a referendum/constitutional change and the legislation itself is only symbolic power for a hand-picked group of indigenous people
I never heard this side before, thank you for sharing, comrade. It's given me something of a wake up call to my own stupid liberalism.
Try to balance idealism with realism my friend, that’s my advice anyway. Strive for the perfect, but don’t refuse the good