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Australia's Senate votes for holding referendum on Indigenous Voice to Parliament within 6 months

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Labor senators applaud after the passing of the Voice to Parliament in the Senate chamber at Australia's Parliament House, in Canberra, Monday, June 19, 2023. The Senate voted to hold a referendum this year on creating an Indigenous Voice to Parliament, an advocate aiming to give the nation's most disadvantaged ethnic minority more say on government policy. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP)

CANBERRA – Australia's Senate voted Monday to hold a referendum this year on creating an Indigenous Voice to Parliament, an advocate aiming to give the nation’s most disadvantaged ethnic minority more say on government policy.

Dozens of mainly Indigenous people stood up the public galleries and applauded when senators passed the referendum bill 52 votes to 19.

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The Senate vote means the referendum must be held on a Saturday in a two-to-six-month window.

Minister for Indigenous Australians Linda Burney, the first Indigenous woman to hold the job, described the Senate vote as the “final hurdle” toward the referendum.

“Today the political debate ends. Today we can start a national conversation at the community level about what a Voice is, why it’s needed and how it will make a practical difference,” Burney told reporters.

While the Voice would advocate for Indigenous interests, it would not have a vote on laws, and debate for and against the elected body has become increasingly heated and divisive.

Proponents hope the Voice will improve living standards for Indigenous Australians, who account for 3.2% of Australia’s population and are the most nation’s most disadvantaged ethnic group.

If the referendum is passed, it would be Australia’s first successful referendum since 1977 and the first ever to pass without bipartisan support.

An opposition spokesperson, Michaelia Cash, told the Senate most of her colleagues would vote to hold the referendum “because we believe in the people of this nation and their right to have a say.”

“This is not because we agree with what this bill ultimately sets out to achieve, which is of course to irrevocably change this nation’s constitution in a way that will destroy one of our most fundamental values: equality of citizenship,” Cash told the Senate before the vote.

Opposition Sen. Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, who is Indigenous, said the Voice proposal was already dividing Australia along racial lines.

“If the ‘yes’ vote is successful, we will be divided forever,” Price said.

“I want to see Australia move forward as one, not two divided. That’s why I will be voting ‘no,’” Price added.

Independent Senator Lidia Thorpe, who is also Indigenous, said she opposed the Voice because it was powerless.

“It’s appeasing white guilty in this country by giving the poor little Black fellas a powerless advisory body,” Thorpe said.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who committed his government to holding the referendum during his election night victory speech, said the fact that some critics argued the Voice was too weak and others that it was too powerful indicated “we’ve got the balance right.”

“The truth is that, for most people ..., it will have no direct impact on their lives, but it just might make lives better of the most disadvantaged group in Australia today,” Albanese told reporters.

"This is an opportunity to do things better. Instead of doing things for Indigenous Australians, make change with Indigenous Australians," Albanese added.

Australia’s House of Representatives last month voted overwhelming in support of holding the referendum. Albanese said he would hold discussions with Indigenous leaders before setting a referendum date. He must give at least 33 days' notice.

The Liberal Party and Nationals party, which formed a conservative coalition government for nine years before the center-left Labor Party was elected last year, both oppose the Voice.

Opinion polls suggest support for the Voice is falling as the “no” campaign gathers pace.

The Voice was recommended in 2017 by a group of 250 Indigenous leaders who met at Uluru, a landmark sandstone rock in central Australia that is a scared site to traditional owners. They were delegates of the First Nations National Constitutional Convention that the then-government had asked for advice on how the Indigenous population could be acknowledged in the constitution.

The conservative government immediately rejected the prospect of the Voice, which it likened to a third chamber of Parliament.


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