Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Australia to look at steps after vote

Better Indigenous living standards goal after proposal rejected

- ROD MCGUIRK

CANBERRA, Australia — Australia will look for new ways to lift Indigenous living standards after voters soundly rejected a proposal to create a new advocacy committee, the deputy prime minister said on Sunday.

Every state and mainland territory apart from Australian Capital Territory voted against a proposal to enshrine in the constituti­on an Indigenous Voice to Parliament to advocate on behalf of the nation’s most disadvanta­ged ethnic minority.

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles said his government remained committed to improving Indigenous welfare to close the eight-year gap in average life expectanci­es between Indigenous Australian­s and the wider community.

“In terms of exactly what the precise steps forward are from here is a matter that we need to take some time to work through and I think people can understand that,” Marles told Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp.

“Coming out of this referendum there is a greater call for action on closing the gap,” Marles added.

Indigenous Voice campaigner­s were flying Aboriginal flags at half-staff across Australia on Sunday as a mark of their disappoint­ment.

Proponents had hoped that the Voice’s advice would lead to better government service delivery and improved outcomes for Indigenous people.

Accounting for only 3.8% of the population, Indigenous Australian­s have a suicide rate twice that of the national average, are more likely to be incarcerat­ed than other Australian­s and suffer from diseases in the remote Outback that have been eradicated from other wealthy countries.

Latest counting on Sunday found more than 60% of voters had opposed the Voice. There was majority support for the Voice in Outback polling booths in the Northern Territory. That part of the country has Australia’s highest proportion of Aboriginal residents and the result suggests the Voice was popular among Indigenous Australian­s.

Many Voice supporters accused opposition lawmakers of spreading misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion about the Voice.

Marcia Langton, an Indigenous academic who helped draft the Voice proposal, said opposition leader Peter Dutton through his “no” campaign had “cemented racism into the body politic.”

“The nation has been poisoned. There is no fix for this terrible outcome,” Langton wrote in The Saturday Paper.

Dutton accused Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of dividing Australian­s by holding the referendum.

“This is the referendum that Australia did not need to have. The proposal and the process should have been designed to unite Australian­s, not to divide us,” Dutton said.

Albanese blamed Dutton’s campaignin­g against the measure for the failure. No referendum has ever succeeded without support of the major parties.

“When you do the hard things, when you aim high, sometimes you fall short,” Albanese said after conceding defeat.

Minister for Indigenous Australian­s Linda Burney, who is Aboriginal, told Indigenous people that the recent months of referendum campaign had been “tough.”

“But be proud of who you are. Be proud of your identity,” a tearful Burney said after conceding the referendum had been rejected.

“Be proud of the 65,000 years of history and culture that you are a part of. And your rightful place in this country. We will carry on and we’ll move forward and we will thrive,” she added.

It is the second time that Australian­s have rejected a referendum that would have included recognitio­n of Indigenous people in the constituti­on.

When a referendum was last held in 1999, Australian­s rejected adding a preamble to the constituti­on — an introducti­on that carried only symbolic and no legal significan­ce — acknowledg­ing that Indigenous Australian­s had inhabited the country “since time immemorial” and were “honored for their ancient and continuing cultures.”

Australian­s have now rejected 37 referendum­s since the constituti­on took effect 122 years ago. Only eight have succeeded and none since 1977.

 ?? (AP/Rod McGuirk) ?? “Yes” campaigner Arnagretta Hunter promotes the cause outside Old Parliament House as Australian­s cast their final votes in Canberra, Australia, on Saturday in their referendum that aims to tackle Indigenous disadvanta­ge with a new advocacy committee.
(AP/Rod McGuirk) “Yes” campaigner Arnagretta Hunter promotes the cause outside Old Parliament House as Australian­s cast their final votes in Canberra, Australia, on Saturday in their referendum that aims to tackle Indigenous disadvanta­ge with a new advocacy committee.

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