Australia to add ‘Indigenous Voice’ in 2023

Australia to add ‘Indigenous Voice’ in 2023

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Australia to add ‘Indigenous Voice’ in 2023

People ride bikes along the Lake Burley Griffin in the thick fog in Canberra, Australia on June 17, 2022.


Australians will decide in 2023 if the country’s constitution will be changed to give an institutional voice to the long-suffering Indigenous population, the government said on Wednesday.

The proposed “Voice to Parliament” aims to give Indigenous Australians a greater say in national policymaking, as they battle poorer health, lower incomes and higher barriers to education. 

Indigenous Australians are not currently mentioned in the country’s constitution and any move to change that is politically contentious. 

Speaking at a folk festival in the state of Queensland later on Wednesday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will say the vote will be held “next year,” according to prepared remarks released by his government. 

“I also want to reaffirm, proudly and clearly, my government’s determination to enshrine in the Australian constitution an Indigenous Voice to Parliament,” he will say.

The Voice to Parliament would establish a constitutionally recognized body, or voice, responsible for advising the government on issues impacting Indigenous Australians. 

Albanese argues the constitutional change would help Australia “come together as a nation and take the hand that First Nations people have extended to us.”

Advocacy group Reconciliation Australia said putting it in the constitution would mean it cannot be “shut down” if a different government had a change of heart in the future. 

“Embedding a Voice in the constitution would recognise the special place of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Australia’s history,” the group has said.

The conservative Nationals party, a minor political player, has already announced it will campaign against the Voice. 

Critics called the Voice “another layer of bureaucratic red tape” and questioned whether it will make a difference. 

Indigenous Australians settled the country an estimated 65,000 years ago, according to the national museum, but have suffered widespread discrimination and oppression since the arrival of British settlers in the late 18th century. 

They were still banned from voting in some Australian states and territories until the 1960s. 

The inequalities facing the Indigenous population remain stark, they have life expectancies years shorter than other Australians and are far more likely to die in police custody.

Indigenous Australians make up 2 percent of the total population but, according to the Australian Law Reform Commission, constitute 27 percent of the prison population. 

There are strong international precedents behind the Voice proposal, both Canada and Norway amended their constitutions in the 1980s to recognize indigenous residents.