Dancers from the Gumatj clan during the Garma Festival in northeast Arnhem LandCredit:AAP
He said"voting for a constitutional voice is our chance to bring our constitution home,to make it better,more equal,more Australian"and"Aboriginal Australians do not need abalanda[white person] lecture about the difficulty of changing the constitution".
On the eve of the festival,Mr Shorten proposed a bipartisan parliamentary committee to finalise the recommendations,in consultation with Aboriginal voices,with a view to completing a referendum proposal by the end of the year.
His call for another committee has been greeted with scepticism and frustration from Indigenous figures – including former Referendum Council co-chair Pat Anderson and council member Megan Davis – who contend the Parliament should move immediately to propose a referendum question based on the already available work.
Mr Shorten said detail of how a Voice and Makarrata commission would work still needed to be figured out in a parliamentary process. He emphasised a Voice would act as an advisory body on legislation affecting Aboriginal people and not have veto power over legislation.