Touching on concerns about the lack of detail on how the Voice would operate,Albanese said he was deliberately creating the space for people from across the political spectrum to contribute.
He said the draft constitutional amendment to establish the Voice,which he proposed at the Garma Indigenous festival in July,was not final because “we want people to have input and if people have got a little bit of a better idea,then that’s fine as well”.
The draft amendment proposes to empower the Voice to “make representations to parliament and the executive government on matters relating to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples”,with the parliament given the power to decide the body’s composition,functions,powers and procedures.
But key supporters of the Voice have warned the wording needs to be rigorously stress-tested amid a brewing debate over its scope and whether its remit should be limited to specific laws about First Australians.
During a day-long meeting on Thursday,the 21-member working group identified a set of common principles that defined the Voice as a body that “provides independent advice to the parliament and government” but would not have veto power or a program delivery function.
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The principles,released in a communiqué,included that the Voice would be “chosen by First Nations people based on the wishes of local communities”,representative of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities,accountable and transparent,and work alongside existing organisations and traditional structures. It would be “empowering,community-led,inclusive,respectful,culturally informed and gender-balanced,and includes youth”.
A Resolve Political Monitor survey,conducted forThe Sydney Morning Herald andThe Ageearlier this month,showed64 per cent of voters backed the draft wording proposed by Albanese.
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton this week said there was a range of views within the Coalition on the Voice but it would ultimately adopt a party room position. However,he repeated his criticism that there was a lack of information and detail to form a position.
“It causes me concern that even the most basic of questions can’t be answered by the government and I think that’s given rise to confusion,even with Indigenous leaders that I’ve spoken to in the last 24 hours,who are concerned about what is happening,what’s in place,and what the next steps will be,” Dutton said on Wednesday.
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