Anthony Albanese argued establishing the Voice was not about a treaty or paying Indigenous Australians compensation for colonisation.Credit:AFR
In an interview on radio station 2GB,Albanese also argued establishing the Voice was not about a treaty or paying Indigenous Australians compensation for colonisation,and said his government would reject advice from the Voice to change the date of Australia Day,for example,if the body proposed such a change.
Asked by radio host Ben Fordham about the downward trend in a slew of opinion polls including Newspoll,Essential and this masthead’sResolve Political Monitor – which has seen support fall from 63 per cent last August to 49 per cent – the prime minister said voters were focused on other issues at present.
“It is true that that’s the case[the downward trend]. But there has been a debate between politicians in Canberra with some focus as well from the media on things that this isn’t about,” Albanese said.
“You have the Yes and the No case published for the first time just yesterday. There’ll be a focus on what this is about. I think that if people actually read the question that’s being asked,and then they read both the Yes and the No case,I’m very confident that people will come to a view that if not now,when?
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“This is about ... recognition,but importantly,it’s about getting better outcomes by listening to Indigenous Australians about matters that affect them.”
Albanese said he would not seek to legislate the Voice rather than enshrining it in the Constitution – which the opposition has called for – because Indigenous Australians had “said they don’t just want recognition,the symbolism of recognition,they want something that will make a practical difference to their lives”.