Lidia Thorpe addressed the National Press Club on her 50th birthday.Credit:Mick Tsikas
Instead,Thorpe said her “black sovereign” movement,which she flagged would run candidates at the next election,wanted a treaty led by the federal government. The appropriate level of compensation for Aboriginal people would send Australia broke,she argued,urging the Commonwealth to come to the table to negotiate a settlement.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said in an interview on Tuesdayhe was against paying reparations to Indigenous Australians. He has previously said the referendum will not be called off.
In response to Thorpe’s comments on Wednesday,Albanese said he respected her genuine passion on the issue of deaths in custody but noted the Indigenous community overwhelmingly supported the Voice proposal.
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“I fail to see how other issues will be advanced if a No vote is reported,” he said.
Branding herself an “infiltrator”,Thorpe failed to answer a question on whether she had played a part in securing any policies that benefitted Indigenous Australians in her time in politics,and said she opposed Australia’s first treaty process – in Victoria – because the Andrews government was not conducting negotiations in the manner she had hoped.
“The Voice cannot give us what we need. It has no power to return land,deliver services,distribute resources,enact laws or even block racist laws,” she said.