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The Inquiry

What went wrong with Australia’s Indigenous call for a voice?

The Inquiry

BBC

News Commentary, News

4.61.7K Ratings

🗓️ 9 November 2023

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When the Referendum to give Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders greater political rights was first announced, it was well received, with the early polls suggesting that more than sixty percent of Australians supported it.

This was an opportunity for the establishment of an advisory body to Parliament that would allow Indigenous Peoples a voice on the issues affecting their own communities and for them to be recognised in the Australian constitution.

The ‘YES’ campaign said their proposals outlined in the Uluru Statement from the Heart, requested a modest yet profound change, allowing Indigenous Australians to take their ‘rightful place’ in their own country.

Whilst the ‘NO’ campaigners argued that the ‘Voice to Parliament’ would be racially divisive, giving Indigenous Peoples greater rights over other Australians.

In the end Australia voted ‘NO’ to changing the status quo, by an overwhelming majority.

This week on The Inquiry, we’re asking ‘What went wrong with Australia’s Indigenous call for a voice?’

Contributors: John Maynard, Emeritus Professor, Aboriginal History and Research, University of Newcastle, NSW Australia. Tim Soutphommasane, Chief Diversity Officer, Professor of Practice in Human Rights and Political Theory, University of Oxford, UK and a Former Race Discrimination Commissioner for Australia Andrea Carson, Professor of Political Communication, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia Thomas Mayo, Indigenous Rights Advocate, Maritime Union of Australia Official and Author

Presenter: David Baker Producer: Jill Collins Researcher: Matt Toulson Technical Producer: Richard Hannaford Production Co-ordinator: Jordan King Editor: Tara McDermott

Image: Voice Referendum in Australia: Credit: Reuters.

Audio for this episode was updated on 20th November 2023.

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC Sounds, music, radio podcasts.

0:05.0

It's exhilarating.

0:07.0

It's like driving a car under an avalanche,

0:10.0

but you're taunting the avalanche rather than trying to get away from it.

0:13.6

Amazing sports stories from the BBC World Service.

0:18.0

Find it wherever you get your BBC Podcasts.

0:21.6

Welcome to the Inquiry on the BBC World Service with me David Baker. Each week one

0:27.8

question, four expert witnesses and an answer. May 21st, 2022. In his first speech is Australia's new Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese is outlining his vision for the nation.

0:48.0

In among the promises of economic growth and greater security, there's a pledge that is music to the ears of Australia's

0:56.3

indigenous population.

0:58.3

I begin by acknowledging the traditional owners of the land on which we meet.

1:03.0

I pay my respect to their elders, past, present and emerging.

1:07.5

And on behalf of the Australian Labour Party, I commit to the Ulleruru's statement from the heart.

1:14.0

The proposal to recognize for the first time in Australia's constitution the rights of the country's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island

1:25.1

are peoples seems to have widespread support.

1:29.3

In early polls, more than 60% of Australians are in favour.

1:34.0

But 18 months on, in October this year,

1:38.0

voters deliver a resounding no.

1:42.0

So this week on the inquiry, we're asking, what went wrong with Australia's

1:48.6

indigenous call for a voice. part one, Australia's original inhabitants.

2:12.0

When British colonists first landed in Australia in 1788, the country was already inhabited by a large number of different indigenous peoples.

2:17.0

You're looking upon Aboriginal Australia at that time of somewhere between 300 to 500

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