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Divided we stand, can the Voice unite us?

Australians go into the referendum divided – can the country emerge united, asks political commentator MICHELLE GRATTAN.

THE stakes in the October 14 referendum are high. For Anthony Albanese, who has made the Voice his great social cause of his first term. For Peter Dutton, who has defied those who say he is on the “wrong side of history”.

Michelle Grattan.

For those Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who look to the referendum for affirmation of their special place in our society, as well as giving them a chance for some tangible improvements in their lives and opportunities.

For Australia’s international reputation.

The latest polling has put the “no” side ahead, after a slide over the months in the initial substantial support for the constitutional amendment. History is on the “no” side. Only eight of 44 referendum questions have been carried since federation.

But the result remains open, at the start of this campaign. Both sides accept there is a substantial bloc of uncommitted voters, as well as others, presently nominally in the “yes” or “no” camps, who are “soft” and thus open to persuasion.

Many voters haven’t yet tuned in; this is unsurprising, especially when the cost of living is dominating so many people’s attention.

The strength of support from younger voters, a lot of them still unengaged, will be a crucial factor in the outcome.

Albanese will be prominent in the campaign, but it won’t fill his calendar, according to his office. This is not an election. Indeed in a few days the PM is off overseas, visiting Indonesia and the Philippines ahead of the G20 meeting in India. The government says it wants this campaign to be grassroots-led. Yes23 already has some 28,000 volunteers in the field door-knocking.

If the “no” side won, it would be a significant blow to Albanese. This might not translate into a longer problem for the Labor vote, because the caravan would move on: people would make their judgements on Labor versus the Coalition on other grounds. But the interesting thing would be whether Albanese’s authority among his colleagues would be diminished. Would cabinet ministers become more inclined to question his judgement?

Looking ahead, a re-elected Labor government would have to think twice, or thrice, about going ahead with a referendum for a republic if it couldn’t carry one for the Voice.

Conversely, a win would strengthen even further the PM’s authority. Dutton would take a hit, especially in current and potential “teal” seats – those seats the Liberals need to win back or prevent from falling at the next election. The Voice has already set Liberals against each other – whichever way the vote goes, Dutton will have to rebuild unity.

The government would try to heap as much blame as possible on the opposition in the event of a “no” victory, but the cost to Dutton would probably be overshadowed by the wider fallout. And blame-shifting would involve saying the electorate got it wrong, which is always tricky.

A loss would be devastating for indigenous people, even accepting that not all of them support the “yes” case. It would invite despondency, unleash anger, strengthen the radical activists in the indigenous community, and deeply harm reconciliation. It would be the end of what many saw as a new beginning.

On the other hand, a “yes” result would start another long journey. Most immediately, that would involve putting together the Voice itself, about which the government has only been willing to specify the barest bones. The task wouldn’t be easy, involving fresh consultations with indigenous people and, almost certainly, a good deal of argument.

That would be followed by activity on treaty and truth telling, to which the government is committed under its pledge of support for the Uluru Statement from the Heart as a whole.

In future years, the worth of a successful referendum would be judged, in part, by whether the Voice did in fact contribute to noticeably better outcomes in closing the gap in health, education, housing, employment and other markers of equality, fairness and opportunity.

Would it turn out to be a cohesive, informed, influential body, or fall victim to politics, internal or external? In a decade, would it be seen as a failure or a facilitator?

Other countries mightn’t be hanging out for the referendum result, but it will be noticed internationally – or at least, its defeat would be.

On Monday, Foreign Minister Penny Wong and former foreign minister Julie Bishop campaigned together in Perth for the “yes” case. A sparky pair, these two, in their very different ways.

Bishop, who is now chancellor of the Australian National University, warned: “Australia’s international reputation can be affected by a ‘no’ vote.

“I have no doubt that it would be sending a very negative message about the openness, and the empathy, and the respect and responsibility that the Australian people have for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders,” she said.

The referendum campaign will, unfortunately but inevitably, sharply divide the country. For voters, a crucial question should be, what outcome will leave Australia most united afterwards?The Conversation

Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra. This article is republished from The Conversation. 

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Michelle Grattan

Michelle Grattan

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3 Responses to Divided we stand, can the Voice unite us?

G Hollands says: 31 August 2023 at 8:39 am

Quite frankly, I couldn’t give a rat’s b#m about our international “reputation” re the voice. The proof of how good it is to live in Australia are the people lining up to come here. Greatest country on earth and it goes without saying
that inserting a racist provision in our founding document is wrong. Your don’t fight racism with a racism.

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David says: 1 September 2023 at 1:33 pm

The potential international embarrassment is caused by what the referendums is about and that comes from the government. Try to explain to someone from overseas that we’re being asked to place racial division into a currently non-racially dividing constitution and they get confused. You then tell them that the change being asked for is about enshrining a voice to parliament in one of the best democracies in the world where there are so many ways to make representations to parliament. They are now stunned. You then add the proposed changed doesn’t even compel parliament to act on the advice and they fall off the chair.

When they get back on their chair you them tell them that the vote is also about recognition of early settlers who have their own languages. To that you add the voting paper is in English and they have to write an English word Yes or No to vote. A ‘Y’ or ‘N’ is valid, so is a tick and not a cross. A bit weird so far, but then add that the indigenous word for Yes in Nawa so if they write N it is counted as a No. Now you have them laughing. Then add that we pay someone $600K/yr to oversea the referendum and the defense for the voting system being so out of date is that that is the way its been done for ages. If we only paid them $60K/yr they might have to do some work and update the system. Now they fall off their chairs laughing.

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David says: 1 September 2023 at 5:05 pm

An overseas friend pointed out to me the comments made by a Professor Hill which caused another chair fall. Wondering how someone can claim a group that has managed to get our country to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on a referendum, doesn’t already have adequate representations to parliament. More funny is the claim that elected members currently have to play by the rules yet the proposed voice is only advisory to the government.

The bit about it only being one page was confusing as the thought was for a constitutional change to be justified you’d expect there to be at least a few hundred pages. Saying it was only page was thought to be a detriment to the yes campaign.

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