February 7, 2023
1 min read

Majority Australians in favour of Indigenous Voice to parliament

A referendum on changing the constitution to establish the voice is expected to be held in the second half of 2023…reports Asian Lite News

Support for a proposed Indigenous Voice to Australia’s Parliament remains high ahead of a referendum, a new poll revealed on Monday.

According to the poll published by News Corp Australia, 56 per cent of voters are in favour of enshrining the voice in the constitution, 37 per cent opposed and 7 per cent undecided.

A referendum on changing the constitution to establish the voice is expected to be held in the second half of 2023.

If successful, Indigenous Australians would be acknowledged in the constitution and included in the law-making process, with the body to advise Parliament on issues relating to First Nations people.

Senator Patrick Dodson, the government’s Special Envoy for Reconciliation, said the body could also have a role advising the national cabinet, which consists of the prime minister and state and territory leaders.

“I’m not sure how that’s going to work out in the legislative framework of how to interact with the parliament and the executive government, but I would think that national cabinet is one of the aspects that you’d want to be able to talk to,” he said.

The support for the proposal revealed in Monday’s poll is a boost for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who has come under pressure from the Opposition to reveal details of how the voice would function.

Neither the conservative Liberal Party nor progressive Greens has yet announced whether they will support a yes vote in the referendum.

Monday’s poll found only 28 per cent of voters said they were “strongly” in favour of the Voice and 23 per cent strongly opposed, meaning almost 50 per cent of the population could still be swayed.

In order to be successful a referendum must achieve a double majority, meaning a simple majority of voters nationwide and a separate majority of voters in at least four out of six states in favour.

ALSO READ-Australia in dire need of foreign doctors: Minister

Previous Story

Hands replaces Zahawi as Tory chairman

Next Story

Biden dials Erdogan, vows assistance

Latest from -Top News

Kremlin warns US against Iran strike

Putin revealed that Moscow had proposed several compromise frameworks to all involved parties — including the US, Israel, and Iran Washington would be making a serious mistake by launching an attack on

Multiply Media expands to UK

Multiply Media Group (MMG) will exclusively manage and operate a selection of premium digital Out-of-Home (DOOH) advertising sites in central London….reports Asian Lite News Multiply Media Group (MMG), a fast-growing media conglomerate

GCC talks women’s economic empowerment

The two-day dialogue, spearheaded by the UAE Gender Balance Council in partnership with the World Bank, brought together senior officials and gender policy leaders from the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain….reports Asian

UAE, Canada eye deeper ties

President’s message was delivered to Canadian PM Mike Carney by H.H. Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, during his official visit to Ottawa. President

UAE tops global FDI charts

UNCTAD ranks UAE 10th globally for FDI inflows in 2024, with record AED 167.6 billion secured The United Arab Emirates has emerged as one of the world’s top ten destinations for foreign
Go toTop

Don't Miss

China focus of Australian, Japanese PMs visits

The top-level visits take place immediately after foreign ministers of

India, Australia to ink trade deal by 2023-end

Last year, India and Australia finalised the Economic Cooperation Trade