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Saturday, May 20, 2023

Lushington D. Brady: ‘Voice’ Sounds a Bum Note with Aussies


Support falls further as referendum nears

Is the “Indigenous Voice” referendum dead? It’s far too soon to get our hopes up, but the racist proposed Constitutional amendment is certainly gasping for breath, right now. Its biggest problem is that it’s suffering the same issue as the 1999 Republic referendum: the more the Australian people learn about it, the further from it they run.

The campaign for an Indigenous voice to be entrenched in the Constitution is now in deep trouble. The latest Resolve polling shows the Yes vote has dropped from 64 per cent late last year, to 58 per cent earlier this year, to just 53 per cent now.

The raw figures are 39 per cent opposition to the voice, 18 per cent undecided and just 44 per cent support. What’s more, according to the pollsters, some states are shifting from Yes to No.

Australian referenda require a “super majority” to pass: that is, not just a majority of voters overall, but a majority of voters in a majority of states. In other words, a majority of voters in four states, as well as a majority of voters in Australia in total.

Australia’s system is rightly designed to set a high bar for Constitutional change. So high, that only eight of the 44 referenda held in Australia have ever passed.

The numbers aren’t looking good for the “Voice” — and they’re only getting worse.

This tends to confirm last month’s Morgan poll, showing a seven percentage point drop in the Yes vote to 46 per cent; and a nine percentage point rise in the No vote to 39 per cent. In two states, Queensland (46-41) and in South Australia (50-39), the No vote was actually in front. Only in Victoria, said Morgan, was there still majority support for Yes. As well, the Essential poll has Yes down six points to 59 and No up six points to 41 since February. This polling is remarkably similar to polling on becoming a republic, five months out from the 1999 referendum, which ultimately went down in every state and 55-45 nationally.

Australians are especially sick of being told to shoulder collective guilt for things that happened before they were even born.

As well, especially among the overseas born, voters are starting to ask why this generation of Australians – who have never been responsible for mistreating Indigenous people – should have to make it up to current generations of Indigenous people.

The biggest problem for the “Yes” campaign, though, is that when push comes to ballot-box shove, they can’t coast by on the fairy-floss guff they’ve been feeding us. As a result, support is “a mile wide but an inch deep”. It’s all very well to blither trite, feel-good fluff, but when it comes to the Constitution, voters want hard answers.

No campaigners say voter concerns that the voice may be divisive and that there’s not enough detail are being intensified once people are clear that the voice involves changing the Constitution – which, unlike legislative change, is permanent […]

This will get only worse as more questions emerge that voice proponents can’t (or won’t) answer. And while just about everyone would be happy to see Indigenous people formally recognised in the Constitution as the First Australians, it’s far from clear that a super-majority of voters are prepared to give the government what amounts to a blank cheque for a change that’s so much more than that.

Ultimately, Australians are finally getting a chance to say in the privacy of the ballot box what the left has furiously denied them the chance to say in public.

If there’s any upside here, a referendum at least gives every Australian a say on what has happened by stealth until now. And anyone who doesn’t like where things are headed – from the permanent flying of the Aboriginal flag coequally with the national flag, to the now routine Indigenous welcomes – notwithstanding all the moral pressure that will be brought to bear, in the privacy of the ballot box they will at last have a chance to vote No.

If, as is seeming more and more likely, the referendum is consigned to the dustbin of history, the left will screech and stamp their feet, just as they did in 1999. Which ultimately only serves to confirm middle Australia’s suspicions.

Bellowing “racist!” at decent, ordinary Australians will no more be a vote-winner than sneering “Deplorables” at millions of Americans was.

Lushington describes himself as Punk rock philosopher. Liberalist contrarian. Grumpy old bastard. This article was first published HERE

6 comments:

Robert Arthur said...

"The more the people learn about it the further from it the people will run" Applies to much race based legislation here. The govt and msm make sure the general public learn very little about.How many of general public know the detail of Pae Ora, the health rearrangeemnt, the infinite co governace/co management stipulations running throgh so much natonal and local body legislation?

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

'The Voice' (singular) officially claims to represent Australia's First Peoples (PLURAL) being Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.
Even assuming the Aboriginals to be a homogeneous racial entity (which they are not), we have a problem here in that Torres Strait Islanders are Melanesians - racially and culturally distinct from Australian mainland Aboriginals. These disparate groups have no 'voice' in the singular.
This oversight is typical of the marxofascist habit of focusing exclusively on vertical relationships between groups ('oppressor'/'oppressed') while ignoring horizontal relationships within them.

Anonymous said...

no matter how much one disagrees with seymour's libertarian ideals, he should get credit for suggesting that we put a referendum about the country's name change and the 'principles of the treaty'...

more importantly, we need a referendum that perennially bans govt funding of media in any shape or form under any circumstances (including emergencies).

Anonymous said...

The Voice becoming law would be a disaster. It creates an ethnocracy. It gets a life of its own. It represents no one. It can potentially set different aboriginal groups against each other not to mention conflict with other Australians. Who will it apply to - any one with relevant DNA no matter how much? Those that identify with one of the racial groups….etc….? It will hide the real issues. If people have struggled to address real issues up to now, how will this ‘Voice’ help them’. It is dangerous political intoxication.
I have no idea how social issues affecting aboriginal Australians can be managed. It will probably take many more years. It will require dynamic forward looking leaders who understand that the present generations of Australia are not those of the past. It will require those leaders to understand their own communities and people and work with them. With the support and belief and patience of all Australians. And the commitment and ability of all to build the proverbial bridges. But please please don’t let this get sabotaged by the Voice.

Anonymous said...

We the people need "Direct Democracy" as opposed to indirect democracy which has been high-jacked by the UN and it's masters which are the owners of Blackrock and Vanguard.

Anonymous said...

You only need to see how NZ is broken over our non indigenous maori Iwi's have destroyed relationships and bled the country financially. There is no One Voice as indigenous people are tribal and they do not share or agree with other tribes or even in their own tribe. Intermarriage means discord and seperatism in families. Its heartbreaking for country and people