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Anthony Albanese hits back at critics of the proposed Indigenous Voice to Parliament

  • Anthony Albanese hits out at critics of proposed Indigenous Voice to Parliament
  • The Prime Minister said he wants to see national unity on the issue

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has hit out at detractors of the proposed indigenous Voice to parliament, accusing some of being ‘disingenuous’ in their opposition.

Mr Albanese says he wants to ‘look for national unity’ in the lead up to the referendum on the Voice to be held later this year, hitting back at criticism that the Labor government is not releasing enough detail on the proposal.

‘It’s a simple proposition, that we recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in our constitution and that they have a voice, that they be consulted, I regard it as good manners,’ he told ABC TV’s 7:30 program.

Anthony Albanese (pictured with partner Jodie at the Boxing Day Test) said he wants to see national unity on the issue

Anthony Albanese (pictured with partner Jodie at the Boxing Day Test) said he wants to see national unity on the issue

‘But it is also very clear that the reason why some of the debate is disingenuous at the moment about detail is that it misses the whole point.’

The prime minister referenced Opposition Leader Peter Dutton as a politician who looked ‘for division’ after he published an open letter to Mr Albanese on the weekend featuring 15 questions he needed to be answered before Australians go to the polls.

‘It’s obvious that the prime minister has made a political decision based on the advice of his strategists not to provide the detail to the Australian public,’ Mr Dutton said in the letter.

‘By doing that, I really think he’s treating people like mugs.’

The Opposition Leader then went on to say that Mr Albanese was ‘setting the Voice up for a fail’ by ‘starving the Australian people’ of its detail.

The Indigenous Voice would compose First Nations representatives who would advise top levels of government

The Indigenous Voice will compose First Nations representatives who would advise top levels of government 

Mr Albanese hit back on Monday, saying he wants national unity on the issue.

‘I have made that very clear and that’s why I’ve met with Peter Dutton on a number of occasions, and that’s why I was disappointed to pick up the paper and read that apparently he had written to me, but he forgot to actually write to me, he just gave it to the newspapers, which is the first time that I heard about this correspondence,’ he said.

‘To me, that isn’t fair dinkum, if you are fair dinkum, sit down, work the issues through, come up with a constructive proposal.’

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Mr Albanese also hit back at the accusation that there is not enough information on the Voice, saying that there was ‘an enormous amount of detail out there’.

The model will follow one outlined in a 2021 report by Marcia Langton and Tom Calma that has previously been taken to the previous Coalition Cabinet by former Minister for Indigenous Australians Ken Wyatt.

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