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Requiem for The Voice

By Chek Ling - posted Friday, 27 October 2023


Albo bears a huge burden for its failure. He should have taken heed of the historically dismal success rate of referenda, shown uncompromising leadership, and done something audacious, “Disruptive”,  and inspiring. Sadly it was business as usual for him. “It’s a modest proposal ... Everything to gain, nothing to lose”, he cajoled the nation.

Had he taken the high ground, and proclaimed our moral duty to make restitution for past injustices, it would not have left a vacuum for Dutton and his fellow No camp dissemblers to sow seeds of doubt, and to spread outright lies under a cloud of fear.

Regrettably Albo’s timidity in Opposition, lest he be politically wedged, has become his trademark as Prime Minister. For instance, he had no need to embrace Morrison’s last minute AUKUS so fulsomely and with such haste; he had no need to unequivocally endorse Israel’s right to defend itself, a de facto code for turning a blind eye to Israel’s long history of oppression of the dispossessed Palestinians now living in Gaza, which some commentators have said to be the biggest open air prison since the Warsaw ghetto.

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All this does not speak well for his Prime Ministership. And not seeing the need to take the moral high ground might transpire to be his Achilles heel.

As for Dutton, handed the poisoned chalice of a Party cleansed of its moderates, a process begun quietly by John Howard and completed by Morrison with drums and cymbals, he took what might be the only chance he had to land a body blow on his opponent. No one should be surprised. The winning-is-everything mentality has long afflicted our 2-Party-Preferred electoral system.  Parliament is so often just a gladiatorial pit.

Two gladiators, just one winner.

That is the other critical cause of our Voice Referendum failure.  

What was in it for Dutton to join forces with Albo?  He would have be seen as a traitor to his political handlers – the entrenched conservative caucus; the mining lobby; and the Murdoch mercenaries. 

And luck was with Dutton. Some who have done well for themselves as fair dinkum “representatives” of the First Peoples, as consultants and compradors, might have been worried about their position in the Australian economy should a well-organised and well-consulted Voice for all First Peoples have come into being, distinctly and with integrity, for diverse groups of First Peoples living under vastly different circumstances.

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Empathy did not intrude, not close. “They” just don’t want the First Peoples to be a nuisance, to have a seat at the table. The lie of terra nullius must live on, despite the 1992 Mabo judgment. So much White privilege could be lost! Remember how backyards were going to be lost to Native Title claims?

We sorely need a political leader who has the courage and the stature to lead our nation out of this quagmire.

The dismantling of our 2-Party-Preferred electoral system, now resembling two mafia-doms perpetually fighting for control, seems unavoidable for that future to come about.  Just imagine if the Greens had had their quota of 15 to 18 MPs in the last few Parliaments! Would Morrison, as a minority government PM, have got away with the immoral and incompetent Robotdebt scheme?  Would Albo, ever timid, have got away with not putting a temporary cap on rent-gouging when the housing crisis is getting worse by the day, with 30% of households renting?

I live in hope that Proportional Representation will be introduced in the foreseeable future. That would civilise our Parliament, reinstall integrity into public life, and improve the quality of MPs towards the standards set by the Teals and Independents. Their wide-ranging life experience outside the confined political nurseries of two old Parties, their well-seasoned intellect and their fearlessness have allowed them to pursue what is good for this country with integrity.

And with that civilised, uplifted, and nourished parliament, restitution for the First Peoples will become not only possible but a matter of course.

 

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About the Author

Chek Ling arrived in Melbourne in 1962 to study engineering, under the Colombo Plan, from the then British Colony of Sarawak, now part of Malaysia. Decades later, the anti-Asian episodes fomented by Blainey and later Hanson turned him into a mature age activist.

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