One of the architects of the Uluru statement from the heart, Alyawarre elder Pat Anderson, says she remains confident of a successful yes vote in the referendum on enshrining a voice to parliament in the constitution, despite many speakers at Thursday’s Invasion Day rallies publicly rejecting it.
An Ipsos poll of about 300 Aboriginal and Islander people conducted in the days before Thursday’s rallies showed about 80% were in favour, 10% undecided and 10% firmly voting no.
Anderson, the Uluru Dialogue co-chair, said she was “buoyed up and confident” that there was still a lot of support around the country from First Nations people and other supporters for the voice.
“But we’ve got a long way to go,” she said. “It’s a very, very active campaign with a lot of opinions.”
Anderson said there was “disinformation and misinformation” given to people at the rallies.
“It was a big megaphone yesterday, and it was used by those people who were organisers for their own purposes,” she said.
Thousands of people attended Invasion Day rallies across Australia on Thursday, where First Nations speakers called for action on deaths in custody, an end to the removal of Aboriginal children and – in many locations – made a case against an Indigenous voice to parliament being enacted before a treaty.
Anderson said the Uluru statement does call for a treaty, but a voice should come first. She said the First Peoples’ Assembly of Victoria was essentially a voice to the Victorian government, set up by traditional owners to negotiate on their behalf.
The assembly will negotiate a statewide treaty which could include improving political representation for First Nations Victorians via a permanent Indigenous decision-making body, or reserved seats for Indigenous representatives, similar to New Zealand’s parliament.
Traditional owners will also be able to enter into separate negotiations with the state.
“They had to set up the First Peoples’ Assembly of Victoria because you need a body to oversee all of those discussions,” Anderson said. “We still have to decide: are we talking about one treaty? Or are we talking about over 360? There’s a lot of work to do, and we need to do that ourselves.”
Anderson is a member of the Albanese government’s referendum working group and has spent decades working in Aboriginal health in the Northern Territory. She co-authored the Little Children Are Sacred report on the abuse of Aboriginal children in the Northern Territory, which was used by the Howard government in 2007 to justify the military intervention in territory communities.
Anderson said she was distressed to hear calls by the federal opposition leader, Peter Dutton, and the Alice Springs mayor, Matt Paterson, to send in the army or federal police to quell social unrest in town, which prompted a rapid visit by the prime minister and new alcohol restrictions.
Aboriginal organisations say they had repeatedly warned all levels of governments that alcohol-related harms would rise if alcohol bans were lifted, but nothing was done.
Anderson said she firmly believed that, if there was a voice, the situation in Alice Springs could have been avoided by forcing governments to listen to what Aboriginal people say they want and need.
“How do you get them to listen? You lock it into the constitution,” she said. “By what our mob call the ‘big law’. They have to follow their own law. That’s why they have to listen because we will have the protection of the constitution, which comes to us from the Australian public, not the politicians.”