8 Oct 2023

Australia PM 'optimistic' of long-shot win in Indigenous rights referendum

7:32 pm on 8 October 2023
A woman walks past posters advocating for an Aboriginal voice and treaty ahead of an upcoming referendum, in Melbourne on August 30, 2023. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced Australia will hold a historic Indigenous rights referendum on October 14 setting up a defining moment in the nation's relationship with its Aboriginal minority. (Photo by William WEST / AFP)

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced Australia will hold a historic Indigenous rights referendum on 14 October, setting up a defining moment in the nation's relationship with its Aboriginal minority. Photo: WILLIAM WEST / AFP

Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Sunday he remained hopeful a referendum to recognise the country's Indigenous people in the constitution would succeed, even as the measure lags in opinion polls less than a week from the vote.

"I'm optimistic," Albanese told the Australian Broadcasting Corp (ABC) on Sunday morning, according to a transcript. "Whether it be Shepperton or Sydney or Brisbane, Melbourne, the places I've been, Hobart, Adelaide in the last week, have been extremely positive."

Albanese's centre-left Labor government backs the referendum, while the opposition Liberal-National conservatives urge a "No" vote on 14 October. Nationally, opponents lead the yes campaign by 53 percent to 38 percent, according to an opinion poll last week.

If the "Voice to Parliament" referendum is approved, it would constitutionally enshrine Indigenous people and set up an advisory body for their input on policies that affect them.

Most Indigenous people favour the change, but some say it is a distraction from achieving practical and positive outcomes and would not fully resolve the issues affecting them. The political opposition says the measure is divisive, would be ineffective and would slow government decision-making.

Marginalised by British colonial rulers and not mentioned in Australia's 122-year-old constitution, Indigenous Australians, who make up 3.8 percent of the population, face discrimination, shorter life expectancy, lower education outcomes and high incarceration rates.

As part of final efforts to buoy the yes side, Albanese on Saturday posted a photo to Social media platform X showing him casting his vote in Sydney in Australia's most populous state, New South Wales, where 4.2 percent of people identify as Indigenous.

Last month, thousands rallied in state capitals to support the yes campaign, which sees the measure as necessary to boost outcomes for the nation's Indigenous people.

- This story was originally published by Reuters

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