Prime Minister Anthony Albanese - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 19 Oct 2023 03:50:09 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Prime Minister Anthony Albanese - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Call for unity after Indigenous Voice referendum https://cathnews.co.nz/2023/10/19/call-for-unity-after-indigenous-voice-referendum/ Thu, 19 Oct 2023 05:08:59 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=165170 Call for unity

A call for unity has been made following Australians voting against a proposal to amend the constitution, thus denying First Nations people an advisory body for the government. Brisbane Archbishop Mark Coleridge has issued a reflection, published by The Catholic Leader, saying to Australians "It's time to look forward rather than look back. "There's an Read more

Call for unity after Indigenous Voice referendum... Read more]]>
A call for unity has been made following Australians voting against a proposal to amend the constitution, thus denying First Nations people an advisory body for the government.

Brisbane Archbishop Mark Coleridge has issued a reflection, published by The Catholic Leader, saying to Australians "It's time to look forward rather than look back.

"There's an urgent need now to create a new kind of national unity, and that can't be left to the politicians because there's more to this than politics" Coleridge wrote.

The final vote on "The Voice" was 60 percent against the proposal. All six Australian states rejected the plan.

Bishop Charles Gauci, chair of the Bishops Commission for Relations with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, commented, "Voters rejecting a referendum to give greater political rights to Indigenous people in Australia doesn't mean we accept the status quo."

Gauci said many Australians "will be glad" to see the campaign has come to an end.

"For our nation though this should be seen as a time for a new beginning" the bishop reflected.

Australia is home to just under a million Indigenous Australians, and a great number of those face disparities in health, education and opportunities in a nation of nearly 27 million people.

Moment of disagreement

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese also made a call for unity in the face of this "moment of disagreement."

Albanese stated "We are not Yes voters or No voters, we are all Australians. And it is as Australians together that we must take our country beyond this debate."

Archbishop Coleridge said the Australian Catholic bishops have spoken of the need for a new engagement with Indigenous peoples.

"Fine words and symbolic gestures are not enough," the archbishop said

"In the Archdiocese of Brisbane we will commit ourselves more resolutely to our Reconciliation Action Plan.

"It's up to all of us to ensure that what we do from here serves national unity and racial justice, because we'll never have the first unless we have the second," Coleridge concluded.

Sources

Crux

The Catholic Leader

CathNews New Zealand

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Albanese and Dutton need to find common ground on Voice to Australia's Parliament https://cathnews.co.nz/2023/06/08/indigenous-voice-referendum-needs-government-cooperation-now/ Thu, 08 Jun 2023 06:05:40 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=159726 voice

An Australian priest backing the Indigenous Voice referendum to parliament fears the result will leave Australians divided. That will be a tragedy, he says. Father Frank Brennan (pictured), a Jesuit priest and human rights lawyer, blames leadership on both political sides for not seeking common ground. He hopes a "reconciling spirit" will blow through parliament's Read more

Albanese and Dutton need to find common ground on Voice to Australia's Parliament... Read more]]>
An Australian priest backing the Indigenous Voice referendum to parliament fears the result will leave Australians divided. That will be a tragedy, he says.

Father Frank Brennan (pictured), a Jesuit priest and human rights lawyer, blames leadership on both political sides for not seeking common ground.

He hopes a "reconciling spirit" will blow through parliament's chambers during the next three weeks while elected leaders lay the groundwork for the three-month campaign.

He says he'd like some changes made to the federal government's proposed Indigenous Voice referendum question.

It's too broad, he says. Its reference to the Voice making representations to executive government will attract many legal challenges.

He suggests changing the wording from "executive government" to "ministers of state" could broaden support for the referendum.

However, given all major political parties' reluctance to consider any proposed Constitutional amendments, the wording of the change "might not be perfect," he says.

Stating his case in Rome

On Saturday, Brennan will deliver a lecture on the referendum at the Pontifical Gregorian University.

His draft lecture notes say he proposes discussing a contemporary Australian perspective on recognising Aboriginal rights.

He will also urge Australians to recommit to "deep inner listening" towards each other and the land.

This will include reminding Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton of their responsibility for the debate's tone.

"Neither side of the parliamentary chamber has done what was needed to bring the country together, to bring reconciliation in our land, to bring the country to ‘Yes'," Brennan's notes say.

"The government has assured parliament that it would have the power to legislate whether and how representations by the Voice need to be considered by the executive government, and should "tweak the words" to ensure that public servants performing routine administrative tasks will not be required to consider representations by the Voice."

Voters will face a stark choice in the referendum, his lecture notes continue.

"We can vote ‘No' to a constitutionally enshrined Voice either because we continue to think that all constitutional entitlements should be held ‘in common with all other Australians' or because we are not convinced that the Voice will work effectively," the notes say.

"Or we can vote ‘Yes' because, whatever the imperfections of the wording and the risk of future complications, we think it is high time that Australia's First Peoples were recognised in the Constitution in a manner sought and approved by a broad cross-section of Indigenous leaders."

He also plans to tell his audience that only eight of 44 referendums have succeeded in Australia since the federation and he hopes "this one will be the ninth".

Papal gift

Brennan presented a copy of his new book, "An Indigenous Voice to Parliament: Considering a Constitutional Bridge", to Pope Francis this week.

His dedication on the gift says he is "hoping and praying for an Indigenous Voice to Parliament."

"May the Australian people bring the country to ‘Yes', recognising the rights of our First Peoples who have occupied the Great South Land of the Holy Spirit for tens of thousands of years," he says.

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