In January, the Australian government released the Indigenous Voice co-design group’s interim report. This was followed by a public consultation process led by a senior advisory group, chaired by Marcia Langton and Tom Calma, and supported by the work of a national co-design group and a local/regional co-design group.

Together, these groups were tasked with advising the minister for Indigenous Australians, Ken Wyatt, on “options for models that will ensure that Indigenous Australians are heard at all levels of government – local, state and federal.”

The public consultation process sought feedback on design options for the Voice, through written submissions, an online survey, public consultation hearings and closed stakeholder meetings. It concluded on April 30.

As public law academics working with the Indigenous Law Centre at the University of New South Wales, we have followed this process carefully and analysed all consultation documents.

Our analysis revealed:

  • overwhelming public support for a constitutionally enshrined First Nations Voice

  • a sense of momentum and urgency for the government to take this reform to a referendum

  • deep concerns the government is not listening to First Nations people in designing the detail of this Voice.


Read more: Indigenous recognition is more than a Voice to Government - it's a matter of political equality


Constitutionally enshrined First Nations Voice

There were extremely high levels of engagement with the public submissions process. As of June 9, 2,554 public submissions had been uploaded to the National Indigenous Australians Agency (NIAA) website.

Of these submissions:

  • 90% believe the First Nations Voice should be constitutionally enshrined in line with the Uluru Statement from the Heart

  • a third of public submissions stated explicitly that a referendum on the Voice needs to be held before the Voice is legislated

  • only four submissions indicated a preference for a legislate-first approach.

Submissions in support of constitutional enshrinement were made by:

  • non-Indigenous individuals organisations and groups (including corporate organisations (61%)

  • First Nations community organisations and groups (17%)

  • First Nations people (3%).

Some pragmatists argued constitutional enshrinement of the Voice is needed to protect it from being removed by future governments. Denise McConnachie from Wollongong says:

I have observed what occurred to The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission at the hands of a hostile government. Legislated bodies can be unlegislated, at a whim. The Voice to Parliament needs to be secure, consistent and an inalienable right for First Nations people…

Others said constitutional enshrinement was about observing the wishes of First Nations people. The Ngalaya Indigenous Corporation said:

The delivery of the Uluru Statement from the Heart was a watershed moment for this nation. […] The path forward requires that a structural promise to listen to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voices be enshrined in the Australian constitution.

Other submissions said constitutional enshrinement of the Voice is essential for recognising the unique status of First Nation people via substantive structural reform. As primary school students N (age 9) and E (age 10) said in their submission (prepared alongside their year ¾ classmates):

[First Nations people] should have a say because everyone’s voice and point of view is important and it should be listened to because they have been here for 65,000 years and they are no different than everyone else. They have the right to say what they need to say.

Submissions also strongly opposed the government establishing a legislative Voice before deciding whether to progress constitutional enshrinement.

Submissions further argued this approach would set the Voice up to fail, and it would reduce momentum and support for a referendum.


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Concerns the government hasn’t engaged with First Nations people

The interim report says the national Voice co-design group’s work was informed by a number of discussion papers prepared by the NIAA. These were not publicly available and we ultimately accessed them via a freedom of information request.

The papers revealed options for the design of the Voice were never properly canvassed in the interim report, nor put to the public for feedback.

Options not included in the report included

  • support for a stronger relationship between the Voice and parliament

  • ensuring the Voice has secure and independent funding

  • envisioning the Voice be empowered to conduct audits and evaluations of government policy, administration and service delivery.

Community consultation summaries also indicate there is widespread criticism of the interim report, including concerns it lacked First Nation community involvement in the selection of advisory group members and in developing the design options.

An individual who attended the Perth community consultation expressed frustration that co-design members were a top-down, government-appointed group, with little involvement from community people leading and driving the work.

The Central Land Council also said in a submission it had:

concerns about transparency and accountability in the processes that have led to the release of the report, and in the stage two consultation processes planned.

We are concerned that the current process does not appear to have been a genuine, fully equitable and participatory co-design with Aboriginal and Torres trait Islander peoples in full partnership.

This is particularly worrying, given the extensive discussions and consultation we carried out among our own people, which led to the Uluru Statement.

Where to from here?

The co-design process has substantially progressed the concept of an Indigenous Voice, what its functions will be, and how it might be designed. There is now a foundation of information sufficient to take the Voice to a referendum.

It’s important to remember that only the existence of the Voice as a First Nations’ representative institution and its core function will be constitutionally enshrined. The rest of the details will be established through legislation.

Four years after the Uluru Statement from the Heart, the time is now to put a referendum to the Australian people.

The Conversation

Dr Dani Larkin, Lecturer/Deputy Director of the Indigenous Law Centre, UNSW; Emma Buxton-Namisnyk, Researcher, PVCI UNSW, UNSW, and Gabrielle Appleby, Professor, UNSW Law School, UNSW

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Want to learn more? Register for UNSW's NAIDOC Webinar with the three authors of the report as they examine what the public said in the Indigenous Voice co-design process. See event details.