Spare a thought for No campaign leader Nyunggai Warren Mundine, who must be shocked — shocked — to discover that there are racists in his own campaign outfit, and in the wider No campaign.
This week we had David Adler, head of the Australian Jewish Association and a senior figure in the far-right Advance group, questioning the Indigenous heritage of Lidia Thorpe and accusing Stan Grant of darkening his skin, in remarks reported by Nine’s Paul Sakkal. When busted, Adler literally used the “some of my best friends” trope, telling Sakkal he was friends with Mundine.
Mundine had to go on the ABC — of all places! — and distance himself from Adler, saying Adler wasn’t part of Mundine’s campaign and was on the “fringes” of the No campaign, and that attacks on the heritage of Indigenous peoples were racist and disgusting.
In his effort to put a lot of space between himself and Adler, Mundine revealed he’d sacked two people from his own campaign for racist remarks, including an anti-Semitic statement. This immediately sparked interest in who exactly Mundine had fired from his own No campaign.
There’s a pattern emerging in all this. The Advance campaign was behind a racist cartoon attacking the Yes campaign published by The Australian Financial Review, for which Nine later apologised. Another prominent No campaigner, Gary Johns, demanded blood tests for Indigenous peoples, prompting calls for his departure from the campaign. Yes campaign meetings have been interrupted by Nazis and white supremacists. Thorpe, who doesn’t support the Voice, has described the No campaign as “looking more like a white supremacy campaign that is causing a lot of harm”.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has said voters planning to vote No are not racist — reflecting an anxiety not to repeat Hillary Clinton’s “deplorables” moment. Mundine says racists are only a tiny, fringe minority (though, if so, one that seems strangely overrepresented in the ranks of the No campaign). But the logic of the non-Indigenous campaign against a Voice to Parliament is implacably, irresistibly racist.
While Indigenous peoples can and are in good faith arguing that a Voice is inadequate, that it legitimises a fundamentally illegitimate colonial occupation, or that treaty should be the priority (Mundine, for example, has long supported treaties with Aboriginal nations, a position he reiterated yesterday), non-Indigenous opponents arguing that a Voice is “racially divisive” cannot avoid the racist logic of that position.
The fundamentalist position — one adopted by far-right groups such as the Institute of Public Affairs — is that any constitutional recognition of First Peoples is racist in distinguishing them from any other group. This is a simple restatement of the terra nullius lie, by rejecting the fact that First Peoples were attacked and dispossessed and thus have a foundational role not merely in the history of the Australian continent but in the establishment of the Australian state culminating in Federation — far beyond any other group that may have emerged since then.
The more mainstream No position, that constitutional recognition is fine but without a Voice to Parliament, may part ways with the terra nullius myth but asserts a unilateral form of recognition that rejects as illegitimate and irrelevant any consultation with Indigenous peoples on what form recognition should take. It’s recognition purely on white terms, with First Peoples reduced to objects of white debate, a perpetuation of 240 years of white supremacy.
The “modified mainstream” No position, if it can be called that, is that constitutional recognition is fine, and a Voice is fine, but that the Voice must be controlled by Parliament and has no right to exist outside the whim of governments — another repudiation of what First Peoples have called for.
Those who reject any Voice at all are also rejecting the simple reality that a Voice is part of the framework for driving a much greater role for First Peoples in policy development and implementation, without which efforts to close the gap in educational, health and economic outcomes are doomed to failure.
It may be impolitic to say it, and earn charges of elites trying to shame No voters, but the logic is irresistible. There’s a reason why the No campaign is riddled with racists — it springs from racism.
Is it fair to say the No campaign springs from racism? Let us know by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
Warren Mundine is a notorious turncoat. I would not be surprised that if the Voice gets up he will demand he deserves to be on it.
… You’re only saying that because you’ve been studying his form.
no need to study it, just look at his past positions in Labor, then Liberal party
Exactly.
One of these days maybe he’ll get the respect he thinks he deserves, that he’s been hunting around everywhere for, for so long.
He might have to settle just for the respect he deserves.
Like the rest of us.
Bugger respect………..
………all he has ever wanted is a tax-payer funded lifestyle.
Love this comment klewso, look at moi, look a moi, MAJOR employer.
Not just on this issue, but (mostly) right wing parties and media rely upon influencers and grifters to promote and/or oppose any policy of the day….. because the latter can be so distasteful.
Grifters, doing the work outsourced by ’eminent’ figures.
Doing the PR work outsourced by ’eminent’ figures
Warren and Jacinta oppose the Voice because they see it as a threat to their voice (which we already hear too much of).
“There’s a reason why the No campaign is riddled with racists — it springs from racism.”
Hear! Hear!
It has the imprimatur of Peter Dutton who I think called it racially divisive.
No that’s not fair, it actually stems from Anglo eugenics of the 18hC and colonisation 🙂
Friendly reminder that Warren Mundine thought that racist cartoon in the AFR was funny.
Thank you Bernard, exactly correct. On Warren Mundine though, he was the beneficiary of a substantial amount of money under the previous regimes (probably still is), I suspect this would not have been the case if a Voice had been in operation. Another one whose interest is, really, entirely pecuniary.
i suspect he opposes the Voice because it threatens his power
Mundine listed his reasons in his submission to the Inquiry in the Voice.
His argument is more nuanced than you may think.
If the Voice to Parliament wins, though, he has said he would want to be on the panel.
(He also supports nuclear power, so he is likely to be successful).
https://www.aph.gov.au/DocumentStore.ashx?id=e170b42b-589b-48ec-a585-a4b5ab6aa404&subId=739992
https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/Joint/Former_Committees/Aboriginal_and_Torres_Strait_Islander_Voice_Referendum/VoiceReferendum/Submissions
I wish someone from the Yes camp would identify all the elephants in the room, racist or not, and plainly deal with them.
some examples:
etc.
After assuaging all these fears, then is the time to start listing the positives, and do it in a way that appeals to the quintessentially australian values that most of us like to think we live by. A Fair Go. Giving a fellow australian who’s had a rough time, a helping hand. Decency. It’s just the right thing to do.
You may not win back the hardened No-ers, but the moderates who have peeled off from the Yes side may be brought back.
if the Prime Minister doesn’t know the details -how could voters so the only choice is to vote NO to change the constitution then once that is over begin to really address the underlying problems rather than throwing 30 Billion per year in a shotgun approach.
hi Desmond, i don’t get what you mean when you say Albanese doesn’t know the details. what details?
what 30 billion
A Tony Abbott fantasy………..
yes, it’s really galling that Abbott misleads, in order to garner support for the No cause. There would be plenty of people who would just accept on face value any figure he said, and he would know that. Abbott has a history of justifying deception and manipulation by his firm belief in the “greater good” of his personal crusade for nuttiness. He does it so regularly, i don’t think he’d know the truth if it bit him on the a r se.
I am encouraged to vote Yes.
The Western Australian Government backed down with their new state laws which with out proper consultation and went too far. They repealed the laws within 5 weeks, with an apology .
By voting Yes, the government of the day will always control the agenda, however voting yes gives our first nations people a commitment. Which until now has been blocked and defunded by the government of the day, the most guilty of which is the Liberal party.
I concede the change will take generations.
The Voice should NOT be necessary, if we were a caring community, and not totally driven by business interests. Other countries have managed the transition successfully. The Liberal Government should have stayed out of the debate, allowing a better conversation and discussion, But as wedded as they are to News Corp the Mining Industry for ideas, and cash. What chance did the yes vote have? Still hopeful.