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Labour’s vote-share projection falls on today’s local results – and is lower than Corbyns/Miliband’s

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 04/05/2024 - 2:48am in

Electoral expert says Labour overall has gone backward, despite Starmeroid spin

Keir Starmer and his spokespeople are spinning like crazy that today’s local election results are a sign of how well the public is receiving Starmer’s policy blancmange of nothingness (well, maybe they’re not using quite that terminology), while they point to a few areas where Labour had good results – such as in the Blackpool South by-election.

But Labour also did disastrously in other areas, such as on Teesside, where it failed to oust Tory Ben Houchen despite Houchen facing allegations of deeply dodgy land deals, in North Tyneside, where it lost control of the council, and in the West Midlands, where it expects to lose to the Tories.

And according to expert electoral analysts, Labour has gone backwards compared to last year, like the Tories:

Compared to polling claiming Labour’s Westminster vote share is as high as 47%, a 34% performance is disastrous – and is considerably lower that the shares achieved by Starmer’s predecessors Jeremy Corbyn and Ed Miliband. Corbyn managed higher in 2018 and Miliband in 2012-13:

Independents, meanwhile, performed strongly, beating the LibDems in vote share and seat gains. The Greens also performed well.

With outrage continuing to grow over Starmer’s lockstep with the Tories in backing Israel’s genocidal regime, a nine percent lead does not look guaranteed to hand Starmer a parliamentary majority – and today’s results confirm it.

If you wish to republish this post for non-commercial use, you are welcome to do so – see here for more.

Doctors’ Association survey finds ‘deeply disturbing’ misuse of govt’s non-doctor roles

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 17/03/2024 - 10:34am in

Danger to patients and conflicts of interest as government continues to push for expanded use of ‘associate’ roles – with help from the Royal College of Physicians

A survey by the Doctors’ Association UK (DAUK) has revealed ‘deeply disturbing’ ‘scope creep’ in which – as warned by the British Medical Association (BMA) and others – ‘physician associates’ (PAs), who are not qualified as physicians, are being used and acting as doctors.

A statement by the group warns that PA are not only overstepping the boundaries in which they are meant to operate, but also being used by NHS trusts and health companies to fill positions that require fully-qualified doctors:

PAs are overstepping boundaries, putting patient safety at risk, and impacting doctors’ training. This is shocking in itself, but made far worse by recent events at the Royal College of Physicians… Doctors at Torbay report PAs being used as “middle grades” – clear scope creep.

According to a doctor recruitment agency:

Doctors in speciality training programmes are known as Middle Grade doctors. Junior Middle Grade doctors are trainees who have completed their foundation training and are now in the early years of their speciality training. They are: ST1/ST2: ST stands for Specialty Training.

According to survey responses from doctors at Torbay and South Devon NHS Trust, as well as being used as ‘middle grade’ doctors and putting patients at risk by acting outside their competencies, PAs:

  • work without adequate supervision
  • consent inappropriately
  • participate in unsafe clinical activity
  • treated severe infective colitis with antibiotics and steroids simultaneously

According to NHS Scotland, steroids “shouldn’t be used if you have an ongoing widespread infection. This is because they could make it more severe.”

The DAUK also linked the survey results to this week’s fiasco at the Royal College of Physicians (RCP), where attendees of an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) regarding concerns about PAs linked the behaviour of the RCP’s panel, which was accused of ‘contempt’, shutting down discussion and even filibustering, to the RCP’s financial conflict of interest in the millions of pounds it reportedly makes from administering PA examinations.

The RCP is hiding their full survey data from FRCP and Council until after the EGM vote. This lack of transparency is unacceptable…

The RCP Registrar, who sets RCP professional standards, works at this Trust. (Important note: there is no indication she was involved in this case [of steroid/antibiotic administration].)

Doctors at Torbay report PAs being used as “middle grades” – clear scope creep. Yet the Registrar, whose job is to “create consensus” & uphold standards, has been involved in withholding critical data that potentially sways the EGM vote. This is not leadership.

The Registrar’s own job description emphasises “accountability for clinical and professional affairs” and “…setting and maintaining professional standards.” How can the Registrar fulfil these duties, ensuring patient safety and upholding standards, when those very standards are being violated in their own Trust? This is an untenable conflict of interest.

In our view, the Registrar has failed in their core responsibility for transparency and integrity of RCP decision-making. We call for their resignation to restore trust in the RCP. The RCP’s position on PAs is currently compromised.

The statement concludes with a call on all voting members of the RCP to vote to support all the motions tabled at the EGM calling for a rethink on the issue of PAs:

Lastly, we are asking that Fellows vote in favour of all five motions as presented, to ensure that a safe revaluation of the PA role can be conducted to ensure patient safety and to ensure continued viable training of the medical profession moving forward.

The use of PAs, which is considered by nine out of ten doctors to be dangerous to patients and confuses many patients, who do not realise that they have not been seen and treated by a fully-qualified medic, is being pushed by the government as a way of ‘downskilling’ the NHS, reducing costs and allowing increased profits for private providers, under the guise of the so-called ‘NHS Workforce Plan’ as part of the ‘Integrated Care Systems’ (ICS) project.

ICS, formerly called ‘Accountable Care Organisations’ (ACOs) after the US system it copied, were renamed after awareness began to spread that ACOs were a system for withholding care from patients and that care providers were incentivised to cut care because they receive a share of the ‘savings’. The system remained the same, but the rebranding disguised the reality.

The government used a ‘statutory instrument’ (SI) to pass these changes, avoiding proper parliamentary scrutiny, but both the Tories and Keir Starmer’s Labour support these and other measures to cheapen the NHS for private involvement and only independent MP Claudia Webbe spoke against them during the brief SI debate. Green peer Natalie Bennett’s motion in the House of Lords to attempt to kill the instrument was defeated by the Tories with the help of Labour peers.

At least two people have already died avoidably because of misdiagnosis by PAs. Emily Chesterton, 30, who didn’t realise she wasn’t seeing a doctor, was treated for a calf strain when she had a deep vein thrombosis that led to a lethal embolism. Ben Peters, 25, was sent home from A&E with a ‘panic attack’ that was really a serious heart condition. A doctor’s Twitter/X thread includes details of others said to have died because of issues around PAs.

If you wish to republish this post for non-commercial use, you are welcome to do so – see here for more.

Health Officials To Ban Fairy Bread And Replace It With Mung Beans

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 11/03/2024 - 7:17am in

Australian health officials are reportedly set to ban a childhood favourite, fairy bread, in schools and day care centres and replace it with mung beans. The move is designed to get children away from sugar and used to a life that contains little to no joy.

”We need to get our kids healthy, active and ready for a life in which they work hard to make things better for the boomers,” said a health official. ”Sugar can cause weak bones and obesity, which we don’t want in our future aged care workers.”

”Little fatties grow in to big fatties and that’s not a good thing.”

When asked why mung beans were chosen as the dish designed to replace fairy bread, the health official said: ”Our bad we let the Greens decide.”

”Apparently some people like mung beans.”

”Sorry kids, anyway don’t be sad, it could’ve been worse the Greens did want to replace Zooper Doopers with Kale pops.”

”We had to draw the line somewhere.”

Mark Williamson

@MWChatShow

You can follow The (un)Australian on twitter @TheUnOz or like us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/theunoz.

We’re also on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/theunoz

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Royal College of GPs deletes article exposing lack of supervision of ‘PA’ not-doctors

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 20/02/2024 - 11:36am in

RCGP has been equivocal about government’s changes to use of ‘associates’ without medical training to treat patients

The Royal College of GPs has deleted an article that detailed the extent of the lack of supervision by fully-qualified doctors over the actions and decisions of the ‘physician associate’ (PA) roles – who have only two years’ training – whose use the government is expanding.

The use of PAs, which is considered by ninety percent of doctors to be dangerous to patients and confuses many patients, who do not realise that they have not been seen and treated by a fully-qualified medic, is being pushed by the government as a way of ‘downskilling’ the NHS, reducing costs and allowing increased profits for private providers, under the guise of the so-called ‘NHS Workforce Plan’ as part of the ‘Integrated Care Systems’ (ICS) project.

ICS, formerly called ‘Accountable Care Organisations’ (ACOs) after the US system it copied, were renamed after awareness began to spread that ACOs were a system for withholding care from patients and that care providers were incentivised to cut care because they receive a share of the ‘savings’. The system remained the same, but the rebranding disguised the reality.

Now, as Pulse magazine has revealed, the RCGP has deleted a case study that revealed a shocking lack and laxity in the supervision of a PA:

According to the now-deleted case study, held a ‘minimum’ of 27 10-minute appointments each day and asked the on-call doctor to review patients for an ‘urgent opinion’ only ‘once every two to three months’

…After screenshots circulated on social media, the RCGP removed the case study at the PA’s request…

…The case study previously said: ‘[The PA] has three, ten-minute appointment slots in a row, and at the end of those slots has a ten-minute break for administration and including having prescriptions signed by a GP.’ 

It said supervision is ‘shared’ between GPs working at the practice, and that for ‘non-urgent concerns’ there is a ‘ten minute debrief with an on-call doctor’ which takes place every two to three weeks.

Matt Kneale, co-chair of the Doctors’ Association UK which along with the British Medical Association is opposing the changes, said:

Much of the concern from doctors in recent months has built up from a lack of transparency from Royal Colleges about where they stand on physician associates.

While we are grateful that the RCGP has removed what can, at best, be described as unprofessional practice, we maintain that the College needs to sit down with wider stakeholders on the concerns around PA roles and scope more generally.

The RCGP has voiced ‘concerns’ about the new system, but has not formally opposed it, despite the outrage of doctors and the increasing examples of companies hiring PAs instead of doctors and even making doctors redundant to switch to PAs.

The government’s expansion and renaming of these roles, along with backdoor to regulate them via the General Medical Council (GMC), which regulates doctors – is part of what experts call ‘scope creep’: physician’s assistants and anaesthetist’s assistants, as they were originally called, are valuable roles in carefully limited settings, but NHS England, the government body appointed to run (and run down) the NHS has been using them way beyond their original scope, for example even to perform some types of brain surgery and expecting them to ‘learn on the job’.

The government used a ‘statutory instrument’ to pass these changes, avoiding proper parliamentary scrutiny, but both the Tories and Keir Starmer’s Labour support these and other measures to cheapen the NHS for private involvement and only independent MP Claudia Webbe spoke against them during the brief debate. Green peer Natalie Bennett has tabled a motion in the House of Lords in an attempt to kill the instrument, but without support from the notional ‘opposition’, it is unlikely to succeed.

During the Statutory Instrument debate, Tory former Health Secretary Therese Coffey gushed about the potential for using three associates to anaesthetise patients during operations, with just a single consultant anaesthetist monitoring remotely as an ‘efficiency’.

At least two people have already died avoidably because of misdiagnosis by PAs. Emily Chesterton, 30, who didn’t realise she wasn’t seeing a doctor, was treated for a calf strain when she had a deep vein thrombosis that led to a lethal embolism. Ben Peters, 25, was sent home from A&E with a ‘panic attack’ that was really a serious heart condition.

If you wish to republish this post for non-commercial use, you are welcome to do so – see here for more.

Labour loses half its support among Muslims who voted Labour in 2019

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 06/02/2024 - 12:09am in

Support for Greens surges

Support for Labour has collapsed among Muslim voters according to a new poll commissioned by the Labour Muslim Network (LMN), with a huge majority citing Keir Starmer’s support for Israeli genocide as a decisive factor.

In the 2019 general election, 86% of Muslims voted Labour – but that has now dropped to 43%. 85% of those surveyed said that Palestine was either very important (70%) or somewhat important (15%) in deciding how they will vote at the next general election. The poll showed support among Muslims for the Greens, who have made clear calls for an end to the slaughter in Gaza, has rocketed by 900%.

LMN has repeatedly identified huge issues with the rampant Islamophobia in the party under Starmer and reported in 2022, long before Israel’s genocidal assault in Gaza, that more than two thirds of Muslims don’t trust Labour to sort out its anti-Muslim bigotry. The group said of the latest survey results:

For decades the Muslim community has been amongst the most loyal Labour supporters anywhere in the United Kingdom. The findings of this new opinion poll shows a startling collapse of this electoral and communal relationship.

This is a crisis point for the future of the relationship between the British Muslim community and the Labour Party.

These findings come in the context of over 100 days of Israel’s continuous assault on Gaza. Over 25,000 Palestinians have been killed, more than 10,000 of whom are children, and the Labour Party’s response has been unacceptable and deeply offensive to Muslims across Britain. Muslim voters have been watching and are now sending a clear message – they will not support any political party that does not fervently oppose the crimes committed against the people of Gaza.

The Labour leadership must change paths now or risk losing the support of the Muslim community for a generation.

There is no sign of anything but token attempts to camouflage the contempt of Starmer and his faction for Muslims, while their support for Israel’s war crimes appears absolute.

The most astonishing thing in the survey is that Labour voting intention among Muslims has not disappeared entirely. It would surely do so if Muslims had a clear alternative, instead of the two main parties being one group with two rosette colours.

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Hastings council leadership quits Labour to form Independent Group

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 15/12/2023 - 6:09am in

Resignation statement damning of lack of policies and vision

Hastings council cabinet (including two Green then-members) in May 2022

The leadership of Hastings Council has announced its resignation from the Labour Party to form a Hastings Independents group. A statement from the group summarising their reasons reads:

After long and careful consideration, we have made the difficult decision today to leave the Labour Party and become independent councillors.

There are many reasons, but our view is that standing up for Hastings, and especially for our residents, will be much easier as independents.

The national Labour Party no longer provides us with the policies, the support or the focus on local government that we need given the many local issues we are committed to tackling.

We will now concentrate on standing up for Hastings, to work in partnership with all those who are passionate to drive our town forward, and our work in our communities, which is why we all became councillors.

As a group, we will not be making any further comment until the New Year.

Cllr Paul Barnett Leader of the Council
Cllr Maya Evans Deputy Leader of the Council
Cllr Andy Batsford Cabinet member
Cllr John Cannan Cabinet member
Cllr Ali Roark Cabinet member
Cllr Simon Willis Cabinet member
HASTINGS INDEPENDENTS

The Hastings cabinet consisted last year of six Labour and two Green councillors, but the coalition fell apart with the Greens ‘booted out’. Labour was already a minority on the council, but the largest party with fifteen out of thirty-two councillors. Now the party has less than a third of Hastings councillors, having already lost Norwich, Oxford and Burnley councils over outrage at Keir Starmer’s support for Israeli war crimes. It remains to be seen in the new year whether the genocide in Gaza is among the Hastings group’s ‘many reasons’.

Update: Statements by two of the councillors include Gaza among the reasons for their resignation:

Statement Cllr John Cannan, Wishing Tree Ward, Hastings Borough Council

Cabinet Member and Chair of the Charity Committee

14th December 2023

In May 2022 I was extremely proud to be elected as Labour Councillor for Wishing Tree Ward. I worked hard to get elected and received great support from the Labour Group. That same group of Labour comrades provided me with so much encouragement as I found my feet as a new Councillor. Since that time I have worked hard for the residents of Wishing Tree advocating for them across a broad range of issues.

In October 2022 I was delighted to be invited to join Cabinet as Chair of The Charity Committee. It’s been a real pleasure to work with a cabinet group of such talented, energetic, creative, and hardworking people. I have thoroughly enjoyed the journey described above which is why it has been such a difficult decision for me to make to resign from the Labour party with immediate effect.

Unfortunately, during the time I describe above the Labour Party Leadership and officials have moved the party away from the core values that I hold dear; protecting the most vulnerable, fairness, co-operatively working for the common good, protecting the interests of workers, cherishing the NHS, green policies to fight climate change, international co-operation to name a few. This has been evidenced by a failure to support striking workers and their unions, rowing back on green investment, support for the continued privatisation of the NHS and an appalling response to the tragedy currently taking place in Gaza.

At a local level unelected party officials have undermined Hastings Borough Council leadership over and over again. They vetoed a popular co-operation agreement with the Green Party. They have prevented popular local politicians from applying to stand as the local MP and have ‘parachuted in’ their favoured candidate. What does all this say about local democracy? They have blocked the deputy leader of the Council from standing as a councillor in the forthcoming local election. Where once there was a broad church receptive to ideas from all perceived wings of the party, there is now a narrow-minded vindictiveness directed at those on the left.

I wouldn’t join the Labour Party as it presents and operates today, hence this decision.

I look forward to working with the very talented group of newly independent Councillors who, I know, will put what is best for Hastings at the very core of everything they do.

Statement by Cllr. Maya Evans, Hollington Ward, Hastings Borough Council

Deputy Leader of the Council, Cabinet member for Regeneration & Climate Change

14th December 2023

I would like to announce my resignation of the Labour whip.

I was proudly elected councillor for Hollington ward in 2018 and have taken great pride and honour in serving my residents. Hollington has proven to me the importance of community solidarity and how people who have been given the least in life, often give the most when it comes to helping others. I have been both humbled and inspired by residents who have twice elected me to represent them on the council, and to be the change they want to see.

Over the last few years, it has become increasingly apparent that the Labour Party has moved away from many of its core values and principles. To woo the Tory vote the Labour Party has lost its way, leaning into right wing policies and rhetoric which has become increasingly difficult to publicly justify and support.

I understand that Labour’s current election strategy is to mirror the Tories, and although I want rid of the current abhorrent Government, I cannot continue to volunteer hundreds of hours to an organisation which no longer represents working people, no longer stands up for the persecuted and oppressed, and no longer has a vision to radically improve life for a huge portion of society who are on low incomes, marginalised and vulnerable. I know lots of Labour supporters will feel confusion and maybe even anger at my decision, however it has now become impossible to continue with integrity.

Locally we have been micromanaged by Westminster centric unelected Labour Party officials who have barely visited Hastings let alone understand the town and its residents. The national Labour Party has denied Hastings’ members the right to select their own parliamentary candidate and selection of councillors; and there is now a well-established national pattern of the Labour Party blocking people of colour from leadership positions. It appears unelected Labour officials now have a very fixed idea around who is electable, sadly this tends not to favour people of colour, working class people, or local people from the community. I have personally been blocked by the Labour Party from standing as an MP and also to re-stand as a councillor, reasons given were spurious.

Labour’s policy position on Gaza has been completely unforgiveable, from not supporting a ceasefire, to silencing politicians from speaking out, expelling an MP, unofficially instructing councillors not to attend peace marches, and enforcing a three-line whip which led to the resignation of 10 Labour MP shadow ministers. To date 18,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, 7,000 of which were children. To stay silent is to not support humanity.

I will continue to work hard for my residents as a Hastings Independent councillor, I will continue to uphold the values and principles I was elected upon, moreover I will continue to put Hastings first, prioritising everything I do for the furtherment of the town and its residents.

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Liverpool Independents announce they will stand against Labour MP Maria Eagle

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 22/11/2023 - 2:12am in

MP’s collusion with Keir Starmer to defeat ceasefire motion triggers challenge in seat where independents trounced Labour in May

The Liverpool Community Independents (LCI) group has today announced that it will stand a candidate to challenge incumbent MP Maria Eagle in the Liverpool Garston constituency – currently Garston and Halewood – at the next general election.

In May, working-class south Liverpool community Garston saw Labour lose both its council seats heavily to the LCI’s Lucy Williams and Sam Gorst, despite a disgusting Labour smear campaign in the election, so Eagle has cause to worry, although the resources and volunteers needed for a constituency wide fight will be considerably greater.

LCI leader Alan Gibbons – who trounced Labour in May in Orrell Park in the north of the city – has said that the decision to fight Eagle for the seat is a ‘historical necessity’ after she abstained last week on a parliamentary amendment demanding a ceasefire in Israel’s slaughter of Palestinian civilians in Gaza, including at least five thousand children.

Garston LCI councillor Sam Gorst added that Ms Eagle had committed ‘dereliction of duty’ in supporting the Gaza genocide as well as interventionist UK military action elsewhere. Colleague Lucy Williams has said she would be willing to stand as the group’s candidate if selected.

On the other side of the Mersey Jo Bird, a popular Jewish Birkenhead councillor hounded out of Labour by the Starmer regime, has been selected by the Greens to fight for the Birkenhead seat in which Labour is ousting left-winger Mick Whitley to stand right-winger Alison McGovern.

An earlier version of this article stated incorrectly that Jo Bird is contesting the Wallasey seat.

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Fractured voice, fractured nation?

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 12/10/2023 - 6:46pm in

Voices of the Voice: Marcia Langton, Thomas Mayo, Anthony Albanese

By Tad Tietze

This post is dedicated to the memory of the essayist and blogger The Piping Shrike, who passed away suddenly and unexpectedly on 15 July this year. A dear friend and a key inspiration for this blog’s “anti-politics” analysis, as well as my thinking on race and the Constitution.

Strip away the rancour that has characterised debate leading up to this weekend’s referendum on a Voice to Parliament and a near-certain majority No vote will go down as the latest in a long line of failures to resolve the contradictions faced by the Australian state in addressing the “Indigenous problem” that bedevils its legitimacy.

That legitimacy is one which has been undermined by having its origins in the colonial dispossession of the continent’s original inhabitants, and which — to date — has been managed in explicitly racial terms.

Credible opinion polls have converged on the harsh reality that the campaign to entrench an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander advisory body in the nation’s Constitution is destined to fail, most likely by a wide margin. So stark are the trends that, as of this writing just days before the vote, only some combination of the biggest polling failure and the biggest late swing in Australian electoral history could deliver a victory for the Yes campaign.

A TORTURED PROPOSAL

The proposed constitutional amendment demands the formation of a new “body, to be called the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice” to “make representations to the Parliament and the Executive Government of the Commonwealth on matters relating to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples”.

Paradoxically, the “solution” embodied by the Voice leaves intact the racially discriminatory aspects of the Constitution, especially the “race power” of Section 51(xxvi), which was originally included to allow discrimination against “coloured races”, especially Asians, and which underpinned the nation’s infamous White Australia Policy.

Leading Voice supporter and constitutional law expert George Williams has argued that the Voice is seen by Indigenous leaders as a way of advising on the use of the race power to “move away from negative, race-based interventions to laws that drive better outcomes for our First Peoples”.[1] It’s probably for this reason that the Voice will have not only its own Section but its own Chapter in the Constitution; to give it sufficient weight to impact on racially discriminatory powers that have in the past been used against (as well as for) Aboriginal people.

Notably, however, the proposed amendment includes nothing about the Voice having to be representative or act in the interests of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, nor that it needs to be democratic in any way. And besides, the details of how it would work are left to the Parliament, which would retain the “power to make laws with respect to matters relating to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice, including its composition, functions, powers and procedures.”

In the past I’ve written about the racialised nature of the Australian Constitution, as well as attempts by the official “Recognition” process to find a way to remove its offending sections and replace them with pro-Indigenous and/or anti-racial-discrimination powers.[2] Contrary to popular mythology, the 1967 referendum didn’t deliver equal rights for Aboriginal people, but instead brought them under the race power, from which they had been excluded. This allowed the Commonwealth to make legislation about them as a racial group, whether this took the form of “positive” discrimination (granting land rights or native title, protecting cultural rights, implementing Aboriginal-only health and social programs, etc.) or “negative” discrimination (overriding cultural rights in favour of development in the Hindmarsh Island Bridge case, the Northern Territory Intervention, multiple suspensions of the Racial Discrimination Act, etc.).

Because significant post-1967 gains for Indigenous people had occurred under the aegis the race power, most Indigenous leaders — as well as supportive legal experts and politicians — were nervous that any attempt to remove racially discriminatory provisions needed to be balanced by creating a new constitutional power for Aboriginal advancement. This proposal ran aground after it provoked acrimonious splits on the conservative side of politics, with opposition to positive discrimination based on Aboriginality taking a similar form to more recent right-wing hostility to the Voice.

With the constitutional change process stalled, Aboriginal leaders were next infuriated by Prime Minister Tony Abbott ramming through major changes to the funding of Indigenous programs without bothering to go through the usual consultations, in May 2014. From this time on they warmed to the idea that they needed a permanent place within the state so as not to be shut out of influence over government decision-making again. In July 2015 a meeting between 39 leading activists, Tony Abbott, and then Opposition Leader Bill Shorten led to the drafting of the “Kirribilli Statement”, with one of the options canvassed being “a new advisory body established under the Constitution”.[3] This was based on an idea for a Voice first floated by Noel Pearson in his 2014 Quarterly Essay, “A Rightful Place”, although at that time Pearson still wanted the race power removed.[4]

While the 2017 “Uluru Statement from the Heart” is often portrayed as a plea to the Australian people from the grassroots of Indigenous communities, the Uluru Dialogues whose decisions it summarised were in fact official consultations carefully curated and tightly managed from above, as described by one of those who led them, constitutional law expert Megan Davis:

The dialogues were led by an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander subcommittee of the referendum council that I chaired. We sought advice from a sample of Nations and communities via a structured, deliberative process that walked representatives, chosen by local Indigenous community organisations, through a tightly structured, intensive civics program and an assessment of legal options for reform from the expert panel and the joint select parliamentary committee. Prior to the dialogues we spent a year in communities seeking permission, refining the process and running a trial dialogue. This was a very serious constitutional process. The question of meaningful recognition led to the Voice to Parliament being the primary reform across all dialogues. Agreement-making or treaty and truth-telling were non-constitutional but highly regarded as meaningful recognition. They were included in a framework of change known as Voice Makarrata.[5]

Little wonder that the Uluru Statement ended up with proposals so closely aligned with the direction that the most prominent Indigenous leaders had already been moving towards in the Kirribilli Statement. Most importantly, the Dialogues treated the need to remove or replace the race power as an issue of lesser importance.

Suffice to say, it shouldn’t be surprising that the Yes campaign has found it so hard to sell the Voice as a blow against racism when it rests on the continuation of the race power. Or to claim that a special permanent state body based on “Indigeneity” (which is in part defined by shared ancestry) is different to one based on racial distinctions (also usually defined by shared ancestry). Or to speak of how it will address Indigenous disadvantage when it doesn’t have to act in Indigenous interests. Or how it won’t override claims of “never ceded” black sovereignty while at the same time as being incorporated into the Constitution of the state, the sole sovereign lawmaker of the land.

Or to call the Voice “representative” or “an enhancement of democracy” when it has not been proposed to be either. Or to tell people there is “plenty of detail” (“just Google it!”) available about what it will look like, such as the Calma-Langton Report, but then not want to debate those details because Parliament might decide on a different model.

And that’s leaving aside the multitude of mixed messages made by various Voice advocates about its role in future policies, treaties, and reparation claims.

Polling trend as at 11/10/2023, via Kevin Bonham (@kevinbonham on X)

‘NO PLAN B’

The failure of the Voice referendum will have a major impact on how Indigenous and mainstream politics relate to each other, a secondary consequence of which is likely to be a significant shake-up of power relations within the small but influential Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander political class, as well as its relationship to the Indigenous people it purports to represent.

In this sense Noel Pearson has been truthful that “there is no Plan B” by the current crop of Aboriginal leaders if the Voice fails. His promise to leave politics if that happens reflects that this has been their last-gasp effort to secure a permanent place within governance at the national level. Or as he formulates it, “Without a constant voice in the ear of the government and the parliament of the day, the myriad of issues that need to be tackled won’t be in the consciousness of the decision makers and the people who are allocating funding from Canberra.”[6]

Ironically, the push for a Voice locked into the structure of the state has come just as Aboriginal representation in Federal Parliament has reached its highest ever level, a greater share of parliamentary seats than the proportion of Indigenous people within the Australian population. This has led to the spectacle of supporters of an Indigenous “Voice” (singular) having to downplay the breakthrough of 11 Indigenous “Voices” (plural) being able to speak and vote. They’ve also attacked those Indigenous voices — like Jacinta Nampijinpa Price’s on the right and Lidia Thorpe’s on the left — that have refused to toe the line and support the Voice.

Similarly, No campaigners like Nyunggai Warren Mundine have argued that a single national Voice would force a false homogeneity onto the diversity of Indigenous interests, including traditional owners who identify with specific first nations, or individuals who are not connected with existing Indigenous organisations.

Perhaps predictably, a survey by the reputable pollster Resolve found that support for the Voice among Indigenous voters was running at just 59 percent a week out from the referendum, much lower than the 80 percent that polls had been showing at the beginning of the year.[7]

With a failure to corral it behind one state body — constitutionally enshrined and thereby given inordinate political weight not just in relation to government but to Aboriginal people — the fragmented and often bitterly divided nature of Indigenous politics will now be more obviously out in the open.

Much like non-Indigenous politics already is.

A POLITICAL ECHO CHAMBER

Meanwhile, Anthony Albanese’s decision to run hard on the Voice will have consequences for intra-ALP and wider left politics. It is hard to imagine a more dramatic squandering of popular good will, weighed down by a poorly judged campaign that showed all the signs of having been hatched in a political echo chamber convinced of its own ability to drive social progress by telling voters to simply trust its good moral intentions.

That has been exacerbated by Labor’s decision to play hardball politics, seeking early on to wedge the Opposition by refusing to make concessions in delivering on a “polite, modest request” that had come directly from the Indigenous authors of the Uluru Statement from the Heart. After all, who would want to question the proposal unless they were racists or reactionaries? However, this guaranteed — after a brief period of disorientation on the right — that the Voice would be a partisan issue.

Maybe Albanese was still on a sugar high from the Coalition’s historic thrashing at the last federal election, in which it lost formerly rusted-on urban bourgeois voters and seats to Teal independents and Greens, but his tactic also destroyed any illusory moment of national political consensus. Perhaps Labor tacticians should’ve spent longer pondering the fact that they’d won majority government with a primary vote of just 32.6 percent; hardly a firm base for such hubristic politics, even if it was cheered on by their press gallery fans at the time.

Just as importantly, by advocating for a significant Constitutional change while purposely revealing a minimum of detail on how it would be implemented, the government set up a situation in which voters are being told to “trust politicians” in whom public trust has been on a downward trend for decades.

The long-run decline of social institutions on which politicians and parties had relied for authority also bedevilled the Yes campaign’s claims to be garnering civil society support for the Voice. While not as pronounced as distrust for Canberra politicians, public wariness regarding the media, large banks and corporations, trade unions, and even organised religions meant that admonitions from these bodies to vote Yes could easily become a poisoned chalice.[8] This came to a head with Qantas, which had gone all-in on the Voice, being exposed for its lousy treatment of its workers and gross profiteering during the pandemic as well as the possibility it had gotten special favours from government on keeping competitors out of Australian airspace.

The contrast with ordinary voters’ own lack of influence on government decision-making around issues affecting their lives could not have been starker in the middle of a cost-of-living crisis.

With detail not on offer, the Yes campaign has alternated between, on the one hand, claiming that the Voice is no more than a modest reform that bestows minimal additional rights on a small minority of the population and, on the other hand, claiming it will produce dramatic changes in how government deals with Aboriginal people that will lead to positive social, economic, health, and cultural benefits where in the past there have only been failures. This has resulted in the curious phenomenon of Labor politicians in government — including Albanese himself — unable to explain why they can’t simply listen to Aboriginal people and implement policies beneficial to them now, given they all say they want to, as if the lack of a Voice was the only thing holding them back.

Given the shambolic state of the No side, its lack of consistent and coherent messaging, and the federal Coalition continuing to be in disarray from last year’s election, it seems implausible to credit much of the collapse in support for the Voice — as some on the left have — to the No campaigners’ Svengali-like ability to deploy fake news, fear, and division. What’s more, polls show that there has been only a small narrowing between the major parties since the referendum bill was debated and passed in May, and that the Coalition is still tracking below its disastrous 2022 primary vote, not what one would expect if the centre right was on the political upswing.[9] Similarly, while Albanese’s approval has declined considerably since the election, Dutton’s has essentially remained flat or even declined a little.[10] And the most detailed polling done on people’s attitudes to the Voice, from the very pro-Voice RedBridge group, suggests that once the Voice started to wobble in the polls it was among traditional Labor voters, those who had stuck with the party even as its core support slowly evaporated over recent decades.[11]

In the meantime, much of the left beyond Labor has fallen in behind the push by Albanese and Indigenous leaders, unable to offer a position on Indigenous self-determination independent of the narrow framework set by mainstream political elites.

For the Greens this involved dropping their clearly stated pre-election policy of putting Treaty and Truth before any Voice, so that they lined up with the Yes campaign and with where most of their voters were leaning on the issue, resulting in their First Nations spokesperson Lidia Thorpe quitting the party.[12] Far left groups, meanwhile, have mostly run the somewhat circular line that while there is nothing in the Voice for Indigenous people, supporting it is nevertheless essential to fight the racist right, which would be emboldened by the failure of Yes now that a referendum has been called.[13]

A BITTER DIVIDE

This last position has also crept into mainstream discussion, as attacks on the No campaign have become more prominent than trying to positively explain how the Voice is meant to work or how it might produce better outcomes. The bitterness of prominent Yes campaigners — implying or openly stating that the No vote is driven by some combination of racism and misinformation — was perhaps best expressed by Marcia Langton:

Every time the No case raises one of their arguments, if you start pulling it apart, you get down to base racism. I’m sorry to say it, but that’s where it lands – or just sheer stupidity.

If you look at any reputable fact-checker, every one of them says the No case is substantially false, they are lying to you.[14]

Despite claims that such criticisms have only been directed at the leaders of the No side, they are in line with the dim view that many Voice advocates have of voters as easily taken in by such appeals. Indeed, for some Yes supporters this referendum is fast becoming Australia’s “Brexit moment”.[15] For Noel Pearson it goes even deeper:

“It’s time to talk about the morality of the choices facing us as Australians. One choice will bring us pride and hope and a belief in one another. And the other will, I think, turn us backwards and bring shame to the country.[16]

Given the significant voter disengagement with the politics of the Voice that has been noted by pollsters, the attempt to apply such narratives to a public unsure about the merits of a constitutional change and worried that it might exacerbate social divisions risks reproducing one element of the UK’s unhinging over Brexit, in which “enlightened” politically engaged people turned on their “backward” fellow voters.

Because cost of living pressures have been preoccupying voters more than the Voice, the outlines of the post-referendum narrative from the left will likely involve addressing economic concerns while bitterly remarking how narrow-minded and self-interested No voters were for foregrounding these. No voters are already being characterised similarly to Hillary Clinton’s infamous description of Trump voters as a basket of deplorables and desperates — on the one hand susceptible to reactionary impulses and on the other driven to vote No by their difficult economic circumstances.

The size of the No vote and the public’s relative detachment mean that the post-referendum polarisation is not likely to be as extreme as that which followed the Brexit and Trump shocks of 2016. However, Yes advocates’ pronunciations of moral failure and contempt for the public are not a formula that can heal more fundamental rifts between a self-absorbed political class and a wary, fractious electorate.

[1] https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/racial-divide-has-always-bee...

[2] https://left-flank.org/2015/06/11/australias-racial-state-indigenous-rec...

[3] https://www.referendumcouncil.org.au/sites/default/files/report_attachme...

[4] https://www.quarterlyessay.com.au/essay/2014/09/a-rightful-place

[5] https://www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au/comment/topic/2022/08/06/what-happen...

[6] https://www.3aw.com.au/there-is-no-plan-b-noel-pearsons-strong-message-f...

[7] https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/indigenous-support-for-voice-fal...

[8] https://theconversation.com/5-charts-show-how-trust-in-australias-leader...

[9] https://www.pollbludger.net/fed2025/bludgertrack/

[10] https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/newspoll

[11] https://x.com/KosSamaras/status/1706214900199276696

[12] https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/feb/06/senator-lidia-tho...

[13] https://redflag.org.au/article/why-left-should-vote-yes-referendum

[14] https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-09-13/marcia-langton-clarifies-no-camp-...

[15] https://www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au/comment/topic/2023/09/16/the-voice-o...

[16] https://www.news.com.au/national/politics/noel-pearson-says-a-no-result-...

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