From 1h agoKey events1h agoDutton calls Liberals ‘the party of the workers’ amid push for nuclear energy2h agoRussia ‘mocks the UN’ with Ukraine invasion, Wong tells UN general assembly2h agoMore than 200kg of cocaine found by underwater remotely operated vehicle3h agoTolls on Sydney’s Harbour Bridge and Tunnel set to increase3h agoDutton tells no voters to avoid rallies led by pro-Kremlin activist3h agoWelcomeFilters BETAKey events (6)Peter Dutton (6)Australia (5)Sydney (3)Rupert Murdoch (3)26m ago21.34 EDTJosh Butler
Lidia Thorpe may ‘pull back’ on voice opposition if Labor does more on Indigenous deaths in custody
The independent senator Lidia Thorpe has said she could “pull back” on opposing the voice if the government commits to implementing recommendations of the royal commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody, urging Anthony Albanese to announce action before referendum day.
Thorpe told Guardian Australia this week that she was “not necessarily campaigning” against the voice but was hoping for a no result, and agreed with no campaign leader Warren Mundine’s claim that treaties would be more likely in the event the referendum fails.
She also claimed she told Albanese that her public stance on the referendum could be influenced if the government committed to implement the remaining recommendations of the 1991 deaths in custody inquiry and the Bringing Them Home report on the forced removal of children from Indigenous families.
Thorpe said:
I’m still waiting for movement from the government on the royal commission recommendations.
He [Albanese] needs to act. The pressure’s on.
I said you’ve got three weeks – announce the recommendations are being implemented, take it to the election if you want to – and I’d pull back. He knows that.
More on this story here:
Lidia Thorpe may ‘pull back’ on voice opposition if Labor does more on Indigenous deaths in custodyRead moreUpdated at 21.45 EDT51m ago21.09 EDT
Peter Dutton sees Liberal return to government in 2025
Dutton wraps up his speech by saying “I believe that we can win the next election, no question in my mind about it.”
He continues, ending to a standing ovation:
We listen to our membership. We reflect the views and the values of our membership through our policies that were enunciate to the Australian public. And if we stay that course, if we can campaign well in our marginal seats, if we continue to keep the pressure on a bad prime minister, we will stand there and 2025 together united as a Liberal family, claiming success, a return to government and return to a much brighter future for our wonderful country.
Updated at 21.22 EDT1h ago21.03 EDT
Opposition leader decries lack of ‘answers’ on voice
Dutton then moves on to the Indigenous voice to parliament, telling the party “when we took our position to say no…
2023-09-22 20:45:50
Original from www.theguardian.com