Divisive voice to Parliament still on Labor’s agenda

The last thing Anthony ‘The Liar’ Albanese needs is another divisive debate on Indigenous relations, but if his corrupt union boss mates have their way, the push for a racist voice in Parliament won’t be going away.

After the flush of victory at the 2022 Federal election Albo burnt a lot of his early political capital with his personal legacy project, also known as the Voice to Parliament referendum.

We all know the story. Far-left extremists tried to insert their neo-Marxist identity politics into our nation’s founding document, the Australian Constitution, and they found a useful idiot in Albanese to help them. He saw it as an opportunity to go down in history as the man who delivered it.

There was just one problem: you can’t change the Constitution at a whim. You need the permission of the Australian people, and a big majority of us ultimately said no despite a well-funded ‘yes’ campaign supported by the government and big corporations keen to show their progressive credentials.

Albo walked away from the bruising result, pretending it was no big deal. The activists wailed incessantly, so confident were they at the beginning we would all just fall into line. They believed they were entitled to what they wanted and blamed everyone but themselves when they failed to get it. They even blamed Albo.

The Prime Minister may have moved on from his spectacular failure, but not the Australian Council of Trade Unions – the peak body for the union movement, of which the Australian Labor Party is merely the political arm. The ACTU has made a submission to a Parliamentary inquiry calling for yet another national representative body for Indigenous Australians “…whether a constitutionally enshrined voice, a legislated advisory body, or a treaty-negotiating assembly.”

The ACTU also wants to move Australia Day from 26 January, where most Australians want it to stay.

How many times does it need to be said? Labor and its union boss mates don’t care that most Australians rejected the voice to Parliament and don’t care that most Australians want their national day on 26 January. Their contempt for our democratic views is plain for all to see.

Evidently this fight isn’t finished. One Nation played a decisive role as part of the campaign which defeated the Voice, and with our new strength, we’re more than ready to step up and defend equal rights for all Australians again.