Last week I saw the first TV advertisements promoting a Yes vote for the Voice to parliament.
At first glance it made sense to give the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people an additional constitutional power of representation to parliament … then I started thinking.
Do Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders already have political representation?
The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) states that 3.8 % of Australians identify themselves as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander. The Federal parliament is made up of 227 members, of which 11 elected representatives identify themselves as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander. This provides a 4.8% representation for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander citizens.
Senator Viki Campion in the Guardian (03.12.22 ) observed numerous other forms of additional representation, including
“the Parliamentary Indigenous Evaluation Committee, the secretaries subcommittee on Indigenous affairs, the National Indigenous Australians Agency Advisory Body , the Prime Ministers Indigenous Advisory Committee, the 151 land trusts, 31 Local Aboriginal Land Councils, the more than 50 Aboriginal peak Organisations providing advice to government, the more than 1 Billion dollar Department of Indigenous Affairs, or the tax payer funded Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander social just commission.”
(1 x Federal Department and 8 equivalent State & Territory Departments. National Indigenous Australians Agency (NIAA) = 32 Offices 1200 staff. Torres Strait Regional Authority (TSRA), Council of Peaks (80+ organisations across Nation), Office of Registration of Indigenous Corporations (ORIC), About 700 Regional and Local Organisations.)