Slippery Albo Dodges the Treaty Issue By James Reed
PM Albo was grilled this week on radio, as to whether his government supported a treaty if the Voice got through. He declined to give a straight answer, but his crooked answer gave the game away. He said that Australians are voting on the Voice not the treaty, so nothing to see here. But, he also said, well the states are going ahead with it, so why worry, be happy? Yes, that is the problem. The federal treaty is what the elites behind the Voice want, as a path to massive reparations, perhaps new taxes upon all aspects of modern Australian life, and the creation of a Black state separate from Australia, as Keith Windschuttle has argued, and perhaps closely tied with communist China, given the communist influence in this movement.
We have covered the reparations movement in California, which is moving to give Blacks, even those who did not have ancestors who were slaves, so much loot that it is likely the entire state will be bankrupt. If that could develop there, there is no reason why an equally weak and woke Australia would not go down the same path.
Disaster looms, and only a decisive thrashing by the No side can stop the planned destruction of Australia by the globalist elite and communists championing the Voice.
“Anthony Albanese is under pressure to clarify his position on a treaty with Indigenous Australians after he repeatedly dodged the question in a lively radio interview.
The Prime Minister committed to the Uluru Statement from the Heart in full, including a Makaratta Commission to oversee “treaty” and “truth-telling” with Indigenous Australians, in his election victory speech.
Draft changes to Labor’s national platform, due to be taken to the party’s national conference later this month, suggested the government would take steps towards a treaty within this term of parliament.
But asked on Wednesday, Mr Albanese was unwilling to say whether his government would negotiate a treaty should the Voice referendum be successful.
“What is before the Australian people is a referendum, which is about Voice which is the first part of the Uluru Statement from the Heart. It’s about listening and about results,” he told ABC RN Breakfast.
Mr Albanese’s said processes to negotiate treaties were ongoing with the states and likened being asked if he supported treaty to “like saying do you support the sun coming up.”
“It’s occurring in Victoria … It’s occurring in Queensland. It’s occurring in the Northern Territory,” he said.
Host Patricia Karvelas repeatedly pushed back on the Prime Minister as she sought to nail down his position on the Commonwealth’s role in treaty negotiation.
“It doesn’t even say that in the Uluru Statement from the Heart. It doesn’t say that, it doesn’t speak about the Commonwealth negotiating treaties. It doesn’t say that Patricia, so don’t get sucked into (the No campaign argument),” Mr Albanese responded.
“I’m not getting sucked into anything. I just want to know what your position is,” Karvelas quipped back.
“What the Commonwealth has a role in is the referendum that we‘ll put to the Australian people in the last quarter, that is what is happening.
“Treaties are … negotiations are occurring in Victoria, in Queensland and in the Northern Territory,” the Prime Minister responded.”
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