Dr John Gardiner-Garden
Social Policy Group
Major Issues Summary
Introduction
The Origin of Commonwealth Involvement
in Aboriginal Affairs
The Lead-up to the 1967
Bill
The 1967 Bill
The Referendum
Campaign
The Yes Campaign
The No Campaign
The Result
The Implications of the
Result
Conclusion
Endnotes
A decade long public campaign ended with a referendum on 27 May
1967. Two of the questions put sought approval for laws which would
change the sections of the Australian Constitution which mentioned
Aborigines. They received a massive 90.77% Yes vote and were passed
in all six States. Laws were subsequently passed:
- removing the impediment in s.51(xxvi) to the Commonwealth
Government making special laws with respect to Aborigines
- removing the impediment in s.127 to counting Aboriginal people
in the census.
Some commentators have called this referendum a watershed
'changing forever the social and political relationship between
Aborigines and non-Aborigines'. The proper significance of the
referendum has, however, been obscured to some extent by popular
myths. It is, for example, widely believed that the referendum was
whole-heartedly supported by both sides of politics, that it ended
legal discrimination, conferred the vote, equal wages and
citizenship on Indigenous Australians, and that it permitted for
the first time Commonwealth government involvement in Aboriginal
Affairs. None of this was the case:
- the Menzies and Holt Governments were less than enthusiastic
about altering s.51(xxvi)
- the repeal of the State legislation which discriminated against
Aboriginal people was a process which was independent of the 1967
referendum and which had began before the referendum
- Aboriginal voting rights had been clarified by the Commonwealth
government five years before the referendum and the extension of
award wages to Aborigines occurred in 1968 as a result of actions
unrelated to the referendum
- the Commonwealth Government had been involved in Aboriginal
Affairs in the Northern Territory since 1911 and, through the
grants provision in s.96 of the Constitution, could have been
involved in State Aboriginal Affairs before 1967 if it had wanted
to be
- the referendum result did not automatically make the
Commonwealth more involved and indeed little changed for 5
years.
Though its practical significance may be questioned and though
it has not lead to parity between indigenous and non-indigenous
Australians in social, economic and health status, the 1967
referendum has provided a head of power for some significant
legislation and has been of unquestionable symbolic significance.
Although the event may have become distorted by myths, it has come
to act as a form of historical shorthand for a decade of change
which begun in the early 1960s and ended in the early 1970s. It is
the 30th anniversary of this era of change which is effectively
being commemorated in May 1997.
Introduction
On 27 May 1967 a referendum question concerned with ss.51(xxvi)
and 127 of the Constitution received a massive 90.77% Yes vote and
passed in all six States. The result opened the way for much
greater Commonwealth Government involvement in the area of
Aboriginal Affairs. Indeed, identifiable Commonwealth expenditure
on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander specific programs has
increased from nothing in 1967- 68 to $1.6 billion in 1996- 97
(although a large portion of this simply substitutes for
expenditure which would have been incurred through mainstream
programs had the specific programs not existed)(1).
Some commentators have called the referendum a watershed
'changing forever the social and political relationship between
Aborigines and non-Aborigines'.(2) The proper significance of the
referendum has, however, been obscured to some extent by popular
myths. These myths include that the referendum was whole-heartedly
supported by both sides of politics and that it conferred the vote,
equal wages and citizenship on indigenous Australians and that it
ended legal discrimination. The referendum did none of these
things.
The referendum also, has not lead to parity between indigenous
and non-indigenous Australians in social, economic and health
status. Indigenous Australians represent only 1.6% of the
Australian population but represent more than 14% of people in
Australian prisons and even more of those in police custody.
Although their rate of participation in further education is
gradually closing in on the national average, Indigenous
Australians experience an unemployment rate nearly 3 times that for
non-indigenous Australians and enjoy an average income only
two-thirds the national average.(3) They are 2 to 3 times more
likely to be hospitalised, have babies die at birth 2 to 4 times
more frequently than is the Australian average, are hospitalised
for respiratory disease and injury at 3 to 4 times the normal rate
and for infectious disease at 4 to 5 times the normal rate, and
have a death rate from infectious disease which is 15 to 18 times
what is generally expected.(4)
The 30th anniversary of the 1967 referendum offers the
opportunity for policy makers to take stock of progress. Essential
for any such stock-taking is, however, a better understanding of
the past.
The Origin of Commonwealth
Involvement in Aboriginal Affairs
Aborigines were barely mentioned in the deliberations of the
Federal Conferences and Conventions of 1890, 1891 and 1897- 98.
Although there were many men involved who were known for their
humanity and sensitivity, including Alfred Deakin himself, there
was not one delegate who ever even suggested that there might be
some national obligation to Australia's earliest inhabitants.(5)
The resulting Constitution of 1901 mentions Aboriginal people only
twice, and on both occasions it does so in a negative fashion.
Section 51, in its original form, provided that:
The Parliament shall, subject to this Constitution, have power
to make laws for the peace, order, and good government of the
Commonwealth with respect to:
...(xxvi) The people of any race, other than the Aboriginal race in
any State, for whom it is deemed necessary to make special
laws.
Section 127 provided:
In reckoning the numbers of the people of the Commonwealth, or
of a State or other part of the Commonwealth, Aboriginal natives
shall not be counted.
Australia's 'Founding Fathers' appear to have been so
uninterested in Aboriginal issues that there is hardly a word
recorded which throws light on why the above sections were so
worded.
There have been several explanations for the wording of
s.51.
Firstly, that the types of laws which the delegates and
'founding fathers' had in mind for 'people of any race' were laws
such as those which had already been passed in many States
concerning 'the Indian, Afghan and Syrian hawkers; the Chinese
miners, laundrymen, market gardeners and furniture manufacturers;
the Japanese settlers and Kanaka plantation labourers of
Queensland, and the various coloured races employed in the pearl
fisheries of Queensland and Western Australia'.(6) These laws were
designed 'to localise them within defined areas, to restrict their
migration, to confine them to certain occupations, or to give them
special protection and secure their return after a certain period
to the country whence they came'.(7) No-one involved in framing the
Constitution ever suggested that such treatment of racial
minorities was in any way undesirable, but they may have wished to
spare Aborigines from such adverse discrimination. In the absence
of something such as the Racial Discrimination Act 1975
and given the nature of the times, such adverse discrimination may
have seemed a real possibility. Indeed, the Commonwealth was quick
to develop a 'White Australia' immigration policy.
Secondly, it was thought that the Aborigines were a dying race
whose future was unimportant. There were no reliable counts of the
Aboriginal population then available and contemporary guesses
grossly underestimated their probable numbers.(8)
Thirdly, it was assumed that Aboriginal welfare would always be
the responsibility of the states. The Commonwealth was not
initially given any territory on the mainland of Australia and was
not given any direct role in matters to do with land settlement,
industrial development, employment, education or health. Indeed,
the majority of the Royal Commission of 1927-29 recommended against
amending s.51(xxvi) on the grounds that the States were still
better equipped than the Commonwealth to attend to the special
needs of Aborigines within their territories.(9)
Given the nature of the times and the fact that the Commonwealth
in its early years repeatedly passed legislation (for invalid
benefits, voting franchise etc.) which explicitly excluded
Aboriginal people from its provisions, the first of the above
explanations is perhaps not as compelling as the second and
third.
Similarly, there have been several explanations offered for the
wording on s.127.
Firstly, it was physically too difficult to count Aboriginal
people. Kim Beazley Sr, who in the early 1960s supported the
campaign to amend the Constitution, argued that Aborigines had been
exempt from inclusion in the census only because of the physical
difficulty of including them and that: 'neither of those sections
[of the Constitution] was intended to be an affront to the
Aborigines'.(10)
Secondly, it was intended that Aboriginal people have no role in
Federal politics, and as the census was the basis of how many seats
a State had in the Senate, it was decided not to count, for this
purpose, the Aboriginal people.
The second of the above explanations appears the most plausible.
Given that in the 1920s Aboriginal people, who had been counted for
voting in certain State elections were having their names marked
for disqualification from voting in Federal elections (to be
discussed later), it is clear that there was more to not wanting to
count Aboriginal people in the census than physical difficulty.
Indeed, it is worth noting that although changing s.127 opened the
way for the use of census data to inform public policy in the area
of Aboriginal Affairs after 1967, data had been collected on
Aboriginals - including their number - long before 1967 and was
being published in Commonwealth Year Books.
In the end the Constitution left little room for Commonwealth
involvement in indigenous affairs and the welfare of Aboriginal
people remained a State responsibility. For the next sixty years
the States pursued policies which could be broadly called
'assimilationist'. Although legislation in this period varied
greatly by State, in every jurisdiction it tended to touch on
similar areas and in every area laws intended for the 'protection'
or 'welfare' of Aboriginal people became laws which dispossessed,
oppressed and alienated Aboriginal people.(11)
For the first sixty years of Federation, most Aboriginal people
were not regarded as having the right to vote in Federal elections.
Before federation, both women and Aborigines had been entitled to
vote in South Australia and in order to preserve the rights of
South Australian women, s.41 of the new Commonwealth Constitution
provided that 'no adult person' entitled to vote at State elections
should be prevented from voting at federal elections. The
Commonwealth Franchise Act 1902 (Cth) extended the federal
franchise to women. A proposal to include in that Act an extension
of franchise to Aborigines was put, but many in the House of
Representatives argued against it.(12) Isaac Isaacs argued
Aborigines 'have not the intelligence, interest or capacity' to
vote and H B Higgins, argued it was 'utterly inappropriate ...[to]
ask them to exercise an intelligent vote.'(13) The proposal was
defeated and, in the end, section 4 of the 1902 Act specifically
denied the voting rights of 'Aboriginal native[s] of Australia...
unless so entitled under Section 41 of the Constitution'.
In R v Pearson; Ex parte Sipka (1983) 152 CLR 254,
Justice Murphy argued that s.41 of the Constitution provided that
as other States extended the franchise to Aborigines, Aborigines
would automatically become entitled to vote in federal elections as
well.(14) The majority in the above case, however, along with legal
commentators earlier this century, accepted a narrower
interpretation of s.41 - it was purely a transitional provision
relevant to the first federal election in 1901, of no import after
the Commonwealth Franchise Act 1902.(15) Further evidence
that the Commonwealth was intent at the beginning of the century on
excluding Aborigines from their sphere of responsibility might be
found in the Invalid and Old-age Pensions Act 1908, s.16
(1) of which explicitly lists 'Aboriginal natives of Australia'
among the people who 'shall not be qualified to receive an old-age
pension'.
Leaving aside the technical questions associated with voting
rights, it is clear that most Aborigines were simply not being
allowed to vote in Commonwealth elections, even when allowed to
vote in State elections. Some Aborigines even lost their voting
rights in the 1920s and 1930s. Even South Australian Aborigines
enrolled before 1902, were having their right to vote taken away.
In 1921 South Australia adopted a joint Federal-State electoral
roll, as did other States during the 1920s, and the wording of the
new enrolment form implied that no Aborigines, Asians or Pacific
Islanders could vote in Commonwealth elections. On the new, joint
roll a small circle beside any name indicated 'not entitled' to
vote for the Commonwealth'. Although many exclusions of long
enrolled voters were almost certainly unlawful under any
interpretation of s.41 of the Constitution, exclusions multiplied
in the 1930s. As researchers Stretton and Finnimore conclude:
Individual bureaucratic whim rather than legal consistency seems
to have determined who was barred.(16)
Myths abounded among electoral officers. In 1945 the Chief
Electoral Officer had erroneously declared that to vote in Federal
elections an Aborigine must not only have obtained State enrolment
before the Franchise Act of 1902 was passed but must have
'retained that enrolment continuously since'.(17) In the
early-1940s Professor Elkin at the University of Sydney questioned
the Electoral Office's interpretation of the law and his case was
taken up by Group Captain Thomas White, war hero and member for
Balaclava. The then Minister for the Interior, Herbert Johnson,
declared that he was interested in extending the franchise 'as
early as possible to Aborigines whose education has reached such a
standard that they are able to appreciate its value', but did not
reveal, as researchers Stretton and Finnimore believe, that it was
Sir Robert Garran, Solicitor-General from 1916 to 1932, who had
instructed the Electoral Office to interpret s.41 as it
did.(18)
The Commonwealth Government became involved in Aboriginal
Affairs when the State of South Australia handed over the Northern
Territory to the Commonwealth Government in 1911. For forty years,
however, the Commonwealth's approach to 'native welfare
administration' differed little from that of the State
Governments.
In 1950 Paul Hasluck presented a private member's motion into
Federal Parliament, referred to the lack of action following the
1937 and 1947 Conferences of State and Federal Administrators, and
moved:
That this House is of the opinion that the Commonwealth
Government, exercising a national responsibility for the welfare of
the whole Australian people, should co-operate with the State
Governments in measures for the social advancement as well as the
protection of the people of the Aboriginal race throughout the
Australian mainland; such co-operation to include additional
financial aid to those States on whom the burden of native
administration falls most heavily...(19)
He asserted that 'whatever the Constitutional situation, the
practical task should be undertaken' and that 'the problem is so
small as to be manageable.'(20)
The House of Representatives responded positively to Hasluck's
proposal and passed the following motion unanimously:
That the Australian Government:
a. Exercises national responsibility for Aboriginal people and
cooperates with the States.
b. Works towards the social advancement as well as the
protection of Aborigines.
c. Provides additional finance and effective
administration.(21)
Hasluck's success in achieving bipartisan support for the above
motion was followed by Prime Minister Menzies appointing him
Minister of Territories in 1951. Hasluck later wrote:
When I took over the Department, I did not find any senior
officer in Canberra who was personally interested or officially
concerned about Aborigines.(22)
The administrative 'torpor' was found to be still greater in the
Darwin office, and much of the personnel was changed. Though an
energetic reformer of Commonwealth administration, Hasluck did not
advocate a transfer of power to the Commonwealth. He argued that
this would not solve anything as the important things which needed
to be done for Aborigines were best carried out by the States. The
Labor Party's Dr Evatt, a strong advocate of human rights, would
seem to have agreed:
My view is, and I am sure that I speak for the political and
industrial Labour movement, that the only thing to be done with the
Australian Aboriginal, full-blood or otherwise, is to give him the
benefit of the same laws as apply to any other Australian.(23)
The Commonwealth Government was not, however, able to secure
full State co-operation in the 'social advancement' policy, and no
one in the Federal Parliament other than Hasluck and the Labor
member for the Northern Territory, Jock Nelson, showed any interest
in Aboriginal affairs.
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, however, interest in
Aboriginal Affairs grew rapidly and that which Hasluck has
described as 'such a small problem' became the enormous social and
political issue which it still is today. Max Griffiths identifies
five reasons for the growth in this interest:(24)
- increasing number of Aborigines were drifting off reserves and
traditional country and becoming unwelcome fringe-dwellers
alongside larger non-Aboriginal communities
- the resource boom brought activity to areas where many
Aborigines still lived traditionally and to whom the activity was
unwelcome
- many missionary groups were starting to question their earlier
paternalistic practices
- many Aborigines who had been educated, even if also embittered,
in missions or in non-Aboriginal communities were becoming
articulate Aboriginal leaders
- there was a growing international interest in human rights
issues, and especially in the issue of racial discrimination.
Two other reasons may have been, firstly, a growing general
awareness (to which television and the family car may have
contributed) of the poor socio-economic situation of the indigenous
population and, secondly, a growing awareness among policy makers
of a movement towards decolonisation (even in Papua New
Guinea).
In this period more and more voices drew attention to the meagre
achievements of the assimilation policy, the denial of civil rights
which it entailed and the poor international image it gave
Australia. These voices were both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal.
Some examples follow.
In 1957 the Labor parliamentarian Gordon Bryant raised the human
rights issue in the House of Representatives, urged the Menzies
Government to intervene where mining operations on Aboriginal
reserves were unwelcome and where Aboriginal communities were
suffering appalling hardships, and declared that 'power to control
native affairs should reside in this Parliament'.(25) Gough Whitlam
and Kim Beazley Sr soon followed Bryant in urging a wider
recognition of Aboriginal need and a wider role for the
Commonwealth Government.(26) In 1963 the Yolngu people from
Yirrkala in the Northern Territory sent a bark petition to Prime
Minister Menzies protesting against plans to grant mining leases in
Arnhem Land. In 1965, thirty Sydney University students, including
two Aboriginal students (one of whom was Charles Perkins), began a
3,200 km 'Freedom Ride' to expose discrimination in rural New South
Wales. In 1966 Aboriginal stockmen and women at Wave Hill in the
Northern Territory walked off the job in protest at their working
conditions and wages, established a camp at Wattie Creek and
demanded the return of some of their traditional land. Throughout
the 1960s the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and
Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI), an alliance of predominantly,
but not exclusively, concerned non-Aboriginal people and
associations, campaigned on a range of issues (e.g. Albert
Namatjira and the liquor prohibition on Aborigines in the NT; the
plight of Aborigines near Maralinga, and the forced removal of
people from 'old' Mapoon in North Queensland and equal pay for
Aborigines on cattle stations in the Northern Territory, voting
rights for Aboriginal people, land rights and compensation for
dispossession).
Faced with this rising tide of public concern and action, many
State governments began to repeal their most discriminatory pieces
of legislation and Aborigines were guaranteed the right to vote in
Western Australia and Queensland in 1962 and 1965 respectively. In
this same period the Commonwealth Government began to lift its
restrictions on Aboriginal rights. The Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1962, which commenced 18 June 1962, entitled 'Aboriginal
Natives of Australia' to enrol and vote as electors of the
Commonwealth (and this applied also to the Northern Territory,
where few of the 44% of the population who were Aboriginal people
had previously been able to meet the property ownership or defence
force service requirements). In 1966 the Commonwealth extended
eligibility for social security benefits to all indigenous
Australians (the Commonwealth government had extended the
entitlement to social security benefits to indigenous Australians
in 1959, but not those classed as 'nomadic or primitive').
The bi-partisanship which had started to emerge in the early
1960s over such questions as Aboriginal voting rights did not
stretch to the bigger questions of constitutional and
administrative change to shift responsibility for Aboriginal
Affairs from the States to the Commonwealth.(27) As early as 1962
Kim Beazley Sr raised a Matter of Public Importance in which he
urged the deletion of s.127 and s.51(xxvi) from the Constitution.
Gordon Freeth, the Liberal member for Forrest and then Minister for
the Interior and Minister for Works, accused Labor of grandstanding
and argued that though such changes might enhance Australia's
international status, they would in practice disadvantage
Aboriginal people as the States were better equipped to handle
Aboriginal Affairs.(28) FCAATSI began a major campaign in support
of a referendum to change the constitution to enable the
Commonwealth Government to legislate for the benefit of Aboriginal
people in the States.
In 1965 the Menzies Government presented a bill which provided
for the repeal of s.127. Section 51 would remain unchanged as,
according to the Prime Minister, Robert Menzies:
The words are a protection against discrimination by the
Commonwealth parliament in respect of Aborigines. The power granted
is one which enables the Parliament to make special laws, that is,
discriminatory laws in relation to other races-special laws that
would relate to them and not to other people. The people of the
Aboriginal race are specifically excluded from this paper. There
can be in relation to them no valid laws which would treat them as
people outside the normal scope of the law, as people who do not
enjoy benefits and sustain burdens in common with other citizens of
Australia...
If the Parliament had as one of its heads of power, the power to
make special laws with respect to the Aboriginal race, that power
would very likely extend to enable the Parliament to set up, for
example, a separate body of industrial, social, criminal and other
laws relating exclusively to Aborigines.(29)
The Prime Minister, Mr Menzies, said that the repeal of
s.51(xxvi) in its entirety had some attraction but he felt the
Commonwealth should retain the power in case it were needed
sometime in the future, for instance in order to assist the
Nauruans re-establish themselves outside their existing island.
In the debate which followed the then leader of the Labor
Opposition, Arthur Calwell, expressed his support for the repeal of
s.127 but said that the Opposition would have liked to have
s.51(xxvi) dealt with in the same Bill. He argued that although
giving the Parliament specific power to legislate on behalf of the
Aboriginal people might be discriminatory in the literal or legal
sense, it was not true in any real or practical terms. He cited
s.51(xxiii) which gave the Commonwealth power in respect of age and
invalid pensions 'and surely this cannot in any realistic sense be
described as discriminatory'.(30) Calwell did, however, note the
difficulty of getting the Australian people to accept any
Constitutional amendment and argued that:
...now that we have achieved the near miracle of agreement
between all the important parties on the constitutional question,
it is important that our differences on other questions do not
obscure our unanimity on the questions actually before us… I
do not believe, nor does any other member of this Parliament
believe, that one Australian worthy of the name will deliberately
vote against this proposal to recognise Aborigines as what they
are, and for what they are-Australian citizens who should be
counted as Australians.(31)
Strong support for the amendment of s.51(xxvi) came from the
Government Member for Mackellar, W.C. Wentworth. Since the Bill
before the House referred only to s.127 he intended moving a
Private Member's Bill proposing that s.51(xxvi) be deleted and a
new section added as follows:
Neither the Commonwealth nor any State shall make or maintain
any law which subjects any person who has been born or naturalised
within the Commonwealth of Australia to any discrimination or
disability within the Commonwealth by reason of his racial
origin.(32)
In supporting Mr Wentworth's proposal, Gordon Bryant pointed out
that as the Constitution now stood the Commonwealth was able to
discriminate in favour of various sections of the community such as
migrants or pensioners but was unable to do so on behalf of
Aborigines. He said:
....Although it is important for the Aboriginal people of
Australia to be counted, there are many in the Aboriginal community
… who want not only to be counted but also to count. And
they will not count until the Commonwealth accepts a greater and
wider responsibility for these people. The need for this greater
acceptance of responsibility for the Aborigines by the Commonwealth
has been before this Parliament continually, for my part, for eight
years.(33)
Another speaker, Mr Kim Beazley Sr, referred to the bipartisan
policy on Aboriginal Affairs in matters of Aboriginal welfare but
agreed with Mr Wentworth that the Commonwealth should have a
positive power to make laws for the benefit of Aborigines. He
continued:
I think it is regrettable that it is quite possible for the
States to continue what are marked discriminations against
Aborigines, and that we as a national Parliament, supporting a
national Government - which is answerable internationally on race
issues - are so powerless to legislate to make a meaningful
Australian citizenship not only have force in the Commonwealth in
regard to voting rights but also where a State has not enacted
voting rights for people who are fully of the Aboriginal
race.(34)
The Government's Bill was passed without amendment by both
Houses, but no further action was taken and the Bill lapsed.
In 1967 the Prime Minister, Harold Holt, announced the
Government's intention to reintroduce the 1965 bill. This time,
however, the Bill would also provide for the amending of s.51(xxvi)
of the Constitution by deleting the words 'other than the
Aboriginal race in any State'. Mr Holt said:
...the Government has been influenced by the popular impression
that the words now proposed to be omitted from section 51(xxvi) are
discriminatory-a view which the Government believes to be erroneous
but which, nevertheless, seems to be deep rooted.(35)
Mr Holt stated that the removal of the words would enable the
Commonwealth Government to make special laws for the Aboriginal
people if it were deemed necessary. The Government would regard it
as desirable to hold discussions with the States to secure the
widest measure of agreement with respect to Aboriginal
advancement.(36) The Government did not propose to adopt Mr
Wentworth's suggestion that a section should be included giving a
guarantee against discrimination on the ground of race. Although
such a guarantee would 'provide evidence of the Australian people's
desire to outlaw discrimination it would also provide a fertile
source of attack on the Constitutional validity of legislation
which we, at this point in time, would not consider
discriminatory'.(37)
The Leader of the Opposition, Gough Whitlam, in supporting the
Bill pointed to the fact that the Labor Opposition had been calling
for this action since 1961. He said that with the excision of the
words in s.51(xxvi):
the members of this Parliament will be able for the first time
to do something for Aboriginals - Aboriginals representing the
greatest pockets of poverty and disease in this country.
...The Commonwealth can at least bring the resources of the
whole nation to bear in favour of the Aboriginals where they
live.(38)
Mr Whitlam also pointed to the important international
implications of the Constitutional alteration:
...if any international convention touches the position of
Aboriginals it will be possible for the Commonwealth forthwith and
directly to implement the obligations which it has undertaken and
which only the Commonwealth Government can undertake
internationally. The States have no international standing at
all.(39)
Mr Wentworth, in his speech supporting the Bill, seemed to admit
the possibility that the new Commonwealth power could be used to
enact laws to the detriment of the Aboriginal people, when he
said:
In Arnhem Land we still have tremendous reserves… There
is great wealth there potentially. There is sufficient to provide
adequate permanent land for the Aboriginal people. I hope that this
land will not be alienated from them.(40)
Mr Bryant spoke of the long campaign which had been waged by the
FCAATSI and the record number of petitions on the issue which had
been presented to Parliament to bring about this alteration to the
Constitution. The Bill was passed unanimously.
The Bill dealing with the Constitution's reference to
Aboriginals was not, however, the only Constitution Alteration Bill
to pass both Houses of Parliament at this time. The other related
to the breaking of the nexus between the size of the Senate and the
size of the House of Representatives. This was indeed the more
controversial issue at the time.
On 14 March 1967 Mr Holt, in announcing the successful passage
of the Constitution Alteration Bills, said that the Referendum
(Constitutional Alteration) Act provided that if, within four
weeks of the passage of the proposed laws through both Houses, the
arguments for and against the proposed laws were forwarded to the
Electoral Officer, he was to print them and send a copy to each
elector. The Government was preparing the Yes case for this
proposal and it was presumed that those who had voted against the
Bill would prepare the No case. Since none had voted against the
proposals relating to Aborigines there was no No case to prepare.
The date of the concurrent referenda was set for 27 May 1967.
The Yes Campaign
In the campaign leading up to the referendum there was virtually
no opposition to the deletion of s.127 which prevented Aborigines
being counted in any census. An editorial in the Age,
however, did sound a note of warning:
All parties and nearly all Australians, are in favour of ending
discrimination against Aborigines.
But the unpredictable performance of voters at many referendums
suggests that lack of dissent will not necessarily guarantee a
victory for Yes. Although it acted properly, if tardily, in putting
up the Aboriginal question, the Government was at least partly
inspired by its wish to break the nexus between the Houses of
Parliament. It is hoping that support for an uncontentious proposal
will have a carry over of Yes votes for the less popular one. This
is a risky tactic and not enough has been done to see that the
process does not work the other way.(41)
The arguments for including Aborigines in the census were
generally taken for granted. Mr Dunstan, the then South Australian
Attorney-General, made the following points in a television
interview:
Although Aborigines could vote at present, they were not counted
in any census when, for instance, the Commonwealth electoral
authorities made a population count to determine where electoral
boundaries should be.
The inclusion of Aborigines in a population census would also
enable a far more accurate collection about their living
conditions, employment, educational facilities and so on.(42)
The President of the Victorian Section of Amnesty International,
said that the Government was in fact asking if the people of
Australia wished to acknowledge that the Aborigines do exist and
that their existence should be recognised, that is that they should
be counted in the census.(43) The prominent Professor of Aboriginal
anthropology, A.P.L. Elkin, reasoned that although at the time of
Federation in 1902 only occasional (if any) contact was made with
the majority of 'full-blood' Aborigines in the central and northern
parts of the continent, in 1967 there were few fully nomadic
Aborigines left so it was now possible to enumerate Aboriginal
people more accurately. The fact that the number of full-blood
Aborigines was increasing and they possessed the franchise were
additional factors for including them in the total reckoning of the
Australian population. Professor Elkin felt this last point needed
emphasis because some Yes campaigners were giving the impression
that the referendum would give voting rights to Aborigines when the
argument should rather be that because they already have the vote
they should be included in the census.(44)
Support for the deletion of the reference to the Aboriginal race
in s.51(xxvi) was widespread also. Those who favoured the deletion
of the words did so for two main reasons: to enable the
Commonwealth to take positive action for the welfare of Aborigines
throughout Australia and to make it plain to the rest of the world
that Australia was not a racist country. It was seen as a means of
ending discrimination against Aborigines. There was some criticism
that the Government did not promote the Yes vote for the Aboriginal
questions sufficiently vigorously, concentrating attention rather
on the question of the nexus between the Senate and the House of
Representatives. On 22 May 1967 the Age editorial
commented that 'the Aboriginal issue has been, and still is, almost
ignored'. It continued:
Weaknesses of presentation do not shake the rightness of the Yes
case... Voting Yes to these proposals is a simple matter of
humanity. It is also a test of our standing in the world. If No
wins, Australia will be labelled as a country addicted to racist
policies.
The Leader of the Federal Opposition, Mr Whitlam, strongly
canvassed for a Yes vote saying that if the referendum were passed
there would be no alibis in the future for failure to improve the
conditions of the Aborigines. He said that the Commonwealth's
inability to make special laws for Aborigines in the States had
inhibited progress even in the Northern Territory. There had in the
past been some hesitancy to do things in the Northern Territory
because it was claimed that Aborigines would flood in from the
adjoining States. The referendum would not simply remove the
appearance of discrimination, it would enable the Commonwealth
Government to take financial initiatives to improve the condition
of Aborigines in matters of health, housing, employment and
community facilities.(45)
In general, advocates of the Yes vote did not see the
Commonwealth as taking over the States' role in Aboriginal Affairs
but as complementing it, particularly with financial aid. This was
put clearly by Dr Barrie Pittock, Convenor of the Legislative
Reform Committee:
The deletion of section 51(xxvii), while supported by all major
parties in Federal Parliament, may raise doubts in the minds of
some Australians, particularly those opposed to centralised
government, on the grounds that such deletion will detract from the
powers of the States. We need to make clear that this need not be
so, but rather that one of its most important effects will be to
enable the Commonwealth to make finance available for State
projects such as Aboriginal housing or vocational training.
We need also to stress the need for Commonwealth initiative in
the setting up of such bodies as an Aboriginal Education Foundation
… and an Aboriginal Arts and Crafts Board… In such
ways Commonwealth power to legislate for Aborigines would most
usefully complement the existing State powers.
We may also look forward to the day when a Commonwealth
Government may enact legislation prohibiting racial
discrimination.
Finally Dr Pittock referred to the fact that Australians are
held collectively responsible for the treatment of Aboriginal
people by world opinion:
Proper race relations is a national and international issue
which therefore ought to be dealt with by Australia at a national
level as well as at the State and local levels. Australia ought,
for instance, to be able, at a national level, to ratify convention
107 of the International Labour Organisation which deals with the
rights of indigenous minorities such as Aborigines.(46)
Concern was expressed in the West Australian that the
deletion of a few words in the Constitution would not necessarily
mean that the Aborigines would be better off. The Commonwealth
Government had given no guidance on how it would exercise its new
power or, conversely, how it would react to a No vote.
Support for the question might bring more Federal money for
Aboriginal advancement; it might also bring interference in State
affairs. Opposition to the question might give Canberra an excuse
to wash its hands of Aboriginal matters altogether, outside the
Northern Territory.
The voter has no evidence that the Federal Government has
evolved a policy at all, though Federal influence has helped to
promote policy reforms in the States. Money is the key to the
problem but Canberra does not need to change the Constitution to
give financial or other help it really wants to. It should not
weaken local administration in such a matter.(47)
The Age saw more positive advantages in a Yes vote:
A Yes vote will pave the way for improving their health,
education and housing; it will give them opportunities to live
normal lives. A No vote will frustrate any vigorous programme to
end discrimination against Aborigines; it will be a brutal rebuff
to the first Australians and bring this country into international
disrepute.(48)
The South Australian Attorney-General, Mr Dunstan, said that at
present power over Aborigines was held in the State Parliaments
which did not have sufficient money to deal adequately with the
problem. The only Parliament with sufficient resources was the
Commonwealth Parliament and a Yes vote would enable the
Commonwealth to carry out welfare activities which were at present
outside its power. He said that large numbers of Aborigines had
come into South Australia from the Northern Territory and were
therefore basically the Commonwealth's responsibility.(49)
The Aborigines were reported to have fully supported the
proposals for the referendum. They saw it as the beginning of a
move towards equality and they felt this move would be swifter with
Commonwealth assistance. Since they already had the Federal vote it
was possible that they could exercise more influence on one key
power centre than on the various States where their influence was
dispersed at the time. They also felt that the Commonwealth would
be more sensitive to international opinion favourable to Aboriginal
advancement than were the States.(50) Faith Bandler, the campaign
director in New South Wales for the Federal Council for the
Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders, was
concerned that the public was confused about the referendum and
felt the political parties had conducted poor campaigns and had not
explained the issues clearly. One of the gratifying aspects of the
campaign for her had been the rallying together of Aborigines.
Many young Aborigines who have never opened their mouths in
public before, are now appearing on television and radio interviews
and making speeches to church, trade union and factory
gatherings.(51)
The Churches came out strongly in support of the Yes vote, the
Heads of all the major denominations publicly pledging their
support. The Anglican Primate saw it as a way of helping to build
the Aborigines self-confidence, self-reliance and self-respect.
The No Campaign
Few people publicly advocated a No vote. The concerns of those
who did centred on the view that the States were closer to
Aboriginal needs than the more remote Parliament in Canberra, that
this was a further erosion of States' rights and that the proposal
that the Commonwealth should be able to make laws on behalf of the
Aboriginal people could in fact perpetuate discrimination. As the
writer of one letter to an editor stated:
....a Yes vote would allow a future centralised Commonwealth
Government to pass legislation discriminating against Aborigines on
racial grounds…
(The) section as it stands is in fact an important protection
for the Aborigines: it excludes them from the application of any
Commonwealth law such as has been included in the White Australian
Policy. It is their best protection against racial
discrimination.(52)
Another correspondent wrote:
The fathers of our Constitution, while recognising the possible
needs for some racial discriminations applying to, for example the
problems of influx of cheap Kanaka and Chinese labour of last
century, took care with these words to exclude our own indigenous
race from such measures.
That protection we are now blandly asked to wipe out by voting
'Yes' on both Aboriginal questions…
If we are a people of goodwill towards our black
fellow-Australians we should vote 'No', to ensure that we do not
relinquish our own, and our States' control of their well-being to
a far less controllable and an overwhelmingly powerful central
Government.(53)
One correspondent to the Advertiser declared his
intention to vote No:
Due to a wise provision in our Constitution the Aborigines who
link us with the pre-historic past have remained free in their
nomadic state.
Now progress requires that they be counted, which clearly means
controlled, put on an electoral role, be fined if they don't vote,
submit an income tax return and generally come under all the
controls that go with civilised progress.
For the sake of their freedom I feel I must vote 'No' a second
time, and so preserve their independence a little longer.(54)
The Referendum was held on 27 May 1967. Residents of the
Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory did not
have the right to vote in referenda at that time. Many Territorians
were annoyed that they did not have a vote on an issue that was of
such direct relevance to them and on polling day there was a
protest march in Alice Springs.(55)
In all States except New South Wales the electors voted No on
the question to do with the composition of the Senate. The question
on the status of Aborigines was, however, carried overwhelmingly in
all States. The overall Yes vote was 90.77%.(56) The No vote was
largest in the three States with the largest Aboriginal
populations. In Western Australia 19.05 per cent voted against, in
South Australia 13.74 per cent and in Queensland 10.79 per cent. In
New South Wales the No vote was heaviest in the country electorates
with racial problems.(57)
Result of 1967 Constitutional Alteration (Aboriginals)
Referendum
Electors Votes For Votes Against Informal Total
No. % No. %
NSW 2315828 1949036 91.46 182010 8.54 35461 2166507
Victoria 1734476 1525026 94.68 85611 5.32 19957 1630594
Queensland 904808 748612 89.21 90587 10.79 9529 848728
South Australia 590275 473440 86.26 75383 13.74 12021 560844
Western 437609 319823 80.95 75282 19.05 10561 405666
Australia
Tasmania 199589 167176 90.21 18134 9.79 3935 189245
Total 6182585 5183113 90.77 527007 9.23 91464 5801584
Source: Australian Electoral Commission
The strong inverse relationship between the percentage of
electors agreeing with the proposals and ratio of Aboriginal to
European population was noted at the time. One editorial suggested
that these figures showed how urgent it was for the Commonwealth to
use its new powers to help remove the economic and social
deprivations of Aborigines which foster racial prejudice.(58)
The Federal Council for the Advancement of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islanders immediately called for the following action:
The Federal government should establish a national policy on
Aboriginal affairs based on the needs and desires of Aborigines and
Islanders to this end:
to provide immediately for a survey team of experts to inquire
into all matters relevant to Aboriginal affairs throughout the
Commonwealth
to make provision for the establishment of a national
secretariat involving all State Aboriginal authorities
to establish a national education foundation like that of the
Maoris
to establish a national Aboriginal Arts and Crafts Board to
encourage the work of Aboriginal artists and craftsmen.
Faith Bandler, the NSW State Secretary of FCAATSI, also
expressed the desire to see a bureau of Aboriginal affairs
established.(59)
The West Australian in its editorial said that the
overwhelming Yes vote revealed a deep seated national conscience on
the Aboriginals' lot and a nationwide desire that the Commonwealth
should take positive action about it.
The government has been given a firm directive to go far beyond
its past efforts and evolve an effective programme of native
reform.(60)
The lack of Government policies on Aboriginal Affairs came in
for some criticism in the months following the referendum. The ACTU
in September 1967 demanded immediate action to secure adequate
levels of housing, medical care, education, employment with the
equal protection of industrial laws, and social opportunity. It
said the Commonwealth showed no signs of using the power it had
been given and had made no provision for action on the Aboriginal
problem in the Budget apart from the normal allocation to the
Northern Territory.
The Prime Minister, Mr Holt, said after the referendum that the
Government had been granted the power to play a useful part in
ensuring justice and social acceptance for the people of the
Aboriginal race. He was also, however, reported to have said to his
adviser H.C. Coombs: 'You know Nugget, I've never spoken to one, I
don't think I've ever met one'.(61) It soon became apparent that
the Government had no plan for immediate action. Mr Sinclair, the
then Minister for Social Services, said that the Government had
nothing specific in mind and its policies would be worked out
during the Budget discussions.(62)
Although many developments are widely believed to have been the
direct result of the referendum, it did in effect change little. As
have been noted above, many of the developments people associate
with the referendum, such as guaranteed voting rights for
Aboriginal people, preceded the referendum. Another such
development, the granting of award wages to Aboriginal people in
the pastoral industry, did not happen until 1968 and was the result
of an unrelated process linked to a successful action in the
Conciliation and Arbitration Commission by the North Australia
Workers Union in 1965.(63)
It is significant, moreover, that the referendum had not given
the Commonwealth Government exclusive responsibility for Aboriginal
Affairs, or even any explicit responsibility in the area. Had such
responsibility been sought, it would almost certainly have been
opposed by the State Governments. It had simply cleared the way for
some form of Commonwealth involvement in an area which had hitherto
been the sole, and would hereafter remain primarily, the
responsibility of the states.
Mr Holt set up an Office of Aboriginal Affairs within his own
Department, appointed Mr Wentworth Minister-in-Charge of Aboriginal
Affairs and appointed a Commonwealth Council for Aboriginal
Affairs. Mr Holt's successor, John Gorton, made no advance on these
initiatives. In his address at the Conference of Commonwealth and
State Ministers responsible for Aboriginal Affairs at Parliament
House in Melbourne on 12 July 1968, Mr Gorton said:
I believe that the Minister and the Council, in their relations
with the States, should seek to discharge three main functions:
- To allocate funds from the Commonwealth to the State for
Aboriginal advancement, using State machinery to use these funds
for an agreed purpose to the greatest possible extent.
- To gather information regarding Aboriginal matters (especially
welfare) and to act as a clearing house for such information both
as between the various States and as between States and
Commonwealth.
- Where appropriate to assist the States in coordination of their
policy and in setting the general direction of the Australian
approach to Aboriginal advancement.
We propose to give the fullest cooperation to the States, and I
am sure we will get the fullest cooperation in return.
The lives of Aboriginal people remained primarily in State
hands. According to H.C. Coombs, Mr Gorton 'couldn't see there was
any problem about Aborigines that was different from unemployed or
poor white people'. In 1972 the McMahon Government announced a
policy which recognised the rights of individual Aboriginals to
effective choice about the degrees to which, and the pace at which,
they might come to identify themselves with the wider society and
which aimed to encourage Aboriginals 'increasingly to manage their
own affairs-as individuals, as groups, and as communities at the
local level'. There were, however, few actions to match the
rhetoric. Indeed, Prime Minister McMahon made a new general purpose
lease for Aborigines conditional upon their 'intention and ability
to make reasonable economic and social use of the land', and had it
'exclude all mineral and forest rights'.(64)
Aboriginal frustration at the general lack of Federal Government
action in the five years following the referendum and the McMahon
Government's attitude to land rights culminated in the raising, on
26 January 1972, of a 'Tent Embassy' on the lawns in front of
Parliament House in Canberra. The tents were re-erected after being
torn down by police on 20 July 1972 and, after a violent clash with
police, on 23 July 1972 and on 30 July a demonstration of
approximately 1,500 people prevented the tents being removed again
on that day.(65) A flag designed the year before by Aboriginal
artist Harold Thomas (and flown on 12 July 1971, National
Aborigines' Day, in Adelaide's Victoria Square) was flown at the
Tent Embassy and this flag soon became the focus for Aboriginal
land rights aspirations which it had been intended to be.(66)
Together with the repeal or revision of most of the restrictive
State legislation in the 1960s, the 1967 Constitutional changes
had, however, cleared the way for several significant
developments.
Firstly, the changes enabled the introduction of 'benign
discrimination'. Despite resistance from parts of the Government,
Mr Wentworth was able to initiate several Federal programs
specifically aimed at satisfying desperate Aboriginal needs. When
the Federal Government changed in 1972, the Office of Aboriginal
Affairs was upgraded to a Department, more programs were developed
to address needs in the area of employment, education, health,
housing, and the administration of justice.
Secondly, the newly worded s.51 offered a head of power on which
the Government was able to draw (though largely untested) for
enacting the Aboriginal Land Fund Act 1974, the
Aboriginal Loans Commission Act 1974, the Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islanders (Queensland Discriminatory Laws) Act
1975, Aboriginal Councils and Associations Act 1976, Aboriginal
Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976, Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islanders (Queensland Reserves and Communities
Self-Management) Act 1978, Aboriginal Development Commission Act
1980, Aboriginal and Torres Strait IslanderHeritage (Interim
Protection) Act 1984, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders
Commission Act 1989 and the Council for Aboriginal
Reconciliation Act 1991.
Thirdly, a new administrative definition of Aboriginal was
introduced. One benefit of the Commonwealth's late arrival in the
area of indigenous affairs was indeed that, unlike the Australian
State Governments and unlike the Federal Government in Canada,
which had been involved in Aboriginal Affairs from its inception,
the Australian Commonwealth Government had not created a raft of
restrictive, technical or bureaucratic definitions of what
constituted an Aboriginal person and has not had to work within and
against a crude system of blood-quantum definitions. Definitions
such as these were never accepted as meaningful by Aboriginal
communities and the Commonwealth was easily able to introduce for
its administrative purposes a fresh, more practical, definition
based on community and self-identification.
Fourthly, the changes in the late 1960s heralded in a period
characterised by the search for ways to facilitate
'self-management', 'self-sufficiency', 'self-determination' and,
most recently, 'self-empowerment'.(67)
Fifthly, the changes offered the Federal Government a head of
power (the so-called 'race power') to enact, in response to the
1992 Mabo High Court decision, the Native Title Act 1993
and Land Fund and Indigenous Land Corporation (ATSIC Amendment)
Act 1995 and to defend the former from a High Court challenge
by Western Australia in 1995.
Many popular notions associated with the 1967 Referendum belong
in the category of myths. The referendum was not whole-heartedly
supported by both sides of politics, did not end legal
discrimination, did not confer the vote, equal wages and
citizenship on indigenous Australians and did not permit for the
first time Commonwealth government involvement in Aboriginal
Affairs. The Hansard record clearly shows the Menzies and Holt
Governments were less than enthusiastic about altering s.51(xxvi).
The repeal of the State legislation which discriminated against
Aboriginal people was a process which was independent of the 1967
referendum and which had begun before the referendum. Aboriginal
voting rights and employment rights had been clarified by the
Commonwealth government some years before the referendum. The
Commonwealth Government had been involved in Aboriginal Affairs in
the Northern Territory since 1911 and, through the grants provision
in s.96 of the Constitution, could have been involved in State
Aboriginal Affairs before 1967 if it had wanted to be. The
referendum result, moreover, did not automatically make the
Commonwealth more involved and indeed little changed for five
years.
Though the technical and legal significance of the 1967
Referendum may be questioned, its symbolic significance cannot be,
and it is this symbolic significance which gives the event a
lasting practical significance. Although the event may have become
distorted by myths, it has proved to be a very useful marker of
change, and as Andrew Markus observes, 'markers are so difficult to
find on the field of desolation that is the history of
Aboriginal-white relations'.(68) Indeed, the referendum has come to
act as a form of historical shorthand for a decade of change in the
area of Aboriginal Affairs, a decade which began in the early 1960s
and ended in the early 1970s and a decade which, to some extent,
foreshadowed the increased Commonwealth involvement in other policy
areas previously the sole province of the States (e.g. health,
education, conservation). It is the 30th anniversary of this decade
of change which is effectively being commemorated in May
1997.(69)
- For an better understanding of these
figures see
- Commonwealth Expenditure on Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Affairs(Parliamentary Research Service Current Issues
Brief No. 15 1995-96).
- F. Bandler, Turning the Tide: a Personal History of the
Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait
Islanders, Canberra, Aboriginal Studies Press, 1989, p.
1.
- Indigenous Australia Today, An Overview by the Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander Commission, Canberra, April
1994.
- Australian Bureau of Statistics, The Health and Welfare of
Australia's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples,
1997.
- Geoffrey Sawer, 'The Australian Constitution and the Australian
Aborigine', Federal Law Review, vol. 2, 1966-67, p.
17.
- Harrison Morre, The Constitution of the Commonwealth of
Australia (2nd edition, 1910), p. 462, as quoted in Geoffrey
Sawer, 'The Australian Constitution and the Australian
Aborigine', Federal Law Review, vol. 2, 1966-67, p.
20.
- Quick and Garran, The Annotated Constitution of the
Austarlian Commonwealth (1901), p. 622, as quoted in Geoffrey
Sawer, 'The Australian Constitution and the Australian
Aborigine', Federal Law Review, vol. 2, 1966-67, p.
20.
- ibid, p. 18.
- ibid, p. 35.
- Hansard, House of Representatives, 1962, vol. 35, p. 1710.
- For an overview of State legislation in this period see John
Gardiner-Garden, Aboriginality and Aboriginal Rights in
Australia (Parliamentary Research Service Background Paper No.
12, 1992-93, reproduced in The Mabo Papers (Parliamentary
Research Service Subject Collection No.1), Canberra, Department of
the Parliamentary Library, 1994, p. 11-17.
- T. Blackshield et. al., Australian Constitutional Law Theory,
Federation Press, 1996, p. 186 and Hansard, House of
Representative, 24 April 1902, pp. 11975-11980.
- Quoted in T.Blackshield, ibid.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- Stretton, P. and Finnimore, C., 'Black Fellow Citizens:
Aborigines and the Commonwealth Franchise', Australian
Historical Studies, 521, 24, 1993, p. 530.
- ibid.
- Stretton, P. and Finnimore, C., 'Black Fellow Citizens:
Aborigines and the Commonwealth Franchise', Australian
Historical Studies, 521, 24, 1993, p. 530.
- Hansard, House of Representatives, 8 June 1950, vol. 208, p.
3976.
- ibid, p. 3977.
- Quoted by Max Griffiths, Aboriginal Affairs, a Short
History 1788-1995, Kenthurst, Kangaroo Press, 1995, p.
72.
- Paul Hasluck, Shades of Darkness: Aboriginal Affairs,
1925-1965, cited in Griffiths, op. cit., p. 73.
- Hasluck, Shades of Darkness, op. cit., p. 78.
- Hansard, House of Representatives, 9 May 1957, vol. 15, p.
1223.
- Griffiths, op. cit., p. 79-81.
- The next three sections of the paper draw heavily on work done
in an unpublished paper by Dorothy Bennett entitled 'The
Constitution Alteration (Aboriginals) 1967 Referendum', 19 November
1982.
- ibid, p. 85.
- Hansard, House of Representatives, 11 November 1965, p.
2639.
- Hansard, House of Representatives, 23 November 1965, p.
3067-8.
- ibid, p. 3068.
- ibid, p. 3070.
- ibid, p. 3072.
- ibid, p. 3077.
- Hansard, House of Representatives, 1 March 1967, p. 263.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- ibid, p. 279.
- ibid, p. 280.
- ibid, p. 281.
- Age, Editorial, 22 May 1967.
- 'Poll to Aborigines', Advertiser, 22 May 1967.
- Letter to the Editor, Age, 26 May 1967.
- 'A Yes Vote for Aborigines', Sydney Morning Herald, 16
May 1967.
- 'Yes Vital to Help Aborigines', Age, 26 May 1967.
- Rights and Advancement, no. 7, March 1967, p.
2-3.
- Editorial, West Australian, 26 May 1967.
- Editorial, Age, 26 May 1967.
- 'Poll to Aid Aborigines', Advertiser, 22 May
1967.
- 'Shoulder to the Wheel', Age, 26 May 1967.
- 'Public Confusion Evident on Aboriginal Issue', Sydney
Morning Herald, 24 May 1967.
- Letters to the Editor, Sydney Morning Herald, 16 May
1967.
- Letters to the Editor, Advertiser, 24 May 1967.
- Letter to the Editor, Advertiser. 22 May 1967.
- Scott Bennett, 'The 1967 referendum', Australian Aboriginal
Studies, 1985, no. 2, p. 31. An advertisement complaining
about Terrritorians' exclusion from the vote was published in the
Adelaide Advertiser on 27 May 1967 and a petition signed
by 600 protestors was published by The Centralian Advocate
on 1 June 1967.
- ibid, p. 26.
- ibid, pp. 26-31.
- Sydney Morning Herald, 29 May 1967.
- 'M.P. Calls for Material Aid for Aborigines', Sydney
Morning Herald, 29 May 1967.
- Editorial, West Australian, 29 May 1967.
- D. Hill, 'Nuggets of History', Sydney Morning Herald,
26 August 1995.
- 'After the Yes Vote', Australian, 3 June 1967.
- 'Wages', in D. Horton (ed.) The Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal
Australia, Canberra, Aboriginal Studies Press, 1994, p.
1138.
- 'Tent Embassy', in D. Horton (ed.) The Encyclopaedia of
Aboriginal Australia, Canberra, Aboriginal Studies Press,
1994, p. 1062.
- ibid, pp. 1062-3.
- ATSIC News, Spring 1991, pp. 8-9.
- For an overview of developments in these areas see the
following three papers by the present author, John Gardiner-Garden.
Aboriginality and Aboriginal rights in Australia,
(Parliamentary Research Service Background Paper Number 12,
1992-93), reproduced in The Mabo Papers
(Parliamentary Research Service, Subject Collection No. 1),
Canberra, Department of the Parliamentary Library, 1994, p. 17ff;
Innovation without change? Commonwealth involvement in
Aboriginal health policy, (Parliamentary Research Service,
Department of the Parliamentary Library, Current Issues Brief No.
12 1994 -95); Commonwealth Expenditure on Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Affairs (Parliamentary Research Service
Current Issues Brief No. 15 1995-96).
- A. Markus, Australian Race Relations 1788-1993, St.
Leonards, Allen & Unwin, 1994, p. 177.
- The Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation is marking this
anniversary with an Australian Reconciliation Convention in
Melbourne (26 to 28 May 1997), at which a well researched book on
the subject of the referendum will be launched. The authors are
Bain Attwood and Andrew Markus, in collaboration with Dale Edwards
and Kath Schilling, and the title The 1967 Referendum, or when
Aborigines didn't get the vote.
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