House debates

Wednesday, 2 August 2023

Questions without Notice

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice

2:28 pm

Photo of Jim ChalmersJim Chalmers (Rankin, Australian Labor Party, Treasurer) Share this | Hansard source

We shouldn't pretend that we have to choose here between good social outcomes and good economic outcomes, or that they are competing priorities. They're not. The Voice is about better outcomes, it's about better value for money, and that makes it good economic policy as well. We won't get better outcomes in this country by listening less. We won't get better outcomes by leaving this to our kids to sort out down the track in some kind of generational buck-pass or by surrendering to the scares and the lies and the cynicism and the misinformation which is egged on by too many of those opposite.

We'll get better outcomes if we listen more and if we build on a foundation of recognition and respect and decency and optimism. I think a lot about what Minister Burney has said. She said this:

For too long governments have made policies for Indigenous Australians, not with Indigenous Australians.

The minister is spot on. This is a chance to do things differently and to do them better. We won't get better outcomes by doing everything the same way that has delivered us a wasted decade of division, of disadvantage and of disappointment. We want more people in work, in training, in uni, in good health, in good schools, in safe communities and out of the justice system. Just last week the Productivity Commission laid out the challenges before us and said that we need more consultation. We need to involve and empower people if we want to make a real impact. So this is about value for money, but it's about much more than that as well.

This is our big chance, and we can't waste it. This is our generational opportunity to do the right thing and to grasp the hand which has been stretched generously out to us, to move forward together in a spirit of respect and unity and decency and optimism in a Commonwealth of common purpose, shaping a better future on our terms; making a tangible, enduring difference to First Nations people and communities around our country; and strengthening our economy and our society in the process.

Comments

No comments