CANBERRA, Australia (AP) 鈥 Voters began applying Monday for mail-in ballots ahead of the Oct. 14 referendum that would create an Indigenous Voice to Parliament, a proposal for constitutional change that opinion polls suggest is becoming increasingly likely to be rejected.
Australians will in a generation whether to enshrine in the constitution a collection of appointed Indigenous advocates aimed at giving the nation鈥檚 most disadvantaged ethnic minority more say on government policy.
People who are unable to attend a polling booth on Oct. 14 for reasons including distance, disability and prison sentences can apply from 6 p.m. Monday for authorities to provide them with postal ballots, which will be cast in Australia鈥檚 first referendum since 1999.
A majority of voters across the nation and in a majority of Australia鈥檚 six states need to support the referendum for it to pass. Only eight out of 44 referendums have achieved that double majority.
But a Resolve Political Monitor opinion poll published in newspapers on Monday suggested the smallest state, Tasmania, was the only one with majority support for the Voice.
春色直播 support for the Voice was at 65% when polls on the question were first held in August 2022, but support has been declining for months.
Proponents hope support will rally when voters become more engaged with the question closer to the voting day.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese took the final step in ensuring the referendum goes ahead by directing the governor-general late Monday to issue electoral authorities with a required legal order to conduct the vote.
Opposition leader Peter Dutton had earlier urged Albanese in Parliament to call the referendum off because of the declining support in polls.
鈥淲ill the prime minister withdraw his Voice referendum so that we can avoid an outcome which sets back reconciliation and divides the nation?鈥 Dutton asked Albanese.
Albanese criticized Dutton over his opposition to the Voice, saying the conservative party leader had 鈥渃hosen politics over substance.鈥
The Voice referendum would be the first in Australia鈥檚 history to pass without bipartisan support.
Melbourne University election analyst Adrian Beaumont said referendums proposed by Albanese鈥檚 center-left Labor Party have always been opposed by their conservative opponents since 1946.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very clear that Voice support is slumping in all polls,鈥 Beaumont said. 鈥淐onservative oppositions always oppose Labor referendums, and they are able to scare the electorate into opposing changes."
Proponents say embedding the Voice in the constitution would recognize the special place that Indigenous people have in Australian history while giving them input in government policies.
it would be the biggest change to Australia鈥檚 democracy in the nation鈥檚 history and divide Australians along racial lines without reducing Indigenous disadvantage.
Indigenous Australians account for 3.8% of the population and they die around eight years younger than Australia鈥檚 wider population on average.