ARM Media Statement - 25 January 1999
Republicans release declaration of principles for an Australian
Head of State
Republicans across Australia rallied today from Perth to Sydney
to call on Australians to look to the future this Australia Day
and to pass a vote of confidence in the nation by voting YES in
November's referendum on an Australian Head of State.
Releasing a declaration
of principles as to why the nation should have an Australian
as its Head of State in Sydney today, the chair of the Australian
Republican Movement, Malcolm Turnbull, told a representative gathering
of Australians that the November referendum is a vote on our future.
"This is the year we can vote for Australia," said Mr Turnbull,
"not for a political party, nor for a politician. But for our own
country and for our future.
"This is the year we can vote to ensure that every public office
in this country will be unequivocally Australian. This is the year
we can ensure our Head of State is not the monarch of another country,
but an Australian - one of us."
In public gatherings over the next two days in Tasmania, South
Australia, Victoria, NSW, Western Australia, Queensland and the
ACT, republicans will call on Australians to carefully consider
whether they wanted to continue to have a foreigner - someone who
does not live here and who has never lived among us - to be our
Head of State.
Mr Turnbull told Australians at the Sydney gathering, including
Liberal MPs, the Opposition Leader Mr Beazley, Democrats Leader
Meg Lees and well known figures such as Andrew Robb, Maxine McKew,
Leo Schofield and Jason Li, that having an Australian Head of State
will also unite all Australians, regardless of who they are or where
they were born.
"The republican cause unites many Australians. It is supported
by Australians from all walks of life and all political parties.
"The cause is not a rejection of our enduring links to the United
Kingdom. It is an affirmation of our Australian identity and our
pride as Australians.
"The referendum is a test of our commitment and of our belief.
We cannot afford to fail this test. We cannot carry a no-confidence
motion in ourselves.
"If this referendum fails we will have said to ourselves and the
world that we have so little faith in our own country and its people
that no Australian, not even the best of us, is good enough to be
our Head of State."
Mr Turnbull said that a few republicans who will advocate a "No"
vote in the referendum because they think the proposed constitutional
changes do not go far enough, were misguided.
"We believe that the measure of the worth of political change
is not whether it goes far enough, but whether it is a step in the
right direction.
"On any republican view, the amendments will be at least an improvement
to the status quo because the Head of State will be an Australian
not a foreign monarch, and the President will require the support
of both sides of politics, not simply that of the Prime Minister
as is the case with the Governor-General."
Mr Turnbull and republicans across the nation indicated that the
key focus of the Yes campaign will be to convince Australians that
the time is now right for an Australian to be our Head of State,
and that this will be the last opportunity for decades to make such
a change.
"On Australia Day, we should be thinking about the future, not
only for ourselves, but for young Australians to whom we have a
duty to ensure they inherit a strong, modern, confident and united
nation, proud of its people and with enough confidence to have one
of our own as its first citizen - its Head of State."
Authorised by Malcolm Turnbull,
Australian Republican Movement, 60 Park Street, Sydney NSW 2000
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