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The Failure of the Voice Referendum and the Future of Australian Democracy
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13 January 2026

Australia, and Australians, stood at a crossroads in October 2023. Before them lay a new and more accommodating way to practice democracy, a future in which First Nations people were given a representative voice in political decisions in this country. After months of a referendum campaign, struggling over foundational ideals and questions of national identity, misinformation, disinformation and racism, the proposal was overwhelmingly rejected in every Australian state and nationally. The referendum campaign was Australia’s first since the failed attempt at a republic in 1999. The political and media environment in which the referendum campaign would unfold was fundamentally changed. These changes included the growth of social media, growing distrust of major political parties, and the rise of fake news and populist politics.
This book brings together a diverse set of perspectives to explore the many and complex political, social and historical factors that influenced the conduct of the campaign and led to the loss. It includes contributions from lawyers, political scientists, historians, human rights experts, health policy experts, land rights campaigners and Indigenous affairs policy experts. The contributors in this book include First Nations and non-Indigenous authors, often writing collaboratively. The majority of the views offered, based in expertise and experience, are those of First Nations. Their writings place the referendum loss in the context of political failure and attempts at structural reform, and Australia’s terrible record at amending the Constitution through referendums. The book traces the legal and political development of the draft constitutional provision, and the influence of legal risk on the campaign. A major focus of the book is the impact of misinformation and disinformation, which was rife during the campaign, and media reporting of it. The role that civil society and corporate Australia played in the campaign is considered. The Voice campaign will be placed in the context of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander politics and previous attempts at representation. The book will also place the call for Voice in the context of its ongoing relevance and imperative in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander affairs, explaining the power of representation, the Voice as an expression of sovereignty, and the need for Voice to pursue other structural reforms such as treaty and to realise the promise of land rights. The book concludes by reflecting on the role that history played in the campaign and the implications of the campaign for the practice of Australian history.
The book holds lessons for future constitutional change, Indigenous recognition, structural reform and Australia’s democracy. It also looks, with constructive pragmatism, at the future direction of First Nations structural reform in Australia and the practice of democracy.
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Indigenous / General, Indigenous people: governance and politics, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Democracy, LAW / Constitutional, Society and Social Sciences, Constitutional and administrative law: general, Political structures / systems: democracy
‘The results of the October 2023 Voice referendum prompted many to ponder what the place of First Nations Peoples is in the constitutional landscape and the Austral-ian community. The authors capture the complex circumstances the nation now finds itself in and the future of Australian democracy. A must-read.’ — Professor John Wil-liams AM, Provost, The University of Adelaide, Australia
‘It is more important than ever to reflect on the long campaign for structural reform and political representation that led to the Referendum, the forces that led to its fail-ure and the importance of not giving up on its aspirations. Those aspirations are not just relevant to First Nations people but to all Australians and the promise of a fairer democracy. This groundbreaking book should be read as widely as possible.’ — Amanda Nettelbeck, Professor, School of Humanities, The University of Adelaide, Australia
‘A first serious contribution to the truth-telling of this momentous event, laying bare the many ways that Australian politics, media and culture failed Indigenous people when it mattered most. Finally, a deeply philosophical, legal, political and historical analysis to displace the shallowness of the pundit commentary – essential reading for anyone seeking informed hope amid the ruins.’ — Kate Fullagar, author of Ben-nelong and Phillip: A History Unravelled (2023); Professor of History, Australian Catholic University, Australia
‘Australia shouldn’t need a map, but when we take the journey towards a final constitutional reckoning with our past—and we will—this book will provide an essential guide: a scholarly companion, a cautionary tale, an irreplaceable archive, an historical touchstone, a moral compass, a legal compendium, an analytical framework, and a gift of hope, courage, and wisdom. Necessary and precious.’ — Professor Clare Wright, author of Ṉäku Dhäruk: The Bark Petitions.
Gabrielle Appleby is a professor of constitutional law at the UNSW Faculty of Law & Justice and is currently a Professorial Research Fellow at the Pro Vice Chancellor Society at UNSW (Sydney). She is the constitutional consultant to the Clerk of the Commonwealth House of Representatives, a Director of the Centre for Public Integrity and was a constitutional advisor to the Regional Dialogues and First Nations Constitutional Convention that delivered the Uluru Statement from the Heart.
Megan Davis AC is the Whitlam Fraser Chair at Harvard University and Visiting Professor Harvard Law School (2024–2025) and the Balnaves Chair in Constitutional Law. Megan is a Pro Vice-Chancellor Society at UNSW (Sydney) and a Scientia Professor and Director of the Indigenous Law Centre at UNSW Faculty of Law & Justice. Megan has been the leading constitutional lawyer working on constitutional recognition since 2010. She served on the Prime Minister’s Expert Panel on Constitutional Recognition of Indigenous Australians (2011) and the Prime Minister’s Referendum Council (2015–2017), where she chaired the Indigenous Steering Committee and designed the First Nations Regional Dialogues and the National Constitutional Convention. From 2022 to 2023, Davis served on the Prime Minister’s Referendum Working Group and Referendum Engagement Group and the Attorney General’s Constitutional Expert Group.