Australian voters' divisions, indifference doom Indigenous referendum

By Byron Kaye and Praveen Menon

SYDNEY, Oct 15 (Reuters) - Upbeat polls and big-name endorsements greeted Australia's referendum campaign for Indigenous reconciliation when it kicked off in earnest just seven months ago, raising hopes for a historic change to the constitution.

But by the time votes were counted this weekend in the country's first referendum in nearly 25 years, the proposal for a permanent but non-voting "Indigenous Voice" in parliament had been dragged to a resounding defeat, dead by a thousand political cuts.

The centre-left Labor government of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, acting on a campaign promise from last year's general election, crafted the plan along lines requested by elders of the Indigenous community, which makes up 3.8% of Australia's 26 million population.

But without advance buy-in from the opposition party for what had been anticipated as a unifying proposal, the "Voice" became vulnerable to misinformation, race-based suspicion and political indifference, which opponents exploited to turn voters against it.

"Initially it was a proposition that seemed to a lot of Australians to be above politics," said Kos Samaras, a former strategist for the Labor party who now runs a political consultancy, Redbridge Group.

"Once the bipartisanship was gone and there was significant formal opposition to it ... that then bought it down into the political cesspit."

As academics and analysts sort through the wreckage of the failed vote, they point to a variety of data on past referendums and recent social media trends that show both the under-appreciated obstacles the campaign faced, and how the ground has shifted for political battles in increasingly divided societies.

Matt Qvortrup, a visiting professor of constitutional law at Australian National University who studies referendums, said such campaigns start with an average 55.9% of voters in favour but lose seven percentage points if they are not supported by both sides of parliament.

"Everybody has to know that politics is compromise," he said, adding that some voters will also typically peel off when they examine the proposal in more detail.

The impact of partisan politics on the referendum played out in particularly dramatic form on social media.

Among posts on the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, those in favour of the "Voice" continuously outnumbered posts against it before the opposition Liberal Party leader Peter Dutton formalised his party's stance on April 5.