The Australian opposition leader, Bill Shorten, has said a move towards a republic should be progressed alongside a treaty with the country’s Indigenous people.
Speaking to Sky News on Sunday from the Northern Territory community of Barunga, Shorten said the country needed to move towards getting an Australian head of state.
“I think it’s remarkable that over two centuries after first European settlement we are still borrowing, a very worthy person, but a monarch from another country,” the Labor leader said.
The Australian Monarchist League said Shorten was making a “huge blunder”.
“Support for a treaty and support for a republic derive from two entirely different sectors of the community,” the league’s national chair, Philip Benwell, said in a statement.
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“Previous Labor leaders have recognised that approximately one-third of Labor voters are monarchist and conservative traditionalists.”
He said this was seen in the 1999 republic referendum, in which traditional Labor voters opposed a republic, and more recently with a high no vote in Labor electorates in the same-sex marriage postal survey.