Teaching Law

Sunday 4 March 2012

To Change or Not to Change? That is the (Constitutional) Question

On 19 January, the Panel on Constitutional Recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples ('Panel') delivered its report Recognising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the Constitution.  Since the Panel was convened, there has been a lot of comment and public debate - mostly, it seems, centred around the legal implications of constitutional change.

If you are, like me, not an expert in constitutional law, your head may be spinning trying to keep track of the pros and cons of the recommendations.  What then are the primary recommendations for change, and how on earth do we sort through the legal arguments?  In this post, I go out on a limb and say that we need to focus on the goal of constitutional change and let go of the law.

The goal of this proposed constitutional change is to advance reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians, through recognising in the Constitution the special place of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in Australian society.  Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians were excluded from the process of nation building involved in the drafting of the Constitution (as were many other groups in Australian society).  This exclusion has resulted in a Constitution that not only fails to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in an inclusive way, but in fact may provide for lawful discrimination against them (after Kartinyeri v Commonwealth).

Recommendations for Substantive Change
The recommendations for substantive constitutional change are interesting, and in my (non-expert) view follow a logical path.
First is the repeal of s25.  This is not regarded as a troublesome recommendation.  It relates to the limits on federal representation of any State that excludes Indigenous people from voting in that state.

Second is the repeal of the so-called 'race power': s51(xxvi).  This provision not only allows the Commonwealth to make powers in respect of any race, but with no restriction on whether these laws would be beneficial or not.  As a general proposition, the notion of race is repugnant as a basis for law-making, and is probably inconsistent with international human rights treaties including the Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD), as well as contemporary societal norms.  

Having said this, there is still a powerful argument in favour of power to make laws in respect of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians as a means of addressing the well-known gap in health, education, employment, housing and life expectancies between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.  Interestingly, Justice Robert French is reported as suggesting that such a provision would be not a 'race' provision, but a provision responding to 'the special place of those peoples in the history of the nation.'
 
On the basis of the need still to enact legislation in respect of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians, the Panel's third recommendation is to insert a proposed s51A giving such power.  It is prefaced by a number of preambular provisions including an acknowledgement of 'the need to secure the advancement of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.'

To accompany this provision, and to flesh out its context, is a proposed anti-discrimination provision (s116A) whereby no law may discriminate on the basis of race, except 'the making of laws or measures for the purpose of overcoming disadvantage, ameliorating the effects of past discrimination, or protecting the cultures, languages or heritage of any group.'

Finally, is the recommendation for a s127A recognising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages - considered likely to have a declaratory rather than substantive effect.

Arguments
The report was well-received in many quarters, though there has been debate in particular about the 'race' power and anti-discrimination provision.  I put these debates into three categories.

First is the argument that the breadth of the proposed provisions mean that we don't know how they will be interpreted in future.  What does it mean to be for 'the advancement' of peoples?  Will this give more power than anticipated to the Commonwealth?

My view on this is that the proposals may well give more power than is anticipated, but that this is also what has happened with other constitutional powers, such as the external affairs power and the corporations power.  Who would have thought in 1901 that these powers would be used so extensively to legislate in so many areas?  I don't think we should be afraid of this.  In reality, we cannot ever know what a future court will find, or how it will interpret any constitutional provisions.

In terms of the meaning of advancement or the context of beneficial laws, I would have thought that human rights jurisprudence can offer sufficient guidance on the meaning of such a provision, which is, it seems, not unusual in other constitutions

Secondly, is the '100 steps too far' or 'one-clause bill of rights' argument.  I see this as reflecting an inherently conservative understanding of our Constitution.  While this overlaps to some extent with the issue of interpretation (above) it also reflects the existing nature of our Constitution as overwhelmingly a blueprint for governance, without any express human rights.  Again, I see no need to be afraid of addressing human rights within our Constitution.  This would accord with Australia's international human rights obligations, and jurisprudentially, represents a valid constitutional undertaking.

These two arguments include the warning that there 'will be legal challenges'.  This is no argument at all, in my view.  Any change is likely to attract legal challenge.  That is the nature of the law.  Opposing change citing that there 'will be legal challenges' in my view, is fear mongering.

Thirdly is that the proposals are too complex and therefore will fail at referendum.  The way to a successful vote, on this argument, is by putting as simple a proposition as possible - usually this is framed as a provision 'recognising' Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians.  But what would this look like?  How would it be phrased, and what would it mean?  Back to square one...  In fact, the Panel has now investigated this, and has recommended how such recognition could look within our Constitution. We now have something to work with.

If the 'experts' keep telling the public that the recommendations are 'too complex to pass' then by definition there is no bipartisanship.  Instead, I suggest we need to remember what we have set out to do.

Remember the Goal?
Many of the responses to the Panel's report have been based on legal argument.  This is because lawyers are argumentative people.  The law is never truly settled and is always open to challenge and re-interpretation.  On this basis, I can't assess which side has the 'correct' argument, or how courts of the future will read the Constitution.  I therefore cannot assess the 'legal risk' in making the proposed changes.  

We need to look beyond legal arguments and remember that this constitutional change is all about reconciliation, recognition and creating a new and inclusive national narrative.

Failure to change the Constitution represents a grave risk: that of missing the chance to have Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians write themselves into our national story, with the support of the wider Australian public.  That risk, in my view, is far worse than the courts having to interpret the proposed changes.  

I think we need to accept that no one can predict exactly how these proposed changes will be interpreted if they are successful; and that no change is a real risk.  At some point, we need to trust that recommendations for change must work on some level.  Instead of becoming mired in doubt about legal implications of the proposals, we could recognise that the first stage of consultative groundwork has already been done by the Panel.

This would allow us to embrace these suggestions as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to advance reconciliation and human rights through important Constitutional change. 

Update (6 September 2014)

The recognition referendum is in the news again with suggestions that the Abbott government will not support a referendum if it turns into a 'de facto bill of rights'.  The challenges of passing referenda in Australia mean that without bipartisanship, it is likely to fail.

I should point out also that I make this comment as a non-Indigenous Australian lawyer. There is of course a diversity of views on this issue from within Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. See for example Celeste Liddle's recent piece on the Recognise campaign. I acknowledge that I have approached this issue from a particular perspective, which ultimately informs my personal view.

2 comments:

  1. We need all white people on electoral role to vote 'No' to constitutional change. We don't want to trade our sovereign rights, our rights for land rights for a gammon close the gap speech that benefit us none. Land rights is our birthright. Vote No please!

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  2. One of the most important and repugnant facts of the colonization of Australia is the deception propagated by the British government after Captain Cook returned from his voyage of exploration of the Great South Land.

    The British Admiralty struck out references in Captain Cook's reports regarding the inhabitants of the land having well organized societies, social structure and their own legal system in order to pursue their premeditated measure to short cut the gaining of British sovereignty over Australia by declaring it to be terra nullius and thus avoid any international conflict in claiming the new country for the British Empire.

    The Mabo case exposed the deception and now there is an opportunity to make some amends by recognizing Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders in the Australian Constitution as part of reconciliation for a past wrong done to the original inhabitants of Australia.

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