A wrap of today's Voice referendum votepublished at 13:43 British Summer Time 14 October 2023
Ayeshea Perera
BBC News
It's just gone 11.30m in Sydney and we're winding down our coverage today of the referendum vote in Australia.
If you haven't been following or are just logging on to see what happened, here's all you need to know about what transpired today:
- A majority of Australians have rejected the Voice referendum, with a majority of people in all of the six states voting No
- To succeed, the Yes campaign would have needed the support of at least four states, and a majority of the national votes
- The Voice sought to establish an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander body to advise the government on the issues affecting their communities. As well as creating an advisory body, the amendment sought to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders as Australia’s First Peoples in its constitution.
- Australia Capital Territory, which includes the capital Canberra, is the only region that has voted Yes to the reform. However, it does not count as a state vote, and only goes into the national tally
- Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said after the result that Australians need to find a way forward, and that the "moment of disagreement" does not define the people
- South Australia's Opposition leader David Speirs called for PM Albanese to resign in the event of a resounding No vote from the Australian public
- Yes campaign director Dean Parkin, in response to the result, said: "this is a base, not a summit. We will build on this." Yes supporters believe the reform would lead to real improvements - including healthcare and employment - in the lives of Indigenous peoples
- No supporters argued that the Voice, a proposal to include an Indigenous-led elected advisory body in the parliament, was divisive, had not been "road tested" and was a "leap into the unknown"
- Leading figure Warren Mundine in the No camp said the referendum was "built on a lie" and a waste of time and resources that could have been better spent on struggling communities
Thanks for staying with us until now.
And a huge thank you to all the reporters who have worked on bringing you this coverage. Reporting from Australia: Frances Mao, Tiffanie Turnbull, Hannah Ritchie, Katy Watson, Isabelle Rodd, Nicole Ng, and Simon Atkinson. And from our team in Singapore: Joel Guinto and Derek Cai.