senator – Michmutters
Categories
Australia

Jacinta Price claims Peter FitzSimmons allegedly accused her of ‘giving racists a voice’ after refusal to support Indigenous Voice

Aboriginal Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price has alleged newspaper columnist Peter FitzSimons accused her of “giving racists a voice” during an interview last week.

Senator Price – who has refused to support the Albanese Government’s Indigenous Voice to Parliament – made the claims on social media on Sunday night after the interview between the pair was published in the Sun-Herald newspaper.

She told FitzSimons the bipartisan support was due to the “Kool-Aid Australians have been drinking” and defended One Nation leader Pauline Hanson who claimed the Voice was “Australia’s version of apartheid” and walked out of the Acknowledgment to Country.

In a Facebook comment, the proud Warlpiri woman alleged FitzSimons accused her of “giving racists a voice” during the telephone chat but it was not printed in the article.

“I don’t know if I’d do another interview with the bloke again. He accused me of giving racists a voice but that wasn’t printed,” Senator Price wrote before it was later deleted.

FitzSimons has denied all allegations made by Senator Price.

Stream more on politics with Flash. 25+ news channels in 1 place. New to Flash? Try 1 month free. Offer ends October 31, 2022

She later elaborated and said the interview started off “quite well” before claiming FitzSimons became “aggressive, condescending and rude.”

“I’m not a wilting violet but he’s a very aggressive bloke, his interview style is very bloody aggressive, he doesn’t need to launch in,” she told The Australian.

“Accusing me of somehow giving power to racists because the issues I raise are confronting – he loses the point completely.

“I said to him, ‘Get down from the blood ivory tower and come out to one of my communities'”.

Senator Price also compared it to “having a conversation with a brick wall.”

FitzSimons was later contacted by the same publication that reached out to Senator Price for his version of events from last Thursday’s one-hour interview.

The author and columnist denied the allegations leveled against him and described the claims as “complete and utter nonsense”.

He said it was a “professional exchange” with the Senator and he had written “every single word recorded, as I told her.”

“Not even a raised voice. And she approved the entire final result,” he told The Australian in a text message.

“This is not remotely a matter of interpretation. Friendly interview, nice text exchange at its conclusion.”

Senator Price had been quizzed about the history of Australia, the Indigenous Voice to Parliament and her upbringing during the chat.

He asked how the advisory body would “drive a wedge between us all” after she argued in her maiden speech to Parliament in late-July it would divide Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians “further”.

“With a progressive mood sweeping the land, we’re far more unified now than we’ve ever been in our history, and the most prominent wedge, I respectfully submit, Senator, is people like you and your supporters,” FitzSimons posed.

“I don’t accept that,” Senator Price hit back.

“How is having a bureaucracy based on race placed into the Constitution, not driving a wedge? That peddles racial stereotypes of Indigenous Australians being a homogenous separate entity, and we’re not.

“They can call me a “coconut” – (black on the outside, white on the inside) – or an “Uncle Tom” because I’m expressing my views, but I don’t care.

“I’m an individual in my own right, with Indigenous heritage, but I am the first and foremost an Australian, and have no desire for the Constitution to treat me differently.”

She also defended Senator Hanson during the chat after she was quizzed about the One Nation leader’s maiden 1996 speech in Parliament.

“Does it not bother you that she is the most vocal critic of First Nations people in the country, and on this very day, she cites you as proof she’s right?” FitzSimons asked.

“No. I look further and a bit deeper than what is on the surface,” Senator Price said.

“And look, I know Pauline can certainly come across as though she is racist. But I don’t think that she is.

“I think she cares deeply for Indigenous Australians, and that her concern is more about taking more practical approaches towards solving some of our problems.”

.

Categories
Australia

Labor’s newest senator Fatima Payman is blazing trails and she hopes others will follow

Tucked away in Parliament House office, once occupied by Tony Abbott and Clive Palmer, now sits the 47th Parliament’s youngest new member.

At age 27, Senator Fatima Payman is making history and it’s a pretty big adjustment.

“I’ve told my friends ‘please don’t call me senator’. I’m still getting used to the title,” she laughed.

Senator Payman’s small team consists of young women just as eager as her for the first sitting fortnight of the new parliament.

David Pocock and Fatima Payman walk into the Senate
David Pocock and Fatima Payman arrive in the Senate for the first sitting day of the new parliament.(ABC News: Matt Roberts)

It’s safe to say Fatima Payman is vastly different from the men who’ve sat at this very desk and in the Senate chamber she now frequents.

She came to Australia with her family as a refugee from Afghanistan in 2003 and was raised in the northern suburbs of Perth, where she became a union organiser.

Now, she’s the youngest member of the 47th Parliament and the first Afghan-born hijab-wearing senator. She says she’s a “representative of modern Australia.”

“It just feels unreal to me. It’s an absolute privilege,” Senator Payman said.

The new Labor politician is representative of an election result that demonstrated Australians wanted politics done differently, electing an array of fresh faces in what is now one of Australia’s most diverse parliaments yet.

She said she wanted to turn a tide in Australian politics, having gone to the 2022 federal election with a focus on ambitious climate action, an “anti-corruption commission with teeth”, and fee-free TAFE courses.

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

Play Video.  Duration: 6 minutes 41 seconds

‘An absolute privilege’: Senator Fatima Payman on her journey in politics so far

But with her new role comes a unique kind of pressure, one that few of her colleagues have experienced.

Senator Payman says she’s already trying to manage the expectations of the many diverse groups she’s part of – including her Afghan and Perth communities, young Australians, women, migrants, and people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds.

“Having people’s hopes and dreams attached to your sort of progress and the work you do is quite a lot of pressure,” she said.

Nevertheless, she said the pressure was born out of knowing how important it is for all Australians to see themselves reflected in the nation’s most important institution — something she wished her late father could have seen her achieve.

“As ethnic households, politics is discussed at the dinner table all the time, but it never occurred to me that it was a career that I would take upon,” she said.

Anthony Albanese and Richard Marles stand alongside Fatima Payman as she signs the Labor roll
Fatima Payman officially joining federal Labor’s parliamentary caucus.(ABC News: Matt Roberts)

What’s most notable about Senator Payman is her youth. She was giddy and nervous as she watched the cameras and lights set up for her sit-down interview, repeating “I’m new to all of this” and hiding her slightly chipped nails from the camera’s view.

As the third-youngest senator in Australian history, she follows West Australian Greens senator Jordon Steele-John, who became the youngest-ever senator at age 23, and former South Australian senator Natasha Stott Despoja, who famously strode into Parliament House wearing Doc Marten boots at age 26, before going on to become the youngest elected leader of a political party.

Senator Payman looks at her youth as a strength, one that makes her, and her fellow young senators stand out in the stuffy, old building on Capital Hill.

She said she was using her age as a tool to advocate for other young Australians, who she said went into the federal election having lost faith in the political system and were continually ignored when it came to important legislation.

“I hope that my presence will be welcoming but also a beacon of hope for many out there, especially the young demographic that often see themselves slip through the cracks when it comes to massive legislation,” she said.

“It’s important that young people are brought to the table.”

New senators stand in a semi-circle inside the Senate
Fatima Payman with the class of 2022 Senate intake.(ABC News: Matt Roberts)

Senator Payman used her now-viral first address to the Senate to mark the historic moment of her election to the 47th parliament.

“Who would’ve thought that a young woman born in Afghanistan and a daughter of a refugee would be standing in this chamber today,” she told the Senate.

“One hundred years ago, let alone 10 years ago, would this parliament have been this accepting? 100 years ago, let alone 10 years ago, would this parliament accept a woman choosing a hijab to be elected?”

She used the opportunity to tell young girls who chose to wear a hijab to do so with pride.

“For those who choose to advise me about what I should wear or judge my competence based on my internal experience, know that the hijab is my choice,” Senator Payman said.

“I want young girls who choose to wear a hijab to do it with pride and knowledge they have the right.”

The historic moment comes shy of five years since One Nation’s Pauline Hanson wore a burqa in the Senate to call for the dress to be banned in Australia.

“I think it’s unfortunate that I can’t claim to be the first person who has worn Muslim attire inside those same chambers,” Senator Payman said.

“Heck, this is who I am. I want people to accept me for who I am.”

Fatima Payman sits at a desk in her Parliament House office
Fatima Payman wants more young people to enter federal politics.(ABC News: Nick Haggarty)

First speeches often allow a politician to tell their life story.

Senator Payman also used her address to thank her late father, becoming emotional as she acknowledged his sacrifices when bringing her family to Australia.

She later revealed the speech took place on what would have been her father’s 52nd birthday.

“We have all heard ‘it takes a village to raise a child’. This truly hits home for me. I’d like my first gratitude to be expressed to my late beloved, whose sacrifices will never be forgotten and who I dearly wish was here to see how far his little daughter has come,” she said.

“Knowing the sacrifices that my dad went through as a taxi driver [and] security guard to ensure he saved enough money to make ends meet to support this family and to ensure that my siblings and I had the future that he wasn’t able to secure for himself.”

.

Categories
Australia

ACT Independent senator David Pocock delivers maiden speech in Senate, welcomes deaf community in Auslan

ACT Independent senator David Pocock has delivered his maiden speech to federal parliament, during which he welcomed the deaf community using Auslan.

In preparing to make his first speech, Senator Pocock asked last week if he could have an Auslan interpreter alongside him on the floor of the Senate.

But Senator Pocock said both major parties denied his request – a decision he labeled “disappointing.”

Instead, as Senator Pocock delivered his first speech to the chamber, Auslan interpreter Mandy Dolejsi appeared on a large TV behind him and was also broadcast translating his words for people who are deaf or hard of hearing.

“When I was asked by people in our community to have this first speech live-translated into Auslan I didn’t hesitate to say yes,” Senator Pocock said.

“So, thank you, Mandy, for being here today and translating my words.”

But Senator Pocock said the compromise that had been struck to have Ms Dolejsi in a studio and not on the chamber floor was “the difference between accessibility and inclusion”.

“Today we have achieved the former but not the latter. In future, I hope we can achieve both,” he said.

In a message to further demonstrate what he said was his intention to make Australia’s parliament more inclusive, Senator Pocock himself signed a short welcome to the deaf community, though the Senate cameras were too far away to effectively capture it.

New senator doubles down on action on climate change, restoring territory rights

David Pocock speaking in the Senate chamber.
Senator Pocock says he hopes the latest attempt to restore territory rights will be successful.(ABC News: Ian Cutmore)

Senator Pocock made history on the night of the federal election when he became the first territory senator who was not from a major party.

One of the so-called “teal independents”, he had campaigned on a range of issues, including action on climate change and territory rights.

In addressing the chamber, Senator Pocock solidified his support for the issues, saying he wanted “to be a peace broker in the 47th parliament.”

“There is no challenge greater than facing up to the climate and biodiversity crises we face,” he said.

“Today, the systems that sustain life on earth are at the brink of collapse. The climate as we know it is breaking down and the impacts are now being felt with distressing regularity.

“The challenges facing us are so important. I want to be part of making sure we don’t just end the climate wars, we win them.”

Senator Pocock on Monday threw his support behind a bill introduced to parliament by Canberra MP Alicia Payne and her Northern Territory colleague Luke Gosling.

If successful, the bill would repeat the 1996 ban on the territories debating voluntary assisted dying laws.

“It is time for us to restore the right of the territories to make decisions for themselves. To ensure that our Legislative Assembly here in the ACT gets to make decisions about the future of Canberrans, not MPs from around the country whose own constituents already enjoy these same rights,” Senator Pocock said.

“This is not the first time the parliament has tried to repeal the Andrews Bill. But I hope it will be the last.”

ACT ‘no longer a safe seat’, senator says

Telstra Tower in the foreground overlooking Lake Burley Griffin with the sun setting over mountains.
Senator Pocock says “for too long we have been neglected, ridiculed, looked down on or flat out ignored.”(ABC My Photo: @outdooraus)

In concluding his speech, Senator Pocock vowed to use his power as an independent senator and crossbencher “in the best interests of the people of the ACT.”

“For too long we have been neglected, ridiculed, looked down on or flat out ignored,” he said.

“We’re the nation’s capital. I want this to once again be a source of great pride.

“No longer are we a safe seat … The days of the ACT getting less than a quarter of our share of infrastructure funding by head of population are over.

“And so finally, I would like to say thank you to the people of the ACT. Whether you voted for me or not, I will work on your behalf for the next three years.

“I’m committed to being accessible and transparent and I certainly know that you will hold me to account.”

.