14 January 2025

Dutton will force councils to hold Australia Day events on the day

| Chris Johnson
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Flag and magpie at Australian Parliament House

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton won’t be attending the national Australia Day ceremony in Canberra on 26 January. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

Peter Dutton is determined to make Australia Day an election issue, demanding all local councils recognise the day on the day and hold their ceremonies on 26 January.

But he won’t be attending the national ceremony in Canberra.

The Opposition Leader said a Coalition government would change the rules to return the days when all ceremonies were held on Australia Day itself.

Since 2022, councils have been allowed to hold their Australia Day events up to three days either side of the actual day (if they want to attract federal funding for their ceremonies).

An increasing number of councils are choosing to hold their events on days leading up to or just after the 26th, due to the controversy of it commemorating the arrival of the First Fleet, which many Indigenous Australians now call Invasion Day.

But Mr Dutton said enough was enough and that local governments should not be “ashamed” of their country on its national day.

“We have an incredible Indigenous history we should celebrate, and we have an incredible migrant story we should celebrate that as well,” he said.

The Opposition Leader said Australia should recognise the good and bad in its history.

READ ALSO Did Peter Dutton just call an election?

“Part of the reason we have found ourselves in the mess at the moment, with councils running in every direction, is because the Prime Minister removed the requirement for councils to hold their citizenship ceremony on Australia Day,” he said.

“If the Prime Minister doesn’t have the strength of leadership to stand up to mayors and others who don’t want to celebrate Australia Day, then our country’s in more trouble than we first realised.

“There are millions of Australians who have made the migrant journey to our country, they have enriched this country, and for many of them Australia Day is sacrosanct because they became citizens on that day.”

Mr Dutton has confirmed he will not attend the national ceremony in the capital on Australia Day.

Anthony Albanese suggested that was a bit of a contradiction on the part of the Opposition Leader.

“I will be attending the national Australia Day commemorations, as I have done every year in which I have been Labor leader,” the Prime Minister said.

“I hope that Peter Dutton this year makes a choice to join the national Australia Day celebrations in Canberra. That is what I did as the Opposition leader.”

Public Service Minister Katy Gallagher said while she had attended the national ceremony for years, she couldn’t recall ever seeing Mr Dutton at one.

READ ALSO Australia Day snub sparks backlash for our man in London

The Federal Government is providing more than $10 million in financial support for hundreds of Australia Day community events in every state and territory.

A focus on inclusiveness and accessibility will be highlighted at these Australia Day events across the country.

Assistant Minister to the Prime Minister and for the Public Service, Patrick Gorman, said Australia Day was a day to celebrate the freedoms we share and the values and beliefs we hold as Australians.

“It is a day to acknowledge the past and pay respect to First Nations peoples’ survival, resilience and enduring culture,” he said.

“It is also an opportunity to embrace the many cultures and backgrounds that make up the Australian story.”

Australia’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom Stephen Smith caused somewhat of an uproar last week over his decision to snub Australia Day celebrations in London over the “sensitivities” attached to the date.

He has since backflipped on his stance and will now attend a party co-hosted by the Britain-Australia Society and the Australian Foundation Trust on 25 January, with nothing scheduled for the actual day on the 26th.

But his about-face did not occur before Mr Dutton blasted Australia’s top diplomat in the UK for being “ashamed” of his country’s national day.

“If Stephen Smith is ashamed of Australia Day, he should be on the next flight home,” the Opposition Leader said.

Last year, Mr Dutton called for a boycott of Woolworths over the supermarket giant’s decision not to sell Australia Day merchandise.

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ChrisinTurner3:26 pm 21 Jan 25

Strange that Dutton is proposing “big government” from Canberra.

Heaps of Australia Day events, but only those that are inclusive get government support

Last years article… nothing being forced by government at all … the piper plays as he gets paid!

Dutton or an actual Prime Minister has no constitutional power to direct local councils to do anything. He can only threaten funding for citizenship ceremonies.

It is a case of the usual culture wars initiated in the name of “unity”, to be enforced by financial coercion. Those are his “Australian values”.

Every poll and survey, every year, shows the vast majority support Australia day remaining on the 26th. Local councils filled with activists are virtue signalling and ignoring what the clear majority want. Completely anti democracy, and running a little culture war. All the left have is culture wars and class wars.

No Ken that’s not true. It’s just the polls run by the IPA and other conservative ‘thinktanks’ or ‘researchers’ and those run by the newscorp media. They’re the ones that survey their readers on this question, so not statistically sound objective random sampling meaning the results are not scientifically valid. Not that the full demographics and detail of the samples are never revealed, nor is the methodology which is terribly flawed ‘research’.

The great majority support there being an Australia Day and most are supportive of it being the 26th, yet only a minority opposes changing it. A majority thinks it is likely to change in the next decade or so.

Nuance. Try it.

Coincidentally, over 60% did not know what event the 26th celebrates and a majority did not know it related to the first fleet at all.

No surveys were found extolling the virtues of telling elected local councils what to do.

Culture wars. Don’t bother.

@Ken M
“Completely anti democracy …”
Obviously the new year has not seen you make any resolutions about bringing credibility or facts to your posts.

While you can rant and rave about left aligned councils, the bottom line is they have been democratically elected by the rate payers – so the majority have spoken and clearly Australia Day celebrations were not on their agenda when voting.

Nobody is considering Australia day in council elections, JS. As usual, you are drawing ab awfully long bow on this.
Common sense would tell any normal person that when the vast majority don’t want Australia day changed from January 26th on every poll and survey ever run, that these councils are pushing personal agendas against the wants of their constituents. That’s anti democratic, no matter how you try to spin it.

@Ken M
If, as you say, nobody is “considering Australia day in council elections”, then it means it’s not a big issue for those people involved in the democratic process for a particular council. So, your jingoistic chest beating hooplah is really a non event for the majority of those electors then.

Again, JS, you have nothing but spin here. Australia day is not a council election issue. The councils are abusing their position to push their personal agendas. The only fact that matters is that every single poll and survey shows that Australians overwhelmingly reject your culture war nonsense of changing the date to placate the eternally aggrieved.

@Ken M
OK – here we go again, with you showing your total incapacity to engage on a rational, factual level.

Any decision taken by a local council is a matter for the electors to determine if it’s appropriate or not. So, if “The councils are abusing their position to push their personal agendas” then surely that would make it a council election issue? It then follows, that voters would object, in the most overt way possible, and vote them out of office.

Some councils have had this “attitude” to Australia Day celebrations for many years (and at least two council election cycles) – and the constituent voters have not voted them out.

So unless you can actually argue facts, rather than a pathetic whine about my “spin”, I suggest you go tend to the bats in your belfry as they are totally out of control.

I am arguing facts. I’m not engaging in your typical BS where we pretend Australia day is even a featured policy in council elections. The only person here presenting facts is me, with the fact that every poll and survey comes back with the overwhelming majority wanting Australia day left alone. Meanwhile you are making up garbage based on your own kooky view that because a council gets voted in that their constituents agree with their personal agendas on Australia day.

@Ken M
“with the fact that every poll and survey comes back with the overwhelming majority wanting Australia day left alone”
A Roy Morgan poll (https://www.roymorgan.com/findings/9422-roy-morgan-australia-day-survey-january-22-2024) in January last year, showed 58.5% of people polled, say they want Australia Day to stay on 26th Jan . An IPSOS poll (https://www.ipsos.com/en-au/australiaday_2024), from around the same time, showed that only 48.% of those polled think the national day should stay on 26th January. Hardly overwhelming, except to a muppet who probably thinks 50.1% is overwhelming.

I wasn’t able to find any reference to recent polls.

Nevertheless, I don’t dispute that generally, Australians probably think it should stay at 26-Jan. So what? Despite your carry-on, there are a number of local councils who choose not to hold official celebrations on that day.

I didn’t say that (the majority of) their constituents agreed, you are making that up. I said that if the majority of voters, in that council jurisdiction, were that concerned about it, they would vote them out. Clearly that hasn’t happened, so it’s obviously not a big enough issue for those voters – irrespective of what your “overwhelming majority wanting Australia day left alone” think.

Like your ranting – it’s irrelevant. What is relevant, is the decision made by those councillors, elected to make decisions, on many matters for that council region, including Australia Day celebrations. And that is a fact.

devils_advocate9:32 pm 17 Jan 25

Lmao

Imagine being so unaware and oblivious that you’ve never heard of KenM or r/KenM

I wouldn’t even insult the people living under rocks

@devils_advocate
Is there actually a point to your post, or are you just wanting to showcase your skills (or lack thereof) as a dabbler in geology?

Our local kook is pretty easy to stir with the horsey surprise tactics.

@Ken M
Congratulations. Your latest comment, based on its (non) intellectual value, has helped you soar to the lofty heights of mediocrity, possibly a PB for you.

I loved getting my Citizenship on Australia day. All my family and friends where invited and heaps showed up. Lucky it was a public holiday and most had the day off.

If you don’t want Australia day on the 26th January get rid of it and celebrate Australia’s true birth instead on the 1st January instead and loose a public holiday.

There’s no good reason that there couldn’t be another public holiday given on another day.

John Pedestrian9:56 pm 15 Jan 25

The feds pay out 10 million to local governments for Australia things. Don’t know how many LGs there are but 10 million divided by say a thousand local governments works out at about ten grand each , stuff all.
If councils don’t want to do it on Australia day they still can( minus some beer money from the feds.)
Duttons announcement is just more politics as ‘ windy theatre ‘.

HiddenDragon8:27 pm 15 Jan 25

Dutton has made a few public comments about shaking up the federation (or words to that effect) which is presumably about looking for savings via reducing/eliminating overlap and duplication etc. between the different levels of government.

As part of that, a review of the role of local government in the national economy, including in the delivery of services funded in part or whole by the commonwealth, would be a very useful step.

Such a review, done rigorously, could put a long overdue rocket up a level of government which is too often hijacked by posturing activists looking for a platform and/or seen as a stepping stone for upwardly thrusting apparatchiks who use issues such as the Australia Day debate as a distraction from sub-standard service delivery and proof of ideological purity.

The pretence that Dutton’s culture wars are good public policy is laughable.

Dutton will do the same that Abbott, Turnbull and Morrison did if elected, nothing.

William Teach8:08 am 17 Jan 25

It would help if local government were only doing actual local issues, were much smaller, and could thus be operated as direct democracies with staffing provided by the state public service.

However, a bigger issue is federal interference in state matters – the federal government should massively reduce its use of concurrent powers, convert all existing conditional grants into unconditional block grants, get the high court to reinterpret the foreign affairs power as not allowing any domestic action (so a treaty implementation act can’t bind the states), and so on

Surely it is up to the voters in each council jurisdiction to decide if their democratically elected officials should hold Australia Day events on the day in their municipality. Councils have chosen not to do so in the past, and have obviously been re-elected by the majority – that’s how democracy works.

Australia Day is for all Australians. Because you’re in an enclave of ‘self-derision’ should no excuse you from celebrating what is wonderful about our country.

Celebrate, or else.

For all Australians.

Geedess even writes his or her own self-parodies.

In a free country there is no need to ‘excuse people from celebrating anything’. They have the freedom to do what they wish and no-one should be forcing celebrations on anyone for any purpose. This is not yet a fascist state.

Making the ridiculous assumption that not wanting to celebrate a certain event on a certain day is about self-derision shows a complete lack of imagination and understanding of human nature.

@Geedess
“an enclave of ‘self-derision'”
One thing we have in common – neither of us know what you are talking about.

Nevertheless, where did I deningrate Australia Day? Perhaps you see Australia Day as the opportunity to engage in jingoistic displays? Fine – break out your Aussie flag thongs, shorts and singlet and fill your boots … but don’t tell others how to celebrate it and neither should Dutton.

Andrew Cooke9:47 am 16 Jan 25

Celebrate all you want, however some people (quite rightly) don’t like the negative associations with that date and would like to celebrate on a different day.

The headline should read “Dutton To Force Councils Nationwide to Celebrate NSW Founding”…

Dutton declaring his intentions, we can’t say we weren’t warned. And Albanese, typical soppy Milquetoast response. Neither party deserves to win. Bring on the Independents

Yep. I hope all the teals retain their seats and a few more Labor/Liberal seats go teal as well.

Not that i care either way but i am sick of the lefties trying to make me feel guilty for being Australian. This is how Trump got in. People are sick of the outrage for outrage sake.

He rants in outrage…do you even hear yourself?

No one is trying to make you do anything.

Seano, your leftie apologist attitude is bigger than highway billboard

Really? You think people care enough about your opinion to try to make you feel guilty? What would be the point of that?

Councils shouldn’t be forced, just as government and sporting events shouldn’t be forced to have welcome o country ceremonies

No one is forced to have a welcome to country.

The general public appreciates it.

Embracing our Indigenous heritage doesn’t diminish any other part of our heritage.

Capital Retro2:51 pm 15 Jan 25

We are forced to “embrace” so called indigenous heritage almost every day of the year.
It overweighs our Australian heritage. Dutton wants to restore some balance.

What a load of self-pitying drivel, you’re not forced to “embrace” anything.

All Dutton wants to do is rile up culture wars dummies because doesn’t have a single good idea for this country.

@Capital Retro
Who is forcing you to ’embrace” so called indigenous heritage’, CR? The fact that the body hosting a sporting or other official event may choose to present a welcome to country as part of the leadup is hardly forcing anyone to embrace anything. Have you been fined, imprisoned and/or in any way penalised, for not embracing it – which you definitely would not do?

How are you forced?

Good with that nonsense. Dutton wouldn’t have the power and even if he did it would be like herding cats.

Does Dutton have a single idea for fixing any of the genuine problems we face in this country? Every Dutton “policy” I’ve heard so far amounts to little more than culture wars garbage.

Dutton is seemingly spruiking for a return to Abbott/Turnbull/Morrison government which achieved nothing.

Seano, yes, the Coalition has a plan to get to net zero by 2050 with cheap, clean, consistent 24/7 power using a balanced mix of renewable and nuclear generators. This is a good idea to fix a genuine problem.

No, they don’t champion.

They have a plan to make power in this country significantly more expensive.

It won’t happen because this bogus plan relies on massive assumptions such as Australia building nuclear power faster than any country in history, and that SMRs will become commercially viable when they currently are not (BTW there are only two SMRs in commercial operation, both massively subsidised by totalitarian govts, they cost too much for too little power). Dutton’s nuclear plan doesn’t make any economic sense at.

The Gencost Report proves this.

The Energy & Generators and Retailers have rejected Dutton’s nonsense as being too expensive & too slow. Therefore it’s not going to happen even if he wins power.

This is therefore NOT an example of a sensible policy to solve a genuine problem. It is indeed more culture wars garbage. Time to grow up.

Nobody,
Even under the coalition’s fanciful analysis on Nuclear, they admit that Carbon emissions will be significantly higher under their plan up until the late 2040’s, when compared to a transition based on renewables.

Nuclear, expensive, with higher emissions.

Sounds like a bad solution to a problem that already has a cheaper and cleaner solution.

Seano, Chewy14, During the world climate meeting of 2023, there were 26 nations who made the “Declaration to Triple Nuclear Energy by 2050”, which included Canada, Japan, Korea, Sweden, UK, and US, and they were joined by 6 more nations at the 2024 meeting. Then 14 global banks joined this declaration in mid 2024, which included Bank of America, Barclays, Citi, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and Rothschild. When the declaration was made US Presidential climate envoy John Kerry said “We are not making the argument that this is absolutely going to be the sweeping alternative to every other energy source. But … you can’t get to net-zero 2050 without some nuclear.”

So you can’t get there without “some” nuclear at a global scale?

Glad no one has suggested that is the case, particularly not for nations with well developed nuclear power industries.

Shame that at the same meeting you’re talking about, they agreed to triple renewable energy generation by 2030, with significantly higher commitments on renewables to achieve net zero by 2050.

Not sure how this changes the fact that the coalition’s own plan shows significantly higher emissions profiles.

GrumpyGrandpa12:11 pm 15 Jan 25

My take on this is that as a nation, something as significant as the country’s national day shouldn’t be hijacked by local councils.

Whoever pays for the celebration can choose the day and the form of celebration. Currently most celebrations are funded by local government. The federal government funds a national celebration in Canberra where Australians of the year are recognised, an event that Dutton refuses to attend. Very unAustralian for someone who wants to lead the country.

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