Flat White

Jacinta roasts Jacinta over Victorian Treaty

Labor ignores voters and pushes ahead with race politics

31 October 2025

2:55 PM

31 October 2025

2:55 PM

Ignoring the clear wishes of Victorians, expressed via the referendum on the Voice to Parliament, the Labor Premier Jacinta Allan has pushed ahead with official mechanisms that enshrine race into democracy.

It is a move that has shocked and upset the people of Victoria.

Premier Jacinta Allan wrote on X:

Last night, Victoria made history.

The first state in the nation to pass a Treaty with First Peoples.

Built on truth. On respect. On trust.

Families are better off when they have responsibility over their lives and Aboriginal families are no different.

Treaty is a pathway to acknowledging the past and making real, practical changes to achieve better outcomes for First Peoples in Victoria and close the gap.

A new relationship between the oldest continuous culture on earth – and every Victorian who calls this great state home.

This is what progress looks like – what respect feels like.

And this is how we move forward – together.

Others would call the above statement an outrageous misrepresentation of the Treaty’s consequences and demands.

Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price certainly had something to say about the Labor government’s dangerous descent into identity politics which threatens equality in Victoria.

In a statement titled: Premier Allan gives her middle finger to democracy, Senator Price replied:

On October 14, 2023, millions of Australians resoundingly rejected the Voice referendum that, if passed, would have divided our country by race.

Ahead of the vote, Australians understood that Prime Minister Albanese was committed to implementing the Uluru Statement ‘in full’ which includes three components.

The Uluru Statement states, ‘We call for the establishment of a First Nations Voice enshrined in the Constitution… We seek a Makarrata Commission to supervise a process of agreement-making between governments and First Nations and truth-telling about our history.’

The Prime Minister’s commitment to all three components was evident in the t-shirt he wore emblazoned with the words, ‘Voice. Treaty. Truth.’


The Voice was far from a ‘gracious request’. Activists who championed the Voice called it ‘a black political force to be reckoned with’ and ‘the first step in redistributing power’.

The longer version of the Uluru Statement mentions the goals of ‘self-government’, ‘self-determination’, ‘reparations’, and ‘a financial settlement’.

The ‘No’ referendum result wasn’t just a rejection of the divisive Voice.

It was also a rejection of divisive treaty-making.

It was also a rejection of those activists who have no interest in telling history in the round, but instead, seek to rewrite our past in the most hostile, unforgiving and unbalanced manner imaginable.

The referendum result was emphatic with more than 60 per cent of Australians voting ‘No’ and more than 54 per cent of Victorians voting ‘No’.

And yet, yesterday, the Victorian Parliament passed the Statewide Treaty Bill which will bring about everything a clear majority of Victorians voted against more than two years ago.

Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan and her Labor government championed this Bill because they never accepted the referendum outcome.

They stand condemned for their defiance of democracy and for their refusal to accept the will of the people.

In passing this Statewide Treaty Bill, the hubristic Jacinta Allan has given her middle finger to every Victorian who voted ‘No’ and to the democratic process in general.

We all know where this treaty leads:

Victorians will be divided by race.

The activists will be empowered to pursue their goals of reparations and segregation driven, as they are, by retribution and resentment – not reconciliation and forgiveness.

And Victorian children will be taught a distorted and revisionist view of history so they are indoctrinated to feel national guilt instead of the national pride they should feel for Australia – a country where our achievements and successes far outweigh our wrongdoings and failures.

While Premier Allan has succeeded in passing her Statewide Treaty Bill, she presides over a failed state:

A state where taxes are through the roof.

A state where debt is soaring.

A state where energy prices are skyrocketing.

A state where crime is out of control.

A state with a CBD beset by professional protesters of the revolutionary Left almost every weekend.

And a state where a biological man and convicted child sex offender can be incarcerated in a women’s prison.

The only way for Victorians to fix the state they love is to vote out this referendum-defying Premier with her warped priorities at the election next year.

It’s beyond time to give this incompetent Victorian Labor government the boot and begin to reverse a decade of decline.

The Victorian government likes to talk about respect, and yet the Premier could not respect the vote of the people.

Not to mention the propaganda damaging the truth of Australia’s shared history with children being taught about ‘the enduring harms of colonisation’ instead of the extraordinary peaceful and free country of today.

Meanwhile the bankrupt state will spend $206 million on the First Peoples Assembly, and at least $72.2 million every year after that. And that is only a fraction of the total cost.

Given these circumstances, you would imagine the Opposition Leader, Brad Battin, would be out saturating social media with promises to defend the rights of Victorians and reverse all policies that cite race.

But no.

At the time of writing, his most recent post discussed machetes and crime. When given the opportunity to fight against this horrific abuse of the Victorian people, he was wishy-washy at best saying his ‘sole goal is to close the gap when it comes to Indigenous people across Australia’ and that ‘we don’t believe the treaty is the pathway to that’.

Yes, his party has promised to scrap the Treaty, but he said it so quietly we had to check twice to make sure it happened.

‘The cost of the Treaty to the Victorian taxpayer is going to be in the billions of dollars. We have clearly said that money would be better invested in closing the gap.’

Weak. Do you want to win, or not?

It is not just the money, it is the morality.

The Opposition seems to have forgotten that its primary role is to protect the Victorian people from the Labor Party.

Victoria is a bit like America’s New York City, which is considering a Muslim socialist Mayor. Lots could go wrong. We have little choice but let Victoria run their mad experiment in race politics.

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