The State of Australia
The Australia Together Podcast
Episode 42: Saving Australian democracy and sovereignty by building a new Constitution - Part 3
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Episode 42: Saving Australian democracy and sovereignty by building a new Constitution - Part 3

An essay in four parts by Bronwyn Kelly.

Find the full transcript:

Episodes 40, 41, 42 & 43: Saving Australian democracy and sovereignty by building a new Constitution - An essay in four parts by Bronwyn Kelly.

Introduction from Bronwyn Kelly:

Subscribers familiar with my writing will be aware of my most recent book, The People’s Constitution: the path to empowerment of Australians in a 21st century democracy. I’d like to thank readers for their positive comments. But now it is time to think about how we might begin to make a people’s constitution a reality.

In Episodes 40, 41, 42 and 43 of the Australia Together Podcast I’m reading a new major essay which builds on much of the research in The People’s Constitution, taking it to the next step. The essay sets out a practical way forward for the making of a new Constitution by the collaboration of Australians. I suggest in the essay that if we learn how to do this well as a nation - and we can - then we can rescue our democracy and sovereignty, both of which are very much at risk of loss at the moment.

I pose four questions in this essay and suggest answers that will help Australians transition from a constitutional monarchy to a constitutional democracy wherein we can achieve a peaceful coexistence of sovereignties and self-determining political equals. The questions are:

  1. Why does Australia need a new Constitution? (Part 1, Episode 40)

  2. What’s wrong with our democracy? (Part 2, Episode 41)

  3. How can Australians take back their democracy and sovereignty? (Part 3, Episode 42)

  4. How can Australians achieve a peaceful coexistence of sovereignties and self-determining political equals? (Part 4, Episode 43)

What’s in this Episode?

In Episode 42 I read Part 3 of the essay on Saving Australian Democracy and Sovereignty by Building a New Constitution. I ask,

How can Australians take back their democracy and sovereignty? Short answer: by establishing terms of trust with the parliaments they elect.

Full transcript of this series on Saving Australian Democracy and Sovereignty by Building a New Constitution

Click here for a full transcript of Episodes 40, 41, 42 and 43 on Saving Australian Democracy and Sovereignty by Building a New Constitution. Or find the transcript at the ACFP website at https://www.austcfp.com.au/major-essays

Other links: National Agreement on Human Rights and Obligations.

What is ACFP doing to help Australians build a new Constitution?

A major theme within this essay is the need to develop what I’ve called “non-exclusive terms of trust” that Australians can issue to those they elect to parliament. These terms should be designed by Australians so as to specify the purpose for which we wish to come together and stay together as a nation. They should amount to a statement of the national “purpose” or “project” and as such ideally should encompass a statements that:

  • affirm our most sincerely held values as an indissoluble commonwealth (the values that hold us together and define what we stand for as a nation);

  • enshrine all our human rights as equals;

  • transparently set out the government’s obligations to the people in observance of those rights; and

  • provide a guarantee that any and all of us shall be able to have a voice in how the nation should chart a course to a better future.

Australian Community Futures Planning (ACFP) is conducting practical experiments with integrated planning and community engagement processes that can help Australians collaborate to build these terms of trust. These trials have the potential to help Australians and those they elect to rise above politics and evade the uncertainties of the majoritarian democratic exclusion we currently reinforce by confining ourselves to casting votes in elections without specifying terms of trust for those who attain parliamentary and governmental power. If Australians can establish a process for development of non-exclusive terms of trust with those they elect, then there is also potential to release the elected from their servitude to corporate or external powers. Everyone will be better off, particularly the well-intentioned politicians.

To become involved in planning a better future for Australia, visit the ACFP website at https://www.austcfp.com.au/become-involved. Everyone is welcome to participate.

Want to know more about a People’s Constitution?

The People’s Constitution: the path to empowerment of Australians in a 21st century democracy is available in paperback here and on Kindle here. Or click on the picture below. Or visit the Australian Community Futures Planning website to purchase The People’s Constitution at https://www.austcfp.com.au/publications

Listen to the full reading of The People’s Constitution on Apple Podcast

A full reading of The People’s Constitution: the path to empowerment of Australians in a 21st century democracy is available in Episodes 1 to 35 in The Australia Together Podcast here.

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Chapter headings of The People’s Constitution

Chapter 1: The limits of Australia’s representative democracy

Chapter 2: Setting a path to power for the people

Chapter 3: Finding a place to start

Chapter 4: Essentials for a new start as a nation

Chapter 5: Essential No. 1 – Building a statement of Australian national values

Chapter 6: Essential No. 2 – Enshrinement of human rights and obligations in an Australian people’s constitution

Chapter 7: Essential No. 3 – A process for expression on the Australian people’s national voice

Chapter 8: Essential No. 4 – Priority constitutional amendments for an inclusive democracy

Chapter 9: Processes for engagement on and adoption of The Australian People’

Chapter 10: The possibilities of a new democracy under a people’s constitution

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