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Support for Australia Day celebration on January 26 drops: new research

theconversation.com Support for Australia Day celebration on January 26 drops: new research

New polling shows a significant drop in support for January 26 in just two years.

Support for Australia Day celebration on January 26 drops: new research

New polling shows a significant drop in support for January 26 in just two years.

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  • Foreigner here. Would you like a different date? When? Or would rather re-define the current one?

    Edit. I just saw the SJ Patterson post and learned a lot on there.

    • saw the SJ Patterson post and learned a lot on there

      Haha yeah.

      What isn’t exactly made explicit in that thread (it’s sorta just understood by everyone, so while hints towards it are there, nobody needed to make it explicit), 26 January is associated with the arrival of white people on this land, and thus it’s symbolic of the start of oppression towards the Aboriginal population. Among progressive and Aboriginal circles, you’ll often see it called "invasion day" for that reason.

      That’s why people think it should be moved, though agreeing on when to move it to is a much harder proposition.

      Some people want it to stay around this time of year because it’s summer and people like barbies and outdoors. Others say we have enough holidays already between late December and early May (Christmas, Boxing Day, New Year, Good Friday, Easter Monday, ANZAC Day, Labour Day) and would like to see something in the back half of the year, between September and November. Then there’s the question of whether or not it should be a day that has meaningful symbolism, and if so what that symbolism should be.

      I’ll re-share my proposed alternatives in case anyone else wants to see them:

      3 March as the day of commencement of the Australia Act (1986), which saw the last vestiges of Australia's status as a British dominion ended.

      3 September as the day Australia adopted the Statute of Westminster with the Statute of Westminster Adoption Act 1942, which removed the United Kingdom's ability to legislate over the Commonwealth of Australia and making Australia truly a legally independent nation in a de jure sense.

      9 July as the date the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act 1900 became law, enabling the constitution to actually take effect on 1 January 1901.

      • We do the queen/king's bday on a different date to whatever the current Monarch's actual bday is. Surely we could just do the same thing with any of these other dates.

      • The march and September dates are already holidays. Not that I object to shuffling Labour day around.

        • According to the Australian holidays calendar I subscribe to, 4 March is Labour Day in Western Australia. That would just mean they get an extra-long weekend. (Besides, no offence, but that's a dumb time for Labour Day. In terms of the history of the labour movement, on or about 1 May is when it should be.)

          There's no holiday listed on my calendar on or near 3 September. Are you thinking of October, which is when ACT, NSW, and SA have their Labour Day (plus Qld has King's Birthday and Christmas Island has Territory Day)?

          • It turns out our (WA) Monarch's birthday is September 23. I thought it was earlier in the month than that. But still, it's a bit close to September 3.

            • (WA) Monarch’s birthday is September 23

              Yeah apparently in WA the Governor chooses each year and announces his decision on the first Monday in June. It’s almost always either the last Monday in September or the first in October.

              Edit: his decision is apparently largely based on when school holidays and Perth Royal Show are

              But still, it’s a bit close to September 3.

              Not really any closer than the current date is to New Year’s.

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