Sunday, July 6, 2025

Step forward for Victoria’s path to Treaty

Victoria’s path to Treaty has taken another step forward, with the State Government announcing it expects to introduce the Statewide Treaty Bill to Parliament later this year.

Negotiations on Victoria’s Statewide Treaty Bill are focusing on how to evolve the First Peoples’ Assembly of Victoria into an ongoing representative body to provide advice to Government and make decisions over matters that affect First Peoples.

For the last five years, the First People’s Assembly has been the independent, democratically elected body representing First Peoples in the Treaty Process.

Victoria’s Statewide Treaty Bill is proposed to give the Assembly decision-making powers to make sure First Peoples’ communities can design and deliver practical solutions for their communities.

The State and the Assembly are negotiating on how to provide for the Assembly to:

  • Form the independent accountability mechanism that is required by the National Agreement to Close the Gap and provide concrete solutions and recommendations to improve outcomes for First Peoples;
  • Make decisions and rules about specific matters that directly impact First Peoples, such as the confirmation of Aboriginality;
  • Run an Aboriginal Community Infrastructure Program, the Victorian Aboriginal Honour Roll and important events like NAIDOC week;
  • Making certain statutory appointments for designated First Peoples’ seats on government boards and entities, such as First Peoples appointments to the Heritage Council of Victoria;
  • Celebrate over 60,000 years of First Peoples’ culture, including by bringing it into the ceremonial life of Victoria;
  • Lead ongoing truth-telling, healing and reconciliation across Victorian towns and regions, including capturing stories and retaining an archive of this information to support education of the broader public about our shared history;
  • Make representations and provide advice to the Government, including being able to ask questions of Ministers and creating a duty for Ministers and departments to consult with the Assembly on laws and policies that are specifically directed to First Peoples;
  • Build on First Peoples’ knowledge and leadership to strengthen self-determination in the Treaty-era.

The proposed body will sit within the State’s existing parliamentary and democratic structures. It will not have veto power on policy or legislation – a power that does not exist under Victoria’s parliamentary system.​

Under Victoria’s Statewide Treaty Bill, the proposal is that the First Peoples’ Assembly would be a statutory corporation.​

Treaty could also build on the strong community accountability demonstrated by the First Peoples’ Assembly and legislate its ongoing public reporting, election processes, participatory governance and cultural oversight from Elders.

The proposed ongoing body would be subject to oversight bodies including IBAC, VAGO and Ombudsman.

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