A day after parliament endorsed a bill setting out the question and constitutional change, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese had begun working with advisers and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander leaders to settle on a date for the vote.
Mr Albanese told reporters it would be held in the final quarter of the year, but there is speculation October 14 is the government’s preferred date.
“It will be a moment of national unity, a chance to make our nation even greater,” he said.
Indigenous Australians Minister Linda Burney said the passing of the laws was the start of a “national conversation at the community level about what a voice is, why it’s needed, and how it will make a practical difference”.
“What I can say for certain is that our democracy and decision-making will be enhanced by the voice because listening to a range of opinions is essential for good policy,” she said.
Opposition Indigenous Australians spokeswoman Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, a leader of the No campaign, said a “Canberra body of academics and experts” would not be an effective way of closing the wellbeing gap.
“If the Yes vote is successful, we will be divided for ever,” she said.
Opposition leader Peter Dutton asked the prime minister in parliament why he was not providing details of the voice before people cast their vote at the referendum.
“Why are Australians being asked to make the biggest change to Australia’s constitution in decades, creating a permanent new body without any details as to how it would operate?” Mr Dutton said.
Mr Albanese said the parliament — after the referendum was held — would determine the “structure, the composition, the powers and the procedures” of the voice.
But he said there was a clear set of principles, including no right of veto, the primacy of the parliament, the selection of members by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people based on the wishes of local communities, gender balance, youth involvement, accountability and transparency.
Advocacy organisation ANTAR national director Paul Wright said it was “another hurdle cleared”.
“As the consideration of proper recognition and voice leaves the Canberra arena, it is a good thing that it will now be in our towns and cities, our communities and around our kitchen tables that we reflect on what is at stake,” he said.
Labor senator and “father of reconciliation”, Pat Dodson, who is on leave from parliament, tweeted he had “great faith that we will come together to vote ‘yes’ for a better future”.
A pamphlet setting out the Yes and No cases will be mailed to households in coming weeks.