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Thursday, September 1, 2016

Linda Burney,the first Aboriginal woman elected to Australia's lower house of parliament

Linda Burney gives maiden speech as first female Indigenous lower house MP



The first Aboriginal woman elected to Australia's lower house of parliament has promised to bring the "fighting spirit of her clan" to political life. 

Labor MP Linda Burney will represent the New South Wales seat of Barton

In her maiden speech, Linda Burney wore a traditional kangaroo-skin cloak with her personal totem, the white cockatoo, known as the noisy messenger bird.

She lambasted calls for the Racial Discrimination Act to be watered down.

She warned that indigenous Australians still suffered disproportionately high rates of poverty and ill-health.

Usual protocol in the House of Representatives in Canberra was relaxed to allow a woman from Ms Burney's Wiradjuri clan to sing a welcome from the public gallery.



Referring to her people, she promised to bring the Wiradjuri fighting spirit into federal parliament.

"I was born at a time when the Australian government knew how how many sheep there were but not how many Aboriginal people," the former schoolteacher told the House.

"I was 10 years old before the '67 referendum fixed that. The first decade of my life was spent as a non-citizen."

Note

Linda Burney became the first Aboriginal to sit in the state Parliament in 156 years of its existence,when she became the first indigenous MP elected to the parliament of New South Wales, Australia's most populous state

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