logo
Issue tearing Sydney's Mardi Gras apart

Issue tearing Sydney's Mardi Gras apart

Perth Now3 days ago
Sydney's annual Mardi Gras parade is 'the most visible celebration of LGBT people around the world', but activists warn internal division has put its future at risk.
An informal group of Mardi Gras members are campaigning to bring 'disillusioned' members back into the fold ahead of an annual general meeting expected in December.
Also seeking new members, the Protect Mardi Gras campaign aims to 'protect' the inclusive character of the world-famous event and resist efforts to ban NSW police from participating.
Organiser Peter Stahel said Mardi Gras members got 'within a handful of votes' in 2024 of banning police from attending the event following a string of controversies.
'It is the most visible celebration of LGBT people in the world, and it's incredible precious. I truly believe it saves lives – I really do,' Mr Stahel said of Mardi Gras.
'That's why we're doing this. We're not doing it because we want to protect the cops. We want to protect the cops' right to be in the parade.
'We want to protect that because of the power of Mardi Gras and the good that it does for people who are oftentimes really struggling to come to terms with who they are.' An informal group of Mardi Gras members are campaigning to bring members back amid internal divisions. NewsWire / Ben Symons Credit: NewsWire
Mr Stahel believed the push to ban police, and the subsequent pushback against that, went beyond a 'difference of opinion'.
He feared pushes to alienate certain groups from the parade would lead to other groups potentially being formally alienated as well in the future.
'They think we should ban cops. I disagree, but they're still welcome at Mardi Gras, right?' My Stahel said of groups opposed to police participation.
'So, what they're saying is 'anyone we disagree with shouldn't be invited'.
'Mardi Gras is built on this principle that in order to create change, you need to build alliances.
'You need to bring people in, you need to convince people, you need to change hearts, you need to change minds.'
Mr Stahel said campaigners were not pushing back on 'understandable anxieties or concerns about the police'.
'What we are saying is, even if only one in 100 cops are a true ally, it makes no sense to reject that one person,' he said.
'Let's celebrate this person. Let's celebrate the fact that they are brave enough to stand up and be visible. Police breaking up pro-Palestine activists at the 2024 Sydney Mardi Gras. NewsWire / Jeremy Piper Credit: News Corp Australia
'That's what Mardi Gras has been doing since 1998 when the cops first joined the parade.'
Mr Stahel pushed back on claims Mardi Gras had 'lost its way' as a protest, its origin rooted in bringing in people who might not otherwise have been able to be involved.
The campaign has received the backing of 78er Peter Murphy, one of the initial activists who marched in the original Sydney Mardi Gras in 1978.
While he said activists faced 'real and raw' police brutality in the early days, 'progress does not come only from shouting people down'.
'It comes from showing up, educating, challenging, and building alliances.' he said.
Mr Murphy pushed back against what he said was a movement to ban 'LGBTQIA+ police, military, certain political parties, and corporate sponsors'.
'Their goal isn't to broaden the movement – it's to use it to punish,' he said.
'Their strategy is to stack the AGM, take over the board, and totally change what Mardi Gras is and has been.' The parade has been a significant event in the city for decades. NewsWire / Jeremy Piper Credit: News Corp Australia
Attempts to ban police from Mardi Gras were only narrowly defeated at last year's AGM.
Members voted 493 to 459 against banning police.
The failed resolution was moved by the Mardi Gras board and based on community consultation that it said found 54 per cent of respondents opposed police participation.
It came after the alleged murders of Jesse Baird and Luke Davies by NSW Police officer Beau Lamarre-Condon – who has not entered any pleas and whose matter is still before the courts – as well as the Special Commission of Inquiry into LGBTIQ hate crimes.
One of the groups advocating for police to be excluded is Pride in Protest.
In a video shortly after the December AGM, the group said it was not a matter of if police would be excluded from the march but when.
The group has been contacted for comment.
The Mardi Gras organisation declined to comment on the campaign.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Albo's big Gaza call with French leader
Albo's big Gaza call with French leader

Perth Now

time2 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Albo's big Gaza call with French leader

Anthony Albanese has restated Australia's support for a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine in a phone call with Emmanuel Macron. The French President was the first major Western leader to conditionally commit to recognising a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly (UNGA) next month amid starvation in Gaza. The UK and Canada soon followed, sparking speculation that Australia could be next. The Prime Minister has neither committed to nor ruled out doing so, but his government has acknowledged the global 'momentum' for Palestinian statehood. 'The leaders spoke about the crisis in Gaza and their ongoing commitment to getting aid to civilians,' according to a readout of the call put out on Wednesday. 'Both leaders discussed their longstanding support for a two-state solution.' Anthony Albanese has restated Australia's support for a two-state solution in a phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron. Prime Minister's Office / Handout / NewsWire Credit: Supplied The readout said they also 'discussed action on climate and France's support for Australia's joint bid to host COP31 in partnership with the Pacific' as well as 'the importance of finalising the Australia-EU Free Trade Agreement'. 'The leaders agreed to stay in close touch and meet again at the United Nations General Assembly in September,' it said. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and French President Emmanuel Macron will meet on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in September. Prime Minister's Office / Handout / NewsWire Credit: Supplied Mr Albanese held a similar call with Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, earlier this week. France, the UK and Canada have all condemned Hamas' October 7 attacks on Israel in 2023 and said the Palestinian Islamist group cannot play a role in Gaza's governance. Though, all have also made clear the civilian suffering in the war-ravaged strip cannot continue either. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he would go ahead with recognition if Israel did not loosen its chokehold on aid flowing into Gaza, where the death toll from starvation has climbed to nearly 200, according to local health officials. Foreign Minister Penny Wong on Tuesday repeated the Albanese government's condemnation of Hamas and said there was an 'unique opportunity in the international community to isolate and diminish' it while giving life to a Palestinian state.

‘Real thing': China will keep spying on us
‘Real thing': China will keep spying on us

Perth Now

time16 hours ago

  • Perth Now

‘Real thing': China will keep spying on us

China will only continue ramping up secretive efforts to advance its domestic and international agenda in Australia this century despite the Albanese government's attempts to normalise relations, a leading national security expert says. The assessment comes a day after the Australian Federal Police charged a Chinese national with 'reckless foreign interference' in Canberra. The woman, a permanent resident of Australia, is accused of covertly collecting information about the Canberra branch of a Buddhist association called Guan Yin Citta on behalf of China's Public Security Bureau. The Guan Yin Citta association is banned in China. Chris Taylor of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) told NewsWire it reflects 'the reality of espionage and foreign interference directed against Australia'. 'It's an actual, real thing – it exists,' Mr Taylor said. Pointing to an espionage report released by Australia's domestic intelligence agency, he said there was 'a clear intensification of foreign intelligence interest in Australia'. 'Australia is paying a lot more attention to these issues than it may have in the past, not so much at the governmental level … but at a public level too,' Mr Taylor said. 'The messaging that's gone out from government about espionage, about foreign interference, over the last couple of years means that people in the community are more alive to it as a potential issue.' Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Chinese President Xi Jinping have touted progress on bilateral relations. Prime Minister's Office / Handout / NewsWire Credit: Supplied The other factor is 'the big picture, strategic changes that are occurring'. 'The fact that international politics, international power, is concentrating in the Indo-Pacific, concentrating in East Asia, means that it's no surprise that Australia's moved to the front lines of that contest in a way that we really weren't a couple of decades ago.' As for why Beijing would target a Buddhist group in the Australian capital, Mr Taylor said it was about keeping its diaspora in line abroad. This is not new for China. Analysts have long warned of Chinese Communist Party (CCP) influence suppressing free speech on university campuses, with students dobbing in fellow students who voice views that rub Beijing up the wrong way. 'For a lot of authoritarian regimes, they have an abiding interest in what they see as their nationals overseas, whether that's students, whether that's members of diaspora communities,' Mr Taylor said. 'So that kind of foreign intelligence activity ends up bounding that objective. 'It's actually not so much how we might imagine classical espionage directed towards the secrets of the Australian state. 'It's directed towards finding out what those communities are doing and trying to influence what those communities are doing, in a kind of focus on the interests of a regime, rather than the interests of a foreign country as such.' '21st century for Australia' Foreign interference was not among the issues Anthony Albanese broached with reporters on his lengthy state visit to China last month. Instead, the Prime Minister opted for less touchy topics, such as cash-splashing Chinese holiday-makers pumping billions into Australia's thirsty tourism sector. His hosts were also eager to spruik the potential gains of deepening economic ties amid global turmoil driven by Donald Trump's tariffs. Xi Jinping talked of 'unswervingly' pursuing deeper Sino-Australian co-operation regardless of 'how the international landscape may evolve' when he met Mr Albanese. The message was in line with Mr Albanese's own words as he met with business leaders and CCP top brass, championing Australia's trade and research offerings in Shanghai, Beijing and Chengdu. Chinese President Xi Jinping has said Australia and China should 'unswervingly' pursue deeper Sino-Australia economic ties. Prime Minister's Office / Handout / NewsWire Credit: Supplied Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has made clear he sees China as key to Australia's economic future. Prime Minister's Office / Handout / NewsWire Credit: Supplied While he often repeated his mantra of working with Beijing 'where we can' and disagreeing 'where we must', he made clear he saw China as key to Australia's economic future. Foreign Minister Penny Wong on Tuesday was hesitant to say if news of the suspected Chinese agent in Canberra would harm that relationship, but vowed the Albanese government 'will safeguard our democracy'. 'Our democracy is about who we are,' Senator Wong told the ABC. 'And that means we will stand together against any foreign interference. 'We have strong frameworks in place. 'We will not tolerate collectively or as a government, Australians being harassed or surveilled. We will continue to safeguard the democracy.' On relations with Beijing, she said 'dialogue matters'. 'Dialogue is important. Dialogue enables us to manage difference but it doesn't eliminate it,' Senator Wong said. Echoing Australia's chief diplomat, Mr Taylor said it was just a reality that China would spy and meddle in Australia, no matter how 'incongruous' with what Beijing and Canberra say. 'We're being realistic that countries spy on each other, that China and Australia's interests security interests will differ,' he said. 'This is the 21st Century for Australia. 'It's dealing with these incongruities. 'It's dealing with living in a region that has become this increasingly contested space.' He added that 'we shouldn't be we should any less aggrieved, but we should be probably less surprised that people are engaged in espionage against us.'

Latest twist in bold Labor plan
Latest twist in bold Labor plan

Perth Now

time19 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Latest twist in bold Labor plan

The Labor government will seek to introduce a second Bill to reform workers' compensation in NSW despite an earlier version still being subject to a parliamentary inquiry. Treasurer Daniel Mookhey said the state government would introduce the Bill on Tuesday afternoon, the first sitting day of NSW parliament after the winter break. Mr Mookhey said the Bill was 'very similar in nature' to an earlier version that was sent back for a second inquiry by the upper house just earlier this year. He said changes reflected 'agreed amendments' with the lower house crossbench, including Sydney MP Alex Greenwich, and changes to some 'other related schemes'. 'The reason why is because the need for reform remains urgent,' Mr Mookhey said of the need to introduce the Bill. 'The workers' compensation system is failing small business, it's failing the not-for-profit sector, and it's failing injured workers.' The Labor government had hoped to pass its sweeping reforms to workers' compensation before the end of financial year. NSW Treasurer Daniel Mookhey will seek to introduce a second Bill to reform workers' compensation. NewsWire / John Appleyard Credit: News Corp Australia Instead, the Bill was sent to an upper house inquiry following significant pushback from the Coalition, Greens, unions, and the legal sector. The Coalition, who have joined with embattled MLC Mark Latham to propose amendments for the Bill, say the reforms would leave the most vulnerable workers at risk. Their proposed changes would also impact provisions around sexual harassment, including who can make a claim for compensation. A public inquiry on Friday heard evidence from a range of industry leaders, including from the legal and psychology sectors, as well as the unions. The Treasurer said the second Bill was also necessary because the state government did not expect the upper house to conclude the inquiry anytime soon. 'At this point, it's not clear when that (original) Bill will return, and therefore, from our perspective, we do think it's necessary to have to introduce this Bill,' he said. Unions NSW secretary Mark Morey has opposed the reforms. NewsWire / Gaye Gerard Credit: News Corp Australia 'Should we get some clarity from the committee about what their intentions are with the first Bill – if they are intending to release it at a time in which parliament can take it up – then of course, the government will consider whether or not we need to repeat the exercise of having a vote again in the Legislative Assembly.' Mr Mookhey said the lower house would likely have to vote again on the original Bill if amendments were passed in the upper house. The Treasurer said work was under way to set insurance premiums for the nominal insurer, with the private sector reporting loses from the scheme of $6m per day. He told the media on Tuesday that 25 disability organisations had warned they faced a 36 per cent rise in premiums over the next three years if reforms weren't implemented. 'That will almost certainly mean that they either have to dramatically scale back their services or close them together,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store