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Senator Lidia Thorpe Responds After Powerful Protest Makes Global Headlines

"Get used to truth-telling"
Lidia Thorpe Treaty protest
Senator Lidia Thorpe disrupts proceedings as King Charles III and Queen Camilla attend a Parliamentary reception hosted by Prime Minister of Australia Anthony Albanese.
Lukas Coch-Pool/Getty Images

Independent senator Lidia Thorpe has responded to resignation calls during an interview with Radio National, where the senator expressed her disinterest in pandering to the conservative caucus.

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Speaking about her intentions, the senator said: โ€œIโ€™m not looking to be re-elected โ€“ Iโ€™m looking to get justice for my people.โ€

โ€œI will be there for another three years, everybody. So, you know, get used to truth-telling.โ€

The response came after senator Lidia Thorpeโ€™s powerful protest, calling for treaty and truth-telling at the Parliament House event for King Charles III and Queen Camilla.

Charles had just addressed the room of MPs and senators, reflecting on his time as a student in Australia, the learnings of the pandemic and the countryโ€™s vulnerability to climate change, when the senator approached the stage announcing: โ€œThis is not your country.โ€

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Senator Lydia Thorpe King Charles III
(Credit: Victoria Jones โ€“ Pool/Getty Images)

โ€œYou committed genocide against our people. Give us our land back. Give us what you stole from us โ€“ our bones, our skulls, our babies, our people.โ€

Thorpe continued: โ€œYou destroyed our land. Give us a Treaty. We want a Treaty in this country. You are a genocidalist.โ€

As the senator was being escorted from the room, she didnโ€™t hold back, declaring, โ€œThis is not your land. You are not my king. You are not our king,โ€ before her final shouts of โ€œF**k the colony!โ€ were heard from the foyer.

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Enter the nationโ€™s most ardent โ€œfree speech advocatesโ€ (ahem) including Peter Dutton, who jumped at the chance to stir up conflict and division with calls for the senatorโ€™s resignation.

Speaking to Channel Sevenโ€™s Sunrise program, Dutton proclaimed, โ€œIf you were really truly about your cause and not just about yourself, then I think thatโ€™s a decision that you would make.โ€

Continuing, โ€œMy reaction was that, โ€˜here we go againโ€™. It was entirely predictable, all about herself. It doesnโ€™t advance any cause that sheโ€™s interested in. Itโ€™s really just a self-promotion thing, which is why I donโ€™t think we should give it any attention.โ€

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Responding to Duttonโ€™s comments, Thorpe โ€“ a proud Gunnai, Gunditjmara and Djab Wurrung Indigenous woman โ€“ told Radio National โ€œEvery time I see him [Dutton] in parliament he walks in the opposite direction, so he never wants to sit down and have a conversation.โ€

โ€œMy approach, unfortunately, might upset a few people, but how else do you get your message across when we [are] continually shut down as Blak women? The only people they want to hear from are ones that conform and speak nicely, but do nothing about getting justice for our people.โ€

Continuing, Thorpe defended her decision to bring her protest to the halls of Parliament House, stating: โ€œHis family and his kingdom are absolutely responsible for what happened to my people in this country. They came to the shores with guns โ€ฆ Has he done anything about it? If you stay silent, then you are complicit.โ€ 

Senator Lidia Thorpe during her swearing-in at in the Senate at Parliament House on October 06, 2020.
Senator Lidia Thorpe during her swearing-in at in the Senate at Parliament House on October 06, 2020. (Credit: Sam Mooy/Getty Images)
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Speaking to National Indigenous Times on Monday evening, Senator Lidia Thorpe expressed her frustration at the headlines criticising her actions, revealing she had already written to King Charles III several times about the need for Treaty and restorative justice, but received no response from the monarch.

โ€œI have a responsibility โ€“ we all have a responsibility to our elders,โ€ she said in a video interview with the publication.

โ€œWe have to continue to resist this occupation in a way that forces them to come to our table and talk about peace. And what does peace look like? Peace looks like a Treaty.โ€

The senator went on to say: โ€œLetโ€™s go down the process of a Treaty, letโ€™s work out what we want for our people, our families, our language groups and put that on the table.โ€

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Before ending her response, Thorpe addressed the global headlines, stating, โ€œI will keep resisting, I will keep fighting for our Old People, and hereโ€™s to the Blak Sovereign Movement because we have the world stage right now and I ainโ€™t ceding my sovereignty.โ€

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