TV icon Ray Martin launches an extraordinary attack on No voters - lashing them as 'dinosaurs and d***heads' in a scathing speech to a cheering Yes crowd in front of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

Ray Martin has been advised to offer an apology to the ‘millions of Australians’ who are planning to vote No. His comments labeling them as ‘d***heads and dinosaurs’ were criticized by Opposition Leader Peter Dutton. Interestingly, the Prime Minister praised Martin’s speech as ‘very powerful’.

During the same speech, Martin also mentioned that if Australia were to vote No, the country’s reputation on the global stage would be negatively affected. This statement contributes to the controversy surrounding his remarks.

Speaking at a Yes rally held at Marrickville’s Factory Theatre in Sydney, Martin emphasized the importance of how the international community perceives Australia. He stressed that disregarding global opinion by simply saying, ‘well, f*** them,’ is not a valid approach.

Martin was personally invited by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese who praised the address as ‘very powerful’ the next day.

He told the crowd: ‘So, what am I doing here? The Prime Minister asked me. And you can’t say no to Albo, especially as he is the number one Souths man. He asked me to speak tonight for the first time in this Yes campaign.’

Pictures from the event show the PM sitting alongside the Channel Nine stalwart, shaking his hand and applauding throughout the evening. 

TV icon Ray Martin launches an extraordinary attack on No voters - lashing them as 'dinosaurs and d***heads' in a scathing speech to a cheering Yes crowd in front of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

TV icon Ray Martin launches an extraordinary attack on No voters – lashing them as ‘dinosaurs and d***heads’ in a scathing speech to a cheering Yes crowd in front of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese 

In the fiery address, Martin said: ‘If you don’t know, find out what you don’t know.

‘What that slogan is saying is if you’re a dinosaur or d***head who can’t be bothered reading, then vote No.’

Hours after Mr Dutton urged him to apologise, Martin instead doubled down on his criticism, but drew a distinction between different types of No voters.

‘Condemn me for what I said, but not what I didn’t say,’ he told 6PR radio.

‘I was talking about the slogan that said ”if you don’t know, vote No”. That’s one of the stupidest slogans I’ve heard in my life. It’s also an endorsement of ignorance.

‘The people who vote on the basis of ”I don’t know so therefore say no”… are dinosaurs or d**kheads.’

Martin was asked if he held the same feelings about people who were educated about the details of the referendum, and still choose to vote No.

‘Of course not,’ he said. ‘I would never call them that.’ 

The veteran TV journalist revealed in the same interview that he supports a treaty between the government and First Nations Australians, but argued it has no bearing on the current referendum.

Martin ripped into No voters during a promotional event at Marrickville's Factory Theatre in Sydney 's inner west on September 28

TV icon Ray Martin launches an extraordinary attack on No voters – lashing them as ‘dinosaurs and d***heads’ in a scathing speech to a cheering Yes crowd in front of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese 

Video obtained by Daily Mail Australia shows Martin taking aim at the No side's 'If you don't know, vote No' slogan, saying: 'If you don't know, find out what you don't know

Video obtained by Daily Mail Australia shows Martin taking aim at the No side’s ‘If you don’t know, vote No’ slogan, saying: ‘If you don’t know, find out what you don’t know

Speaking to the crowd at the Yes event, Martin also questioned Australia’s standing in the global community if a No vote triumphs.

He said: ‘If we wake up on Sunday, October 15 and Australia has voted No, what will the New York Times and The Times of London and the best media in Europe and Asia and South America, what will the world say about us? 

‘We were asked, in a vote, if we wish to one, recognise the First Australians and two, give them a Voice. No powers, just a Voice so that they can be listened to. And Australia voted No. 

‘Ladies and gentlemen, as a proud Australian, that doesn’t bear thinking about it, does it? The way that the world sees us really does matter. You can’t say, ‘Well, f**k them’. It matters.’

The comments have sparked intense backlash from commentators and the general public, with Opposition Leader Peter Dutton demanding Martin apologise.

‘It’s disappointing,’ Mr Dutton said. 

‘For someone who has relied on millions of Australians to support his work in media and television over a long period of time, to be treated like that… I think a lot of Australians would be pretty disappointed.

‘Ray owes millions of Australians an apology because I don’t think it reflects the reality of people’s views on the ground.’

Mr Dutton also questioned Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s decision not to disavow the comments.

‘The Prime Minister was at this gathering,’ Mr Dutton told Daily Mail Australia. ‘In fact, he endorsed his comments. I think it’s disappointing.’

The Opposition Leader accused both Mr Martin and the PM of being ‘elites’ who ‘have a lot of disdain for people living in the suburbs.’ 

And fellow broadcaster Ray Hadley also expressed disappointment on Thursday.

After playing a snippet of Martin’s speech, he said: ‘There’s one d**khead there, and it’s the person doing the talking.’ 

Mr Albanese described Martin's speech as 'very powerful' the day after the event, which was held on September 28

Mr Albanese described Martin’s speech as ‘very powerful’ the day after the event, which was held on September 28

The PM also addressed the crowd at the event, describing the Voice proposal as 'a handshake, a handout of friendship'

The PM also addressed the crowd at the event, describing the Voice proposal as ‘a handshake, a handout of friendship’

Mr Dutton told Hadley the PM had the opportunity to condemn the comments Martin made in live time, and criticised his decision to instead praise the speech in an interview the next day.

‘I’m sure if he’s asked about it today, he’ll say everyone should be respectful or some rehearsed line like that… but he applauded Ray Martin and that reference to all Australians voting No. He didn’t hop up and say ”well look Ray…”.’

‘The hypocrisy, I don’t think, knows any limits.’ 

Hadley said: ‘As you would know as a former journalist, Ray, a politician’s word isn’t worth a pinch of you know what. We don’t trust politicians.’ 

Martin told the raucous crowd at the event that it was his work as a journalist that made him realise how important Indigenous affairs are.

‘Every Prime Minister I can remember when he or she, in Julia Gillard’s case, write their memoirs, they always seem to say that their greatest failing, their greatest regrets, greatest frustration was in Aboriginal Affairs, their failure to close the gap,’ he said.

‘They say it every time. 

‘It’s no good talking about what you didn’t do after you leave office. Do something while you’re in the Lodge. Something that makes a difference. And that’s what Albo is trying to do now.’

Australians will head to the polls on October 14 for the first referendum in 24 years

Australians will head to the polls on October 14 for the first referendum in 24 years

After breaking the story, Daily Mail readers told us they’d ‘lost respect for the guy’ and that Martin had done little more than ‘make more people vote No’.

One reader said: ‘Name calling isn’t gonna change people’s minds.’

And another said: ‘You can yell and scream at me but I’ll still vote no.’

‘This is like being bullied. It goes on and on. The answer is still no.’

Martin urged those in the room to continue to promote the Yes vote in the lead up to the October 14 referendum, and said he truly believed it was an opportunity to close the gap.

He has a long history of involvement with Indigenous affairs. He was a member of the National Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation for 10 years in his role as chairman of the Australian Indigenous Education Foundation.

The one-time host of Channel Nine programs including Midday and The Ray Martin Show discovered in the 1990s his great, great grandmother was a Kamilaroi Indigenous woman. 

‘What we’ve done for 235 years, often with the best of intentions and spending billions of your taxpayer dollars, is leave Indigenous Australians as the poorest, sickest, most suicidal, most imprisoned, jobless homeless people in our rich society,’ he said.

‘With poverty and third-world diseases like scabies, for God’s sake, that rubs their skin raw and trachoma that sends them blind five times the rate of white Australians, and rheumatic heart disease that kills so many Aboriginal children, guesstimate of two kids a week. And an overall life expectancy which is 20 years less than the rest of Australians. 

‘This referendum is clearly not about dividing Australia. It’s about caring.’

But his taunts to No voters have overshadowed the uplifting message he attempted to send.

One of two bodies that makes up the official No campaign, Fair Australia, took offence at Martin’s comments about ‘dinosaurs and d**kheads’. 

A spokesperson told Daily Mail Australia Martin’s comments were another attack on decent Australians.

‘Having been told we’re ”racist” and ”stupid”, Australians voting No can now add ”d**khead” and ”dinosaur” to the list of insults spat at us by the Yes campaign.

‘The sneering elites from the Yes campaign are dead set on dividing Australians. 

‘These elitists are addicted to insulting us, and just can’t stop sneering down their noses at ordinary Australians.’

Extracts from Ray Martin’s Voice speech in Marrickville

So, let me try and read the room for a moment, if I can. How many have decided to vote Yes? Be honest, who’s voting No? Really? Any undecideds? Well, we’re coming for you. 

So, what am I doing here? The Prime Minister asked me. And you can’t say no to Albo, especially as he is the number one Souths man. He asked me to speak tonight for the first time in this Yes campaign. 

But I worry that I’m going to die and nothing will have changed in Aboriginal Australia in my lifetime. I think this Yes campaign has kickstarted something really good. And I thank you for that and the promise no matter what happens, the promises and all the stuff.

As a journalist, I’ve covered politics for almost 60 years now. I started in Canberra interviewing Bob Menzies and Arthur Calwell back in the 1960s. I was only a baby, of course, at that time. 

But let me tell you, this referendum is not really about politics, despite what you hear and what you read and what Peter Dutton and the other mob claim. Doing the right thing is not political. It’s just doing the right thing.

It’s like being in favour of women’s rights or LGBTQ rights, and now black fella rights. No politics in that, nothing at all. It’s just the right thing. Don’t let them muddy the waters in our conversation. It is just the decent thing to do, as Albo said a number of times. There’s nothing tricky or complicated either. Don’t let them tell you it is. There’s nothing hidden. In the words of the referendum. No ulterior motives. No conspiracy. Nothing that has to be explained.

‘If you don’t know, vote No’. What a stupid, nonsensical slogan that is. If you don’t know, find out what you don’t know. What that asinine slogan is saying is if you’re a dinosaur or a d**khead who can’t be bothered reading, then vote No. The words of the referendum could not be simpler than they are. The No vote organisers also keep asking Albo for the details. What about the details? 

At this stage of the game, the details simply don’t matter. They never did matter. Honestly, they’re irrelevant. Over the next 10 or 20 or 30 years, no matter who’s in government, the details will change inevitably, as will the members of the Voice delegation from around Australia according to the needs and the priorities and the policies that are meant to close that bloody gap. You can’t write all that in the Constitution in 2023. Maybe your priority will be running water in the western desert communities, or education in the Territory, or ending rheumatic fever in the Gulf, or something else in Tasmania or Tenterfield, Marrickville and Mildura and Menindee will need help with their special problems. It’s a big country with lots of different demands and needs. 

How do you give the details of all that in the Australian Constitution? Of course, you don’t. A Voice written in the Australian Constitution locked in will mean that Australian governments of every persuasion in the future can’t sweep the problems under the carpet, or put them in the too hard basket, as they always seem to do. They will have to at least listen because it’s in the Constitution.

Because every Prime Minister I can remember when he or she, in Julia Gillard’s case, write their memoirs, they always seem to say that their greatest failing, their greatest regrets, greatest frustration was in Aboriginal Affairs, their failure to close the gap. They say it every time. It’s no good talking about what you didn’t do after you leave office. Do something while you’re in the Lodge. Something that makes a difference. And that’s what Albo is trying to do now.

Again, don’t be scared of these scare tactics. That’s the oldest cheapest political trick in the book. The Henny Penny syndrome. Yes, vote Yes and the sky will fall in. They will take your backyard. They will take your farm. They will take over. Well, take all that talk as bullshit. Like walking across the bridge that gloriest Sunday in 2000. Be afraid, don’t walk. You never know what will happen if you do. Or when Kevin Rudd said Sorry. Be afraid of what that’s going to bring. Guaranteed there’ll be calls for multi-billion dollar reparations. All the gloom and doom predictions and warnings and threats to Australia as we know it. Guess what? Nothing happened. Life and honour, we all felt a little better, in fact, a whole lot better about ourselves and about Australia. This referendum is the same. 

There’s nothing to be afraid of. A lot to celebrate. A lot to embrace and feel proud about. That’s if we vote Yes. This referendum is not about paying compensation as Albo keeps saying. It’s about recognising the first Australians who have been here for 65,000 years, probably longer. The oldest continuous culture on earth. How good does that sound? Sounds great, doesn’t it? All it is simply asking you for is recognition. Nothing more. Just recognising the first Australians in the Australian Constitution, our Constitution. 

As for the Voice, well, if it’s broke, let’s fix the bastard. And it is broke. It’s time, as Gough said, to do something different. Because what we’ve been doing hasn’t worked up until now.

What we’ve done for 235 years, often with the best of intentions and spending billions of your taxpayer dollars, is leave Indigenous Australians as the poorest, sickest, most suicidal, most imprisoned, jobless homeless people in our rich society. With poverty and third-world diseases like scabies, for God’s sake, that rubs their skin raw and trachoma that sends them blind five times the rate of white Australians, and rheumatic heart disease that kills so many Aboriginal children, guesstimate of two kids a week. And an overall life expectancy which is 20 years less than the rest of Australians. 

This referendum is clearly not about dividing Australia. It’s about caring. It’s about bringing us together. Fixing what our former, I think probably greatest Governor General, Sir William Deane, once called the festering sore of Australian society. 

The Voice isn’t going to fix poverty or disease overnight. That’s obviously going to take time. But it’s a small step in the right direction. And symbolically, like Sorry, it’s a major leap forward. But listening, just listening, no powers, no veto rights, just listening to Indigenous Australians may begin to help us find some of the solutions. It’s surely where it starts. Listening, rather than always telling the First Peoples what to do and what to think and how to do it. Failing year after year, and decade after decade. 

So, what do we got to lose? What are we going to lose if we vote Yes? Not a bloody thing. When you wake on the Sunday morning after the vote, your lives will not have changed one iota. Nothing. But the 350,000 or so, three per cent, First Australians it will mean just about everything. Or it will mean nothing.

I was telling Albo, two people saw our cameras and stopped to talk, as Americans like to do. One was a businessman from Salt Lake City, a Mormon. The other was an African American from Canada, an ex-professional gridiron player, he told me. Hearing we were from Australia, they both asked us separately, ‘How is the referendum going?’ Two of them. And I told them, quite frankly, it doesn’t look too promising at the moment if you listen to the polls. On the way flying home, it made me think, ‘What’s it going to be like?’ Just think. 

If we wake up on Sunday, October 15 and Australia has voted No, what will the New York Times and The Times of London and the best media in Europe and Asia and South America, what will the world say about us? We were asked, in a vote, if we wish to one, recognise the First Australians and two, give them a Voice. No powers, just a Voice so that they can be listened to. And Australia voted No. Ladies and gentlemen, as a proud Australian, that doesn’t bear thinking about it, does it? The way that the world sees us really does matter. You can’t say, ‘Well, f**k them’. It matters. Even more important is the way we see ourselves. 

Noel Pearson this week called the referendum the largest mirror we will ever look into as a nation. That’s a pretty powerful analogy. When we vote on October 14, what are we going to see reflected in that mirror? What are we going to see? A caring, decent united Australia moving forward with our First Nations people or something else? Looking at that Aussie mirror and please vote Yes on October 14. Thank you for listening to me.

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