Albanese Skips Garma Festival, Breaking Annual Commitment
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- Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will not attend the Garma festival, breaking a year-old promise to visit the Indigenous cultural gathering annually.
- Other ministers will attend, but Indigenous leaders express disappointment.
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Prime Minister Anthony Albanese previously committed to attending the Garma festival annually. The festival is Australia's largest Indigenous cultural gathering.
Anthony Albanese won’t attend this month’s Garma festival, breaking a commitment made just 12 months ago to travel to north-east Arnhem Land each year for Australia’s largest Indigenous cultural gathering.
The prime minister last year vowed to keep attending the annual celebration of Yolŋu culture so long as he was in the role.
“I commit here that every single year that I have the great honour to be Australia’s prime minister, I will be here and engaged with you,” Albanese told the Garma Key Forum in 2025.
“This is a journey that has a long way to go.”
But as first reported by the ABC, the prime minister won’t travel to this year’s event, which will run 31 July to 3 August, due to other commitments.
The foreign minister, Penny Wong, and the minister for Indigenous Australians, Malarndirri McCarthy, are among several Labor ministers set to attend.
McCarthy said Albanese’s absence would be disappointing for Yolŋu representatives and the Yothu Yindi Foundation (YFF), which hosts the event.
But she was pleased Wong and other ministers would attend.
“I know that he [Albanese] is trying to get to quite a few communities across Australia and I know it’s disappointing for the Yolngu representatives and YYF in Garma,” she told ABC Darwin on Friday.
“But I am incredibly pleased that we’ve got Senator Penny Wong coming. I have to say, she’s one of my favourites, and no disrespect to you, prime minister, but I think it’s wonderful that the foreign minister is coming and certainly we’ve got so many ministers coming.”
In a statement, the Yothu Yindi Foundation said: “Mr Albanese is a good friend of the Festival, and has been to every Garma since 2019.”
The Northern Land Council chair, Matthew Ryan, said it was very disappointing to learn Albanese would not attend the event, “particularly at a time when Aboriginal people in the Northern Territory are facing so many challenges and strong commonwealth leadership is required.”
Albanese used the 2022 event to reveal his preferred approach to a referendum on an Indigenous voice to parliament. The proposal was defeated at the 2023 national vote.
At last year’s event, he announced a First Nations economic empowerment agenda as he criticised the “dry gully” of culture wars that “lead us nowhere”.
Hosted by the Yothu Yindi Foundation and the local Yolŋu people, Garma is an annual celebration of Indigenous culture and tradition, and brings together community leaders, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander advocates, policymakers, business groups and artists.
The shadow Indigenous minister, Julian Leeser, will attend the festival.
Prof Megan Davis, a co-chair of the Uluru Dialogue, was not critical of Albanese’s planned non-attendance.
“Going to Garma is not a public policy,” she said. “It would be unfair to use attendance at Garma as an objective measure of a prime minister’s political commitment to Indigenous policy.
“Our communities are concerned with actual federal policies and the failure of closing the gap, a problematic framework which Labor inherited from the LNP, which is like this ever-expanding, multi-headed serpent.”
Offene Fragen
- What are Albanese's specific conflicting commitments?
- Will Albanese's absence impact future Indigenous policy discussions?
- What is the Yothu Yindi Foundation's specific reaction beyond the statement?






