Our government has lost its mandate.

Our government and the major parties no longer govern for the people. Look at the policies; look at the responses; look at AUKUS. This isn’t incompetence — it’s capture: decisions made for interests that aren’t ours. Piece by piece we’ve signed away our sovereignty — and it’s time we took it back. Australians have had enough. We want accountability, and we want assurance — a government that answers to us.

GOYAA

The Demands

What we want — and the public response that will force it.

The three

  • Independence. A united Australia, free of foreign entities directing our government and our path — with full lobbying transparency (every name, every cent handed to government) and every treaty and agreement made public. No deals done in the dark.
  • Swear to Australia — in public. Every federal, state and local representative, every politician, diplomat and public servant to declare and pledge their allegiance to Australia and its people — out loud, in a public ceremony, for all to see — and to disclose, in full, any other affiliation or allegiance they hold. And the oath in the Constitution itself rewritten: to Australia, not the King of England.
  • A Royal Commission into AUKUS and defence strategy. A full, official, independent review — to realign AUKUS to best serve Australia’s own defence; to review our current defence and logistics plans in the event of sea-lane disruptions or blockades; and to examine how much of our sovereignty we’ve signed over to the US and UK.

The public response

The goal we’re building toward:

  • A million in Canberra. The national show of force — a million Australians converging on the capital, at the doors of Parliament.
  • A million in every capital city. Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Hobart and Darwin too — the whole nation up at once.
  • A long-term campout in Canberra. And not just for a day — a sustained, peaceful presence on the lawns of Parliament, there and staying until they listen.
  • Daily and weekly meetups — and campouts — in every city and town. A meeting place in every community, gathering day in and day out, holding the ground. A movement that’s always on, everywhere.

Memos

Memos that describe the movement.

Memo · Identity

Who we are, who we are not

A movement for every Australian — every faith, every background. Not about division: it is about the direction of our nation, and who is driving it. We are for everyone, against no people.

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Memo · Field guide

How to protest effectively: non-violent methods

The evidence that non-violence works — about twice as effective as violence — and the behaviour expected of every protester: stay peaceful under provocation, stay on message, respect the police, record every interaction, and never feed a provocateur.

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Memo · Field guide

Simpson Villages: how to camp out and protest

The system for a long-term campout — small, clean, self-governing camps of 50, run on discipline, mateship and absolute non-violence. The code of conduct, the camp structure, the daily rhythm, and how to start your own.

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Videos

A new one most days. Newest first.

All videos →