For Australia to be truly a sovereign nation, policies in a number of different but related policy areas need to change, including:
All international treaties and conventions that have been signed by successive Australian governments and that relate to civil liberties and human rights will be reflected in all relevant Commonwealth statutes
Review all trade agreements as to the net costs/benefits for Australia as a whole and no future agreements (if any) will include Investor State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) clauses
Australia will fulfil its obligation to spend 0.7% of our gross national income on official development assistance
Australia will contribute generously to other nations that are facing a temporary crisis
All existing foreign and defence treaties will be maintained, however Australia will develop an effective defence capability that does not presume that our allies and friends will always be able to come to our assistance in all circumstances
Australia’s sovereignty with respect to First Nations Peoples will be resolved by:
Recognising First Nations people have an inalienable right to determine their own future
Signing a national treaty followed by constitutional recognition
Taking concrete actions including, if desired by the First Nations Peoples, towards the development of self-managed, self-sustaining and well-resourced homeland communities