Key Points
- Anthony Albanese says he will be marching in this month's Sydney Mardi Gras parade.
- He will be the first sitting PM to march within the parade itself.
- Mr Albanese says the decision is an important step marking a celebration, rather than just tolerance, of diversity.
Anthony Albanese will be the first sitting Australian prime minister to march in Sydney's Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras when he joins the parade for the WorldPridefestival.
The prime minister says he will be joined by Foreign Minister Penny Wong, the first openly gay woman in parliament, when he takes part in the event later in February.
"I'll be the first prime minister not to watch the march on Mardi Gras, but to march," he told a crowd at the official opening of Pride Square at Newtown, in Sydney's inner west.
In 2016, Malcolm Turnbull became the first sitting prime minister to attend the Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras, but he did not march in the parade.
That year, then opposition leader Bill Shorten became the first federal leader of a major party to participate in the march.
Mr Albanese said on Saturday his government was committed to removing inequality on the basis of sexuality or people's identities.
"And just as my government is committed to removing gender inequality, we're also committed to continuing to make gains and remove the areas where there remains inequality on the basis of people's sexuality, or people's identity - who they are.
"...We speak a lot about tolerance - and tolerance is really important - but this is about a step that is way more important than tolerance," he said.
"We need to celebrate our diversity, not just tolerate it, because our diversity is what gives our society strength."
Mr Albanese paid tribute to protesters who marched for gay rights in 1978, many of whom were arrested when the first parade on Sydney's Oxford St was dispersed.
Since then, the annual Sydney march has grown to become part of one of the largest LGBTQI festivals in the world.
This year, 12,500 marchers are expected to participate as the parade is incorporated into the 17-day WorldPride festival.
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Mr Albanese said Australia could be "a beacon for the world", where everyone would be respected and celebrated regardless of their beliefs, sexuality or ethnicity.
He said it was his hope that the success of the 2017 same-sex marriage plebiscite - that resulted in the - would be replicated with the referendum on an later this year.
"I'm very confident that just as when we got marriage equality done, people said: well, why didn't we do that earlier? And when we get this done, people will say: why didn't we do it earlier?"
"It's about how a country progresses. And how a country progresses is with a continuum of human rights advances."