Australia’s attorney general, George Brandis,
has defended American rapper Macklemore after the former prime minister
Tony Abbott called for a performance of his hit song Same Love to be
banned.
Abbott’s daughter, Frances, who has emerged as a vocal supporter of same-sex marriage, has encouraged the American rapper to “go harder” in the face of her father’s criticism.
Macklemore’s scheduled performance at Sunday’s NRL grand final, in the middle of the country’s same-sex marriage postal survey, has sparked outrage from no campaigners who oppose marriage equality.
On Wednesday, the former Prime Minister said the season-ending event should not be “politicised” by the pro-LGBT rights song, after the former rugby league player Tony Wall launched a petition on Change.org to stop its performance.
But his daughter, Frances, who this week appeared in a video backing same-sex marriage, has come out in support of the rapper, writing on social media site Instagram that “this is what we need right now”.
“I still remember the first time I heard this song. I was sitting in
my car, about to get out and go to work ... but stopped and listened.
And that same day I went and bought the album and kept it in my car and
listened to it over and over again.Abbott’s daughter, Frances, who has emerged as a vocal supporter of same-sex marriage, has encouraged the American rapper to “go harder” in the face of her father’s criticism.
Macklemore’s scheduled performance at Sunday’s NRL grand final, in the middle of the country’s same-sex marriage postal survey, has sparked outrage from no campaigners who oppose marriage equality.
On Wednesday, the former Prime Minister said the season-ending event should not be “politicised” by the pro-LGBT rights song, after the former rugby league player Tony Wall launched a petition on Change.org to stop its performance.
But his daughter, Frances, who this week appeared in a video backing same-sex marriage, has come out in support of the rapper, writing on social media site Instagram that “this is what we need right now”.
“I can’t think of a better song for all the hundreds and thousands of people to listen to on Saturday. This is what we need right now.
“Go harder @macklemore.”
She also wrote “press play”, a reference to the song’s lyrics: “we press play, don’t press pause. Progress, march on.”
It came after Abbott’s senior colleague Brandis defended Mackelmore and labelled Abbot’s stance “bizarre” earlier on Thursday.
“It is one of his most popular songs and for Mr Abbott and anyone else to say that it should be banned I think is a bizarre thing to say,” he told ABC TV. “I thought Mr Abbott believed in freedom of speech.”
Macklemore himself and the NRL also refused to back down. The rapper said he would “go harder” as a result of the criticism.
“I’m going to Australia to perform at kind of the Superbowl of their rugby league,” he told a US radio station.
“I’m getting a lot of tweets from angry old white dudes in Australia. I think there’s a petition today to ban me from playing it. It’s interesting times in Australia.”
In a statement, the NRL said fans “would not expect anything less” than a full-throated performance of Same Love.
“Macklemore was chosen as the grand final act because he is currently one of the top acts in the world,” a spokesman said.
“The response from fans has been overwhelmingly positive – many young people are coming to the grand final just to see him.
“Naturally he will be performing his number one hits on Sunday. The fans would not expect anything less.”
The rapper, who formerly performed as Professor Mack Lemore, won four Grammy awards in 2014 including best new artist and best rap album. His hit songs Thrift Shop and Same Love both topped the Aria charts between 2012 and 2013.
Last year’s grand final was watched by a peak of 4.2 million Australians, which broke records for metropolitan audiences, and drew a crowd of 83,625 attendees.
Wall, who started the petition to ban the song and who played 10 games for the Western Suburbs Magpies in 1995, asked the NRL to “reconsider its political position”.
“My family and many other loyal NRL fans, who are no voters, will not feel comfortable watching the grand final when the NRL is imposing such a bold political stance on its fans while the issue is currently being voted on by the Australian people.”
His petition also received support from the One Nation leader, Pauline Hanson, and the Liberal senator Eric Abetz.
“Look I don’t even know who he is, Macklemore, anyway,” Hanson told Channel 7’s Sunrise program. “That’s how much important he is to me [but] the whole fact this is politicised is absolutely ridiculous.”
Abetz told ABC radio that the NRL and AFL, who also supported marriage equality, had “done themselves a gross disservice” by “trying to force a political agenda”.
Same Love, released in July 2012, references Macklemore’s uncle, John Haggerty, who is gay, and asks to end the culture of homophobia in rap music. It reached number one on the Aria charts for four weeks.
Mackelmore’s performance on Sunday will last 15 minutes and will also include the songs Glorious, Downtown (featuring Eric Nally) and will feature singer Mary Lambert for Same Love, according to an NRL spokesman.
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