Independent Victorian Senator Lidia Thorpe has announced the Blak Sovereign Movement will publish their own statement this week in relation to the Voice to parliament referendum.
It comes after the Yes and No campaign pamphlets, which will be distributed to Australian households preceding the upcoming referendum were published on the Australian Electoral Commission website on Tuesday.
The former Greens senator said she decided to work with the Blak Sovereign Movement to produce the statement after the Coalition made it clear that their point of view would be excluded from the No pamphlet.
"The Blak Sovereign Movement will explain why the Voice to Parliament is not worth the worry and pain," Senator Thorpe said.
"There are real issues that need your solidarity now and there is a way forward that can bring peace and harmony. So don't stress about how you're going to vote and start showing solidarity with those fighting for change right now."
Having previously made it clear that she does not support constitutional changes presented in the referendum, Ms Thorpe said she is not part of the conservative No campaign, a movement she has described as racist.
"The No Campaign have clearly taken advantage of the pamphlet not being fact checked and done more to embolden racists than they have to argue against the Voice," Senator Thorpe said.

She also criticised the Yes campaign material, suggesting it is of "little substance" with "no historical evidence" whilst not referencing Makarrata, Truth or Treaty.
"The case produced by the Yes campaign reveals just how little substance there is in what they are proposing. They provide no historical evidence that an advisory body would have an impact, fail to recognise that there have been many ineffective advisory bodies in the past, and present a model of the advisory body that has not been debated or agreed to by First Nations people," Senator Thorpe said.
"The case doesn't mention Makarrata, Truth or Treaty. The government has failed to respond to my questions on where the Makarrata money has gone, have been unable to provide a definition of Sovereignty and have refused to acknowledge First Nations Sovereignty in this country."
Makarrata, a word from the Yolngu language means a coming together after a struggle, facing the facts of wrongs and living again in peace.
"Their statement confirms that they have abandoned the two demands that actually came from their stitched up dialogues."
Senator Thorpe referred to the campaign pamphlet content as "shameful" with no reference to deaths in custody, child removals or destruction of Country.
"It is utterly shameful that they could write 2,000 words about 'fixing the Aboriginal problem' and not once mention deaths in custody, child removals or destruction of Country," she said.
"The war on our people continues and this whole Voice business is nothing but a smoke screen to cover up the continued process of the violent colonisation of this country."
She also accused the government of "choosing to not listen to and follow advice they have already been given by First Nations communities" considering it a "clear sign of the level of influence their Voice to Parliament would actually have".
"For the Yes campaign to repeat the statement that their proposal "came from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people" is shameful," Senator Thorpe said.
"It is a statement that denies the diversity of views held by First Nations people, covers up the truth behind the Uluru Statement and is a taste of how they would use their Voice to silence First Nations people that don't tow their line."
Senator Thorpe said for things to improve "the government must learn and accept the true history of this country and cease the violent war on First Nations people and Country."
"Together we must strive for a Treaty to bring peace to this land. It is the only way forward," she said.
The Voice to parliament referendum is set to be held between October and December this year.