Quick had become interested in the
Australian Federation movement while in the Victorian Parliament, and in the early 1890s, he successfully persuaded the
Australian Natives' Association to advocate Federation. In August 1893, Quick attended a convention of Federationists, the
Corowa Conference, and there devised a scheme for the direct election of national convention, tasked to draft a federal constitution which would then be put to voter by means of a referendum. The scheme elicited little interest, and was formally rejected by Edward Barton's Australasian Federal League. But in November 1893 Quick drafted a
bill encapsulating his ideas, in 1894
George Reid adopted them as Premier of News South Wales, and in 1897-8 the Australasian Federal Convention was constructed out of Quick's plan with very little modification. In March 1897 Quick won the second of ten vacancies in Victoria's delegation to the Federal Australasian Convention, outpolling
Alfred Deakin. In the Convention's proceedings, his voting pattern was characteristic of the radical strain within it, and more closely resembled that of Alfred Deakin's more than any other delegate. Nevertheless, he was personally estranged from Deakin, to his later cost. On 1 January 1901, Quick and
Robert Garran published
The Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth, which is widely regarded as one of the most authoritative works on the
Australian Constitution. == Australian Natives Association ==