The Australian’s National Editor Dennis Shanahan says Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is “paying the price” as support for the Voice continues to sink in the polls. A survey by Resolve Strategic revealed the Yes vote for the Voice has dipped to 43 per cent, which marks the fifth consecutive month voters have lurched against the proposal. The new polling comes five weeks out before Australians are set to head to the ballot box in October to vote in the Voice referendum. “I think that what we’re seeing is a bleeding of that failing Yes vote, a failure in getting the referendum momentum going, bleeding into Labor’s support,” Mr Shanahan told Sky News host Peta Credlin. “And we’re seeing a change for Anthony Albanese as leader for the first time in a couple of polls now since the election – his satisfaction rating is negative.”
The Australian’s National Editor Dennis Shanahan says Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is “paying the price” as support for the Voice continues to sink in the polls.
A survey by Resolve Strategic revealed the Yes vote for the Voice has dipped to 43 per cent, which marks the fifth consecutive month voters have lurched against the proposal. The new polling comes five weeks out before Australians are set to head to the ballot box in October to vote in the Voice referendum.
“I think that what we’re seeing is a bleeding of that failing Yes vote, a failure in getting the referendum momentum going, bleeding into Labor’s support,” Mr Shanahan told Sky News host Peta Credlin. “And we’re seeing a change for Anthony Albanese as leader for the first time in a couple of polls now since the election – his satisfaction rating is negative.”
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'I make no apologies': Albanese defends absence from Voice campaignPrime Minister Anthony Albanese has defended the timing of his overseas trip just weeks out from the Indigenous Voice to Parliament referendum on October 14.
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Voters continue to turn against the Voice – and Albanese along with itThe prime minister has suffered a fall in his net performance rating to minus 7 per cent, driving this measure into negative territory for the first time since the election.
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Voters continue to turn against the Voice – and Albanese along with itThe prime minister has suffered a fall in his net performance rating to minus 7 per cent, driving this measure into negative territory for the first time since the election.
Read more »
Voters continue to turn against the Voice – and Albanese along with itThe prime minister has suffered a fall in his net performance rating to minus 7 per cent, driving this measure into negative territory for the first time since the election.
Read more »
Albanese set to return to Australia as Voice support continues to slipPrime Minister Anthony Albanese is set to return to Australia on Monday after attending India’s historic G20 Summit. The return comes as new polling sounds the alarm for the Indigenous Voice to Parliament. According to polling from Nine Newspapers, 57 per cent of Australians are now against the Voice referendum. The same polling reports support for Voice has dropped to 43 per cent. The new data also shows supporters from Victoria and NSW have turned away from the Yes campaign.
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Peter Dutton wants voice to debate to ‘just go on’: Anthony AlbanesePrime Minister Anthony Albanese has taken aim at Opposition Leader Peter Dutton saying he wants the Voice debate to just “go on” and “infinitum”. The comments come after the leader of the opposition said he would hold a second referendum if the Voice were to fail, and if he were elected in the next term. “The leader of the opposition of course has since then committed to if he’s ever elected prime minister, to have another referendum if this referendum is defeated,” Mr Albanese said during Question Time on Monday. “Despite the fact that a majority of the process – occurred under the former government. “It was the former government that established a process under Tony Abbott, it was the former government that appointed Tom Calma and Marcia Langton, it was the former government that appointed Julian Leeser and Patrick Dodson to share the joint parliamentary enquiry. “It’s unfortunate that the leader of the opposition has chosen politics over substance.”
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