Campaign director Dean Parkin (right) and chief operations officer Simon Frost are helping lead Yes23’s referendum campaign.Credit:Chris Hopkins/Alex Ellinghausen
The July 2 blitz represents the first large-scale on-the-ground activation of events that organisers hope will bring national attention to the movement’s army of 8000 volunteers,educate voters,sign up activists and build momentum around a campaign that has been trapped in a political vortex for months.
Yes23 director Dean Parkin said the events marked the moment at which the Yes campaign would be separated from parliamentary jousting over the Voice’s details which has coincided with adrop-off in public support.
“Events will stretch from Hobart to Far North Queensland and across to Perth in what will be a national day for the Yes campaign to connect with everyday Australians,” Mr Parkin said.
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Liberal senator Andrew Bragg,along-time backer of the Voice who previously said he would lead the Liberals for Yes group,said on Wednesday that voters sympathetic to the Voice were being turned into opponents because Labor had failed to build any bipartisanship.
“People have tried to build centre ground here but have been rebuffed,and I think that is hugely regrettable,” he said on ABC Radio National on Wednesday,adding that the government’s “intransigence and refusal to engage has damaged the whole agenda.”
“I’m worried about the product here. I think that people are turning away from it”.