An exclusive survey shows 59 per cent of Indigenous voters are in favour of the proposal,down from Yes campaign estimates of 80 per cent in January,but still far higher than the broader community.
An exclusive survey found 22 per cent of voters say they find it persuasive when critics say the Voice would divide Australians by race.
Ahead of Saturday’s referendum on an Indigenous Voice to parliament,Queensland has become the state where people are most likely to vote No.
NSW voters are tightening their belts,and they expect the state government to do the same.
The Minns government’s slump comes less than six months since polling day,and follows ministerial scandals and tussles with unions over public sector pay rises.
An exclusive survey also found only 15 per cent of voters want the government to limit foreign airlines after a ruling to block more Qatar Airways flights.
The more debate people hear about the Voice,the more questions they have about how it works and the more reluctant they seem to trust the government to get it right.
The 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.
Fewer than half of Australians believe climate change is an urgent problem that requires immediate action,a decline from a slim majority two years ago.
Victorian voters are still backing Labor,but the Premier’s likeability rating is down after a string of controversial decisions and political scandals.
Voters are split on whether the federal stoush over housing policy is important enough to trigger a double-dissolution election,but a clear majority has rejected the idea of going to the polls before 2025 even if the deadlock continues.