‘The more’ people hear about the Voice, the ‘less’ they’re likely to support it: Credlin

Australia News News

‘The more’ people hear about the Voice, the ‘less’ they’re likely to support it: Credlin
Australia Latest News,Australia Headlines
  • 📰 SkyNewsAust
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 12 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 8%
  • Publisher: 78%

The government “won't be too pleased” to find only 28 per cent of Australians “strongly” support the Indigenous Voice to Parliament, says Sky News host Peta Credlin.

‘The more’ people hear about the Voice, the ‘less’ they’re likely to support it: CredlinThe government “won’t be too pleased” to find only 28 per cent of Australians “strongly” support the Indigenous Voice to Parliament, says

Sky News host Peta Credlin.“Even though soft supporters give the Voice a poll majority 56 to 37, the debate has hardly started, and the more people hear about the Voice, the less they’re likely to support it,” Ms Credlin said.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

SkyNewsAust /  🏆 7. in AU

Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Dutton believed to be ‘intent’ on ‘setting up roadblocks’ against Voice referendumDutton believed to be ‘intent’ on ‘setting up roadblocks’ against Voice referendumPrime Minister Anthony Albanese has the belief Opposition Leader Peter Dutton is 'likely' to oppose the referendum on the Indigenous Voice to Parliament, says Sky News Political Editor Andrew Clennell. 'As revealed on Afternoon Agenda, the Opposition Leader Peter Dutton accepted the invitation of the PM to attend the Working Group on the referendum on Thursday,' Mr Clennell said. 'The Opposition then called for the government to set up a Constitutional Convention similar to before the 1999 republican vote, saying there was not enough consultation on the Voice.' 'The Prime Minister now has the belief Peter Dutton is likely to oppose the referendum for an Indigenous Voice to parliament and is intent on setting up roadblocks against it at every turn.'
Read more »

Morrison’s decision to ‘scuttle’ Pep-11 gas project ‘overturned’Morrison’s decision to ‘scuttle’ Pep-11 gas project ‘overturned’Former prime minister Scott Morrison’s decision on the Pep-11 gas project has been overturned, according to Sky News host Peta Credlin. “It was one of the portfolios that Scott Morrison controversially and secretly swore himself into, and when the powers were signed over to him, he used them to scuttle a massive gas project off the New South Wales coast,” Ms Credlin said. “Known as PEP-11, the project, well, it’s back on now – news that the Morrison decision today has been overturned.”
Read more »

The ‘bulk of the media’ gave Albanese a ‘pass’ on AO attendanceThe ‘bulk of the media’ gave Albanese a ‘pass’ on AO attendanceThe bulk of the media has given Prime Minister Anthony Albanese a “pass” on his Australian Open attendance amid the Alice Springs crime crisis, says Sky News host Rita Panahi. “The media reaction has been quite astonishing to see,” she said. “We saw the meltdown when ScoMo spent a week with his family in Hawaii when we had the bushfires happening. “Here we have a crisis that is actually of government policy – this is territory and federal-level Labor policy that has helped see this mayhem in the NT.”
Read more »

Alice Springs residents ‘leaving in droves’ because they ‘no longer feel safe’Alice Springs residents ‘leaving in droves’ because they ‘no longer feel safe’Residents in the town of Alice Springs are leaving in droves because they no longer feel safe amid the high rate of crime, according to Alice Springs Mayor Matt Paterson. Mr Paterson said the community wasn’t ready for the alcohol ban to be lifted. “We need to go and introduce alcohol management plan straight away, and we also need more resources such as police and health workers in hospital,” he told Sky News Australia. “When I say people are leaving in droves, they are also police and health. “Those two services are completely under-resourced, so if something does continue to go wrong, then you know who knows what will happen.”
Read more »

2022 ‘wasn’t a great year for investors’2022 ‘wasn’t a great year for investors’J.P. Morgan Global Market Strategist Kerry Craig says 2022 wasn’t “a great year for investors”. “We had central banks that were aggressively increasing interest rates to fight inflation that was at multi-decade highs, we had still a China that was in lockdown and pandemics,” he told Sky News Business Reporter Edward Boyd. “None of that really fit into the narrative of thinking around good investment opportunities. “We saw equities really fall quite dramatically in a historical context.”
Read more »

RBA Governor made a ‘mistake’ which ‘hurt’ aspirational AustraliansRBA Governor made a ‘mistake’ which ‘hurt’ aspirational AustraliansRBA Governor Philip Lower made a mistake when he said interest rates would remain at historic lows until at least 2024, which “hurt” aspirational Australians, according to LNP MP Garth Hamilton. “But the person who’s going to decide whether the Governor stays on or not is the Treasurer,” he told Sky News host Amanda Stoker. “And, quite frankly, I don’t think the Treasurer really cares that much that the Governor hurt aspirational Australians.” Mr Hamilton said there was a lot of “hubris” in Treasurer Jim Chalmers’ essay but “not much there to inspire” aspirational Australians who want to get into the property market.
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-03-09 04:32:09