More companies are choosing to remain impartial on the Voice to Parliament as the public opinion remains divided, according to Menzies Research Centre's Nick Cater.
More companies are choosing to remain impartial on the Voice to Parliament as the public opinion remains divided, according to Menzies Research Centre’s Nick Cater.
“I think they are recognising this, if they’re sensible they are recognising that the opinion is divided on this issue, including amongst Indigenous people,” he told Sky News host Peta Credlin.
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.
Support for Voice to Parliament below 50 per centFresh polling reveals that support for the Voice to Parliament has dropped, with the question in the survey the exact one that will be asked at the referendum.
Read more »
Less than half of voters back Voice to Parliament proposal, survey suggestsThe latest Newspoll survey was the first to present respondents with the exact question that will be on the Voice referendum ballot paper later this year.
Read more »
NSW Liberal leader ‘has concerns’ about Voice to ParliamentNew South Wales Liberal leader Mark Speakman says he “has concerns” about Labor’s proposed Indigenous Voice to Parliament, which Australians are set to vote on later this year.
Read more »
Albanese pushes Voice with characteristic ‘doublespeak’Sky News host Cory Bernardi says Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Lowitja O'Donoghue Oration in Adelaide shows admission to pushing for change with characteristic Voice to Parliament Yes campaign “doublespeak” rhetoric. “We've been told for months there is nothing to be worried about when it comes to the Voice; the advocates, including the Prime Minister, have said It's a modest change we shouldn’t be afraid of,” Mr Bernardi said. “He told us it's not a radical proposition but a sensible one; it’s a simple, vital and practical principle that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have a say in the policies and decisions that affect their lives. “That was back in February, … this week, while giving the Lowitja O'Donoghue Oration in Adelaide, he took a slightly different tack. “I read the transcript … and I found it full of misleading rhetoric and vague promises … at least now he’s admitting what the Prime Minister is pushing for is neither modest change nor merely symbolic. “Unfortunately, this double-speak is characteristic of many of those pushing the Yes campaign.”
Read more »
Voice opponents could be ‘screaming division’ as a tactic to defeat referendumSky News host Chris Kenny has suggested the ‘No’ campaign for the Voice to Parliament is “screaming division” as a tactic to ensure the proposal is defeated. “The ‘No’ campaigners are saying day in day out that this is divisive, that this will divide Australia,” he told Sky News host Cory Bernardi. “The question about that is, are these valid concerns? Can we demonstrate that they are validly concerned about dividing Australia because if they can then that is a legitimate argument to make. “Otherwise, it is just a tactic. Otherwise, they are only screaming division in order to defeat the Voice.”
Read more »