The billionaire has authorised $2 million of advertisements that warn a vote for the Voice will lead to financial costs for struggling Australian families.
Advertisements bankrolled by mining magnate Clive Palmer in the final days of the referendum campaign will warn a vote for the Voice will lead to financial costs for struggling Australian families.
“Don’t think you won’t be forced to ‘pay the rent’. It’s already happening in Western Australia,” the ad states. “Australia. Keep it together. Vote NO.”Yes campaigners have also repeatedly stated the Voice has nothing to do with reparations. Indigenous leader Noel Pearson said on Wednesday the No side was employing the same scare tactics used during the native title debate in the 1990s.
The federal opposition used the contentious state laws as evidence of the onerous and expensive policies that could be sought by the Voice. Theto boost support for Albanese at the last federal election, at which the Coalition lost several seats to Labor in the state.
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‘Late change’ to Voice proposal could give Commonwealth powers to legislateA new academic paper on the Voice has found it will likely give the Commonwealth the power to legislate, regardless of whether the Commonwealth has the power to do so, based merely on a representation that the Voice makes. Author of the paper, University of Queensland Professor of Constitutional Law Nicholas Aroney sat down with Sky News host Peta Credlin to discuss its discovery of what the Voice can do. “It was always the idea the parliament would be given the power to legislate, to regulate the Voice, in particular, its composition powers, procedures and functions,” Mr Aroney said. “However, a late change was made to the drafting of the proposal so that now it says that the parliament is to have power to make laws with respect to matters relating to the Voice. “The point is these are words of wide connecting input … so one has to ask, well what’s a matter relating to the Indigenous Voice? “It interprets the language as widely as the words used can reasonably sustain.”
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Multiple speed signs defaced as early voting for the Voice gets underwaySpeed signs altered to read 'No' have been spotted in SA, sparking safety concerns and a police investigation.
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Indigenous Voice to Parliament pre-polling beginsDespite poor polling for the ‘yes’ side in the upcoming referendum, Anthony Albanese is adamant the vote can be won.
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Bob Katter says the Voice to Parliament won't help disadvantaged Indigenous communitiesIndigenous leaders in Cape York and the Gulf say the Voice to Parliament can make a difference, provided it has strong grassroots participation.
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Timor-Leste president hits back at Australian criticism of new partnership with ChinaJosé Ramos-Horta rejects concerns about plan that includes enhanced military engagement as ‘imagined Chinese ghosts’
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