Voters mark down handling of immigration amid population growth debate
People in the marginal seats, unstable voters, a cross -counter or the big party, including employed and unemployed, including the unemployed, in each demographic or voter type – less than 10 percent of voters, more than 10 percent of the permanent migration, he said.
Two out of five working voters, 39 percent, permanent migration is very high, 36 percent of the “right ve and 4 percent of 21 percent of the indecisive, he said.
A significant majority of coalition voters, 63 percent, permanent migration is very high, green voters’ migratory levels are the only group that said, 41 percent prefers the current target, 33 percent is very high and 8 percent is very low, he says.
The findings recall how sensitive the issue of immigration has become, and that even workers’ voters are badly marked because the government deals with migration.
Only 31 percent of workers’ voters believe that the migration of the government is carefully planned and managed, 41 percent believes that they are not planned and undenuted and 28 percent are handled undecided.
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Sixty -seven percent of the coalition voters, 37 percent of Greens voters and 68 percent of Pauline Hanson’s supporters of the One nation, 68 percent of the “other” voters were handled in an unplanned way.
The same survey found that the support of Hanson and his party rose from 9 percent to 12 percent, which has been the highest result of the party since the decision survey started in April 2021.
The dissolution survey Jim Reed said, “The debate of immigration is undoubtedly responsible for the vote of a nation. If you are not satisfied with the big parties in the surrounding area, you go to the greenery and if you are not satisfied with immigration, you go to Pauline.”
With a positive sign for the government, concerns about migration were included in the list of concerns listed by voters.
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When he was asked to describe a single issue that they are most concerned about, 40 percent nominated by keeping the cost of living low. Health and elderly care (8 percent) and work and fees (7 percent) was followed.
Only 4 percent of the people said that “immigration and refugees” was the main policy priority of 5 percent last month.