Australians have to vote 'Yes' or 'No' to a question asking
whether they agree to alter the 122-year-old constitution to
recognize Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island people, and create
a body, called the Voice to Parliament, that can provide advice
to the government.
More than 4 million people have already cast their ballot after
early voting began on Oct. 2.
With less than two days to go before voting day on Oct. 14,
those opposed to the proposal lead the 'Yes' camp by 56% to 38%,
according to the final poll by YouGov published on Thursday.
Some 6% of those polled were undecided. Yougov polled 1,519
voters for the survey.
"Our final poll indicates a sweeping ‘No’ victory – with nearing
six in 10 voters intending to cast a ‘No’ vote," said Amir
Daftari, YouGov Director of Polling and Academic research.
"Our detailed analysis indicates that it is very unlikely that
'Yes' will win anywhere apart from a number of inner
metropolitan seats.”
'Yes' leads among the young while older voters overwhelmingly
favour 'No', the polls found.
Australia's Indigenous citizens, about 3.8% of the country's 26
million population, have inhabited the land for about 60,000
years but are not mentioned in the constitution and track below
national averages on most socio-economic measures.
Support for the referendum, the first since voters rejected a
1999 proposal to become a republic, has ebbed over the past few
months. Supporters argue the Voice will bring progress for
Indigenous Australians, while some opponents say enshrining one
group in the constitution would be divisive.
Others against the Voice have described it as tokenism and
toothless.
Referendums are difficult to pass in Australia, with only eight
referendums being approved since it became a country in 1901.
Constitutional change requires a majority of votes nationwide
and in at least four of the six states.
(Reporting by Praveen Menon; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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