Shaun Ratcliff Profile picture
Oct 16, 2023 14 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Much has been written about why No won the Voice referendum but a lot of this is opinion

to provide some data Octopus Group & Accent Research ran a survey on how/why Australians voted incl their attitudes towards racial discrimination (pictured below)

this is what we found 🧵 Image
Support for the Voice was highest among Greens and Labor voters, and lowest with Coalition voters. It was higher in inner metropolitan electorates, and lowest in rural and provincial areas Image
Protestants, those who didnt finish HS, own their home outright, and aged 65+ were the most likely to vote No (>70%). Image
The only demographics where 50%+ voted Yes were those with a university degree, who speak a language other than English at home, aged 18-34, and those who had a religion other than Catholic or Protestant Christianity
It was the claim by opponents that the Voice would be divisive that appears to have been a major driver of opposition to the Voice, selected by 41 per cent of those voting No as the most important reason for their opposition. Image
Nearly half of voters (47%) do not think that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders face more discrimination than White Australians. Image
Of these, only 20 per cent voted Yes for the voice. Image
Many No voters said they did not understand the proposal. While only 1/4 of those who opposed the Voice said a lack of understanding was one of their main reasons for voting No, only 1/3 of voters said they understood the Voice while 16% said they didn't understand it at all Image
The No campaign attempted to tie the Voice to political and media elites. Whether or not that was successful, very few voters believe most politicians can be trusted (17%), while journalists are more trusted, the absolute rate level is still low (26%)
And those with lower levels of trust were significantly less likely to support the Voice
Image
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Voters who relied on Sky News, the daily tabloid newspapers, the Australian, FTA TV news and AM radio were less likely to say Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders faced discrimination, and (along with those who relied on Facebook and FM radio for news), more likely to vote No Image
More than a quarter of voters report that each of free to air television news, Facebook, and the daily tabloid newspapers were important sources of news and information (58 per cent for free to air television) Image
This is not intended to be the final word on why Australians voted the way they did, but a first look post-referendum at why they voted for and against the Voice
A full copy of the report, along with additional details on methodology, full question wording and breakouts of all variables in the survey, can be found here:

accent-research.com/voice

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More from @ShaunRatcliff

Feb 17
Yesterday, the News Ltd papers published the first in a series of RedBridge / @Accent_Research key seats tracking polls

This showed a 3% two-party swing towards the Coalition in 20 key battleground seats Image
These polls are designed to provide voters with information normally reserved for major party campaigns, giving readers a window into what the campaigns see that others do not

Here is the estimated primary and 2pp vote intention in these key seats Image
The survey is a representative sample of 1,002 Australian voters in 20 key seats, collected using the same online panels we use for our national surveys. These are electorates that all the intel suggests could either change hands at the election, or are likely to be competitive. Image
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Read 11 tweets
Sep 9, 2024
Eight months out from the next federal election, and we are firmly in minority government territory

The latest @Accent_Research | RedBridge MRP estimates Labor is on track to win 69 seats and the Coalition 68 if an election were held now

Read on for details on the results Predicted winners for each electoral division. Gains are shaded lighter to highlight where seats are changing hands, and those that are too close to call are shaded grey.
These results are estimates from a model-based approach called Multilevel Regression with Post-stratification (MRP), fit to data from a survey of 5,976 Australian voters conducted between 10 July and 27 August, 2024.
The MRP works by sharing information across electorates, with voters assumed to behave in a related way to other voters with shared characteristics in similar divisions
Read 10 tweets
May 27, 2024
Twelve months from the next election a minority federal government is a live possibility

According to work by @Accent_Research and the RedBridge Group, a hung parliament and a Labor majority are almost equally likely outcome. Image
Covered in the AFR this morning, this research found there is essentially zero probability at this stage the Liberal-National Coalition will win more seats than Labor

afr.com/politics/feder…
Image
Topline results indicate little movement in overall vote share since the last election. However, this hides localised movements. Swings at the electorate level are rarely uniform
Read 14 tweets
Jan 28, 2024
This article by John Burns-Murdoch is interesting. It shows that in a number of affluent democracies, young women (aged 18-29) have become increasingly left-leaning compared to young men.

It got me (and others) wondering if something similar was happening in Australia (a thread)
Looking first at self-reported ideology, we can see that young women in Australia have become more liberal (or progressive) than young men since the mid-1990s. (Cont.) Self reported ideology (on a left-right scale) of voters aged 18-29, by gender.   The curve shows the net progressive share. This is those of each gender saying they had a left ideology minus those with a right ideology. Those with a centrist position or who did not answer the question were excluded.   Data are from the Australian Election Study (AES), 1996-2022.
At the beginning of the period (1996), women aged 18-29 had a similar ideology (measured on a scale of 0-10, left to right) as men of the same age

Both groups shifted left over time, hwv the shift was more dramatic for young women, opening the gap between the two groups
Read 13 tweets
Jun 8, 2022
The 2022 election result was stunning, and while it is true that there was a realignment at the electorate level, claims that the Coalition represents poorer voters and Labor 'elites' is massively exaggerated

🧵
Economically advantaged voters --- those with higher incomes and who own their own homes --- are still more likely to support the Coalition. Those with lower incomes are more likely to vote for Labor, minor parties and independents 

theaustralian.com.au/commentary/wea…
Some variation of these claims has been made multiple times since the election

In the Nine/Fairfax papers the other day Waleed Aly asserted "progressive politics is becoming increasingly a politics of the rich"

 smh.com.au/politics/feder…

Read 25 tweets

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