A month out from the Voice referendum, according to the polls, the ‘Yes’ campaign is struggling.
Across the board, they show a big lead for ‘No’ advocates and already many in the media are all but calling the outcome of the vote.
But beneath the headline numbers there’s a glimmer of hope for ‘Yes’.
The number of undecided voters, those not fully locked in to either side, is sitting in the millions - and both campaigns are doing all they can to win them over.
Today, national correspondent for The Saturday Paper, Mike Seccombe, on what we know about the undecided bloc, and what the polls really mean.
Socials: Stay in touch with us on Twitter and Instagram
Guest: National correspondent for The Saturday Paper, Mike Seccombe.
Read This: David Marr vs Australia’s Old Lie
Treaty: Is it possible after a Voice defeat?
‘Totally f***ed you over’: Australia’s reputation on climate
Right-wing politics and the lie of 'activist judges'
What would an Israeli ground invasion of Gaza mean?
The ‘true elite’ behind the ‘No’ win
Australia votes 'No': Is this the end of reconciliation?
The Fight for a Voice: The future
The Fight for a Voice: The conservative case for ‘No’
The Fight for a Voice: Inside the case for ‘Yes’
The Fight for a Voice: The progressives voting ‘No’
The Fight for a Voice: The road to the referendum
The Weekend Read: Robyn Annear on the untold history in our public toilets
Is this week a turning point for ‘Yes’?
Micheline Lee on fixing the NDIS
Is Australia about to burn again?
How an Australian pastor is influencing the presidential race
The woman fighting to end sex discrimination in Australia
The Pezzullo texts: How power really works in Canberra
Olympus has fallen: Dan Andrews is gone
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Morning Wire
The Daily
Up First
Today, Explained
WSJ What’s News