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According to the latest poll, 72% of voters think Australia is full

 
[Current News]     13 Apr 2019
Nearly three out of four Australian voters said the country was full, with more than half believing Australia was in danger of losing its culture and identity, according to a new survey.

Nearly three out of four Australian voters said the country was full, with more than half believing Australia was in danger of losing its culture and identity, according to a new survey.

According to the latest poll, 72% of voters think Australia is full

(photo source: the Pioneer Sun)


According to the Pioneer Sun, a large number of Labour voters share the same view, and the authors speculate that if they are effectively recruited during the campaign, the Labour Party is likely to lose those votes. According to a poll of 2029 voters by the Australian Institute of population Research, 72 percent of respondents said Australia did not need more people and 50 percent wanted fewer immigrants.

According to the latest poll, 72% of voters think Australia is full

(photo source: the Pioneer Sun)


Fifty-six percent of respondents said Australia had literature to lose its culture and identity, and 47 percent supported a partial ban on Muslim immigration. The authors, Dr Katharine Betts and Dr Bob Birrell, said that while the findings reflected growing concerns about urban congestion and cultural change, there was a huge disconnect between college diploma holders and non-college students.

According to the latest poll, 72% of voters think Australia is full

(photo source: the Pioneer Sun)


For example, 60% of non-college graduates want to reduce immigration, compared with just 1-3% of college diploma holders, 2% of non-college graduates identify with Australia`s loss of culture and identity, and 41% of college diploma holders. Some experts believe that the reasons may be non-university graduates in the economic "backwardness."

The report also shows that "the thinking gap between the rich, the poor and the unemployed is not wide." The author believes that those who have gone to college are immersed in an international world view, while those who have not gone to college are attached to the spirit of the country.

"more voters will betray Labour because they don`t want to share the country," the report said. "47% of Labour voters think Australia is at risk of losing their culture and identity, and 44% want to reduce immigration, but if they are actually betrayed, Further mobilization is needed. "

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