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The Ipsos Issues Monitor
The Ipsos Issues Monitor is an ongoing quantitative survey of Australians about the issues facing the nation, Australian states and territories and Australians’ local areas.
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More than 3 in 4 Australians support the right for people to take refuge
Australians are among the most supportive nations when it comes to support for people being able to take refuge in other countries.
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Pessimism around the globe is fuelling populism; almost half of Australians believe our country is in decline
Across the globe, a profound pessimism is settling in. In Australia, just under half the population (47%) believe their country is in decline and a similar percentage feel that the society they live in is broken.
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Daily Mail Ipsos National Poll 3 Report
The two party preferred estimate based on stated preferences shows Labor on 48%, leading the Coalition 47%, and 5% of Australians saying they are currently undecided.
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Daily Mail Ipsos National Poll 2 Report
The 2nd Ipsos opinion poll shows Anthony Albanese increasing his lead as the preferred Prime Minister.
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Daily Mail Ipsos National Poll 1 Report
Labor and Coalition tied in terms of which party is best placed to tackle top voter cost of living concern
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Asia Pacific open to digital and reform transformation
Asia Pacific open to digital and reform transformation, but concerned about pace of change: can business and government leaders guide the change revolution?
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Interest in national Indigenous issues at lowest level since 2021
Australians less supportive of Closing the Gap initiatives, and changing Australia Day date still unpopular
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Australians divided on whether gender equality has gone far enough
Attitudes towards gender equality continue to be divided by socio-political context, generational divides, and gender identity, with Australians divided on whether gender equality has gone far enough with men more likely to agree that it has, an Ipsos survey reveals.
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Half of Australians believe ‘society is broken’, ‘country in decline’
A third of the nation thinks Australia would be ‘stronger if we stopped immigration’