The Final Voice YES Strategy Revealed By James Reed

So, the Voice referendum is looking to be on October 14, 2023. The Yes side is worried as the polls indicate that they are likely to lose. Thus, in damage control, it looks like they are going to go full steam on targeting young people, women, multicultural communities and soft voters in four states. That is 38 percent of 4.6 million undecided voters. I imagine that this is where the mass funding from corporates and other globalists will be rolled out. We have already covered attempts to make the vote unfair in favour of the Yes side, and have more to report.

What to do? Clearly the pressure needs to be kept up, because things could turn for the worst at the last minute for the No vote, given the forces of Darkness that have been assembled against us. We must keep fighting as hard as possible, and getting the word out at the community level; even down your street and suburb. Think, and act local to defeat the globalists and communists who are behind all of this. It is about time they get put back in their place!

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/indigenous-voice-to-parliament-yes23-campaign-must-target-17m-soft-voters/news-story/a40a8e15c8724b142d9b35a8f2367821

“Yes23 must win over at least 38 per cent of the nation’s 4.6 million undecided voters to claim victory in the October referendum, according to confidential research targeting young people, women, multicultural communities and soft voters in four battleground states.

The 31-page Yes23 Persuasive Conversations document, obtained by The Australian, includes new strategies designed to reverse polling trends indicating the pro-voice campaign is on track to lose the referendum, which is expected to be called for October 14.

Campaign volunteers have been told to name a “villain” when convincing at least 1.7 million undecided voters to join the Yes cause, including invoking mining billionaires who “care more about profit than protecting our country”.

With mining giants strongly backing a constitutionally enshrined voice advisory body, Anthony Albanese on Sunday travelled to Rio Tinto’s iron ore operations in the key state of Western Australia, where he expressed confidence the traditionally conservative state would back the Yes campaign.

The Prime Minister will travel to Adelaide on Wednesday to announce the referendum date and officially launch the Yes campaign in the must-win state of South Australia.

Central to the Yes23 campaign, which has recruited more than 27,000 volunteers, are new strategies to secure backing from millions of soft voters they describe as being “up for grabs”. The PowerPoint slides, which Yes23 says are not official but prepared by volunteers, includes new confidential strategic voting and messaging research.

 “Young people are key. The largest age segment up for grabs are 18-34-year-olds. So are women … 54 per cent of (those) up for grabs are female. People who speak languages other than English at home are not being talked to about this issue,” the document say. “Opposition in WA is much softer than in other states, and so should be a key persuasion priority.

Tasmania is a key persuasion priority, with a higher proportion of supportive segments. SA and Queensland are over-represented in hard-to-move (segments).”

The document, which provides cheat sheets to help volunteers shift sentiment, categorises voters across eight segments – Sceptical Allies (closet conservatives), Cheerleaders (including young female professionals), Leaning Yes, Undecided, Leaning No, Disengaged, Hard No and Culture Warriors.

It provides instructions on how to redirect voters who ask why the voice is needed now, raise concerns over the lack of detail and who believe the voice is about “more than just recognition”. Yes23 campaigners, who should adhere to “positive framing”, are provided with written examples of how to “affirm, answer and redirect” under a plan to engage the base, persuade the maybes and ignore the opposition.

“The job of a good message isn’t to say what is popular. The job of a good message is to make popular what we need said,” the document says.

Yes23 campaigners, who will target voters in SA, Tasmania, WA and Queensland, are instructed to follow the “Four Vs framework – value, villain, victory and vision”.

After discussing values, which are universal or widely supported, campaigners are told to “name the villain, or unfair barrier, including who or what is harming us and why – pick a villain that most people dislike or distrust”. The Yes23 document tells volunteers to single out wealthy miners as villains: “Mining billionaires care more about profit than protecting our country.” This is despite some of the country’s biggest mining companies, such as BHP and Rio Tinto, backing the voice.

Other villain themes include harm caused by discrimination of the past, successive governments taking funding away from local communities without consultation and past governments reneging on promises made to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

Under the Four Vs framework, “value” is based on Australians believing everyone deserves a fair go, “villain” focuses on exposing discrimination and racism “that still has an impact today”, “victory” celebrates the voice as a practical step forward and “vision” represents a “united community where everyone is treated with respect and dignity”.

 

 

 

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Tuesday, 26 November 2024

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