Support for the coalition has lifted to its highest level since the 2022 election while support for the voice dropped following the referendum date announcement, according to the latest Newspoll.

The coalition leads Labor 37 per cent to 35 per cent on primary votes, although the ALP still holds a comfortable two-party preferred lead of 53 per cent to 47 per cent, according to the poll published in The Australian on Monday.

Support for the Indigenous voice to parliament fell to 38 per cent, while those intending to vote 'no' at the referendum rose to 53 per cent and nine per cent were undecided.

Labor leader Anthony Albanese's approval ratings suffered a fall with satisfaction in his performance dropping from 52 per cent in July to 46 per cent in the latest poll. His dissatisfaction rating rose six points to 47 per cent.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton's approval ratings saw those satisfied with him rising two points to 38 per cent, while those with a negative view stayed at 49 per cent.

In the preferred prime minister stakes, Mr Albanese suffered a four-point fall to 50 per cent with Mr Dutton lifting two points to 31 per cent, according to the poll of 1200 voters conducted between August 28 and September 1.

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Gold Coast has locked up Sam Flanders on a four-year deal, securing the gun midfielder after he finished the AFL season in barnstorming form.

Flanders, who was off contract beyond this season, was the 11th pick of the 2019 draft behind high-profile top two Matt Rowell and Noah Anderson.

Unlike that pair, it's taken Flanders four seasons to establish himself, the 22-year-old averaging 29 disposals and five clearances per game for the final 10 matches of the year.

After a mid-season injury, Flanders lapped up the chance to shine with more midfield minutes in a timely display ahead of coach Damien Hardwick's arrival next season.

"I feel I am starting to play some high quality football for the club and love the playing group here, they really make me feel at home," Flanders said.

"I can't wait for what's to come next year and really wanted to be a key part of the next chapter."

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Cronulla coach Craig Fitzgibbon says he's relishing testing himself against long-term mentor Trent Robinson as the Sharks face the Sydney Roosters in a winner-takes-all elimination NRL final.

The Roosters, who surged their way into the top eight with five straight wins, have looked in ominous touch in recent weeks and are expected to be buoyed by the return of Joey Manu.

Robinson joked after Friday's win over South Sydney that he had leant on Fitzgibbon's Sharks to beat the Roosters' rivals for a top-eight spot over the last month.

But now there are unlikely to be any favours in return with Cronulla keen to prove they can be heavyweights come September after Sunday's 24-6 win over Canberra locked up a home final.

"It is a good opportunity for us and our club," said Fitzgibbon, who worked under Robinson for more than a decade.

"Any semi that you play is a privilege because you earned the right through a lot of hard work, a lot of sacrifices from staff and players.

"So any one of them is a privilege, irrespective of who you're playing.

"All that stuff (with Robinson) will heat up later in the week."

The theme of old faces meeting each other is littered throughout week one of the finals series.

Brisbane's Kevin Walters was on Craig Bellamy's staff for years.

He will seek revenge against Bellamy and Melbourne on Friday after the Storm prevented the Broncos claiming the minor premiership in the final round of the season.

Penrith coach Ivan Cleary will be facing a familiar foe in Andrew Webster, who has masterminded a revival of the Warriors.

The Panthers-Warriors game has been shifted to the earlier timeslot on Saturday to allow it to hit primetime television in New Zealand.

Canberra face the most arduous of tasks, heading to Newcastle to face a Knights side on Sunday who haven't lost at McDonald Jones Stadium since April.

The Raiders have won just two of their last seven and have a depleted pack with Seb Kris staring at a lengthy suspension.

"I don't know if anyone knows we're in the finals," said Canberra coach Ricky Stuart.

"I'm so proud of these blokes, they've exceeded all (external) expectations.

"Good on Adam O'Brien, he was getting sacked three months ago, he's turned it around and shoved it up all those people."

NRL FINALS SCHEDULE

FRIDAY: Brisbane Broncos v Melbourne Storm, Suncorp Stadium, 7.50pm

SATURDAY: Penrith Panthers v Warriors, BlueBet Stadium 4.05pm.

Cronulla Sharks v Sydney Roosters, PointsBet Stadium, 7.50pm.

SUNDAY: Newcastle Knights v Canberra Raiders, McDonald Jones Stadium, 4.05pm.

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John Farnham has given permission for his famous song, 'You're the Voice', to be used in a 'yes' campaign advertisement for the referendum on an Indigenous voice to parliament.

"This song changed my life," he said.

"I can only hope that now it might help, in some small way, to change the lives of our First Nations peoples for the better."

The Uluru Dialogue - the organisation dedicated to advancing the Uluru Statement - launched the three-minute ad, You're the Voice, pairing Farnham's anthemic song with transformative moments in Australian history, on Sunday in Melbourne.

Megan Davis, one of the Uluru Dialogue co-chairs, is hoping the ad to run on television and social media, coupled with Farnham's perfect soundtrack, will rally Australians behind the referendum, which will be held on October 14.

"I think for most Australians, this will be the defining song of the campaign," Professor Davis told AAP.

"You don't get anything bigger than John Farnham. He's Australian rock royalty and you don't get anything bigger than this song, which is the unofficial anthem of the nation.

"It is a huge deal. We're really proud."

The ad - which will be in long and short forms - is a direct call to action and aims to remind Australians they have a chance to change history by voting yes.

The ad follows a family through the years as they witness key moments play out on their TV screen; the 1967 referendum to count Aboriginal people in the Census, the Mabo decision, the America's Cup, the Uluru handback, Cathy Freeman's gold medal, John Howard's 1996 gun reform, the 2008 apology and the marriage equality plebiscite.

"This isn't just the hard-headed constitutional reform that will change our people's lives," Prof Davis said.

"It's the heart as well.

"That's what this song speaks to.

"It speaks to the agency of people in a community working together to make a difference.

"It's been quite tough for our mob with the hate and the racism but the majority of Australians are forward-looking and this country actually is 'not gonna sit in silence' and 'we're not gonna live in fear'.

"We're going to step it up and walk together like we did in 1967 to make this change."

Just over a year ago, Farnham had major surgery to remove a cancerous tumour from his mouth.

He's been given the all-clear and in July a documentary about his life, Finding the Voice, was released.

And Farnsy isn't the only rock legend lending his star power and voice to the 'yes' campaign.

Singer-songwriter Paul Kelly wrote and released an original song, If Not Now.

"Music has the power to speak to people's lives," Prof Davis said.

"I was in primary school when You're the Voice was released and, as a young girl, instantaneously felt the power of its message about agency and walking together.

"History isn't just something we witness and observe, but something we ourselves can influence and now we all have a voice in what happens at this critical moment, and we must use it."

Prof Davis, a constitutional law expert and one of the architects of the Uluru Statement from the Heart, has faced many questions about the voice since the Uluru summit in 2017.

She's written countless stories, appeared before numerous committees and conducted hundreds of interviews.

"The number one question Aussies have asked me for six years is 'Have you thought of Johnny Farnham and You're the Voice?'," she said.

"I just hope Australians love it (the ad).

"It's really about a few moments in our history that made us feel happy as a nation.

"There are some moments in our history when difficult decisions were made, we were anxious, but it made our country a better and safer place and that's what this is about."

© AAP 2023