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Gains for Labor as it leads in three of past five polls

Recent polls may have given Labor more to smile about.

Recent polls may have given Labor more to smile about. Photo: AAP

A national Freshwater poll for The Australian Financial Review, conducted March 13-15 from a sample of 1051, gave the Coalition a 51-49 lead by respondent preferences, a one-point gain for Labor since the late February Freshwater poll.

Primary votes were 39 per cent Coalition (down two), 31 per cent Labor (steady), 14 per cent Greens (up one) and 16 per cent for all Others (up one).

By 2022 election preference flows, this would be about a 50-50 tie.

Anthony Albanese’s net approval improved one point to -10, while Peter Dutton’s slid four points to -12. In the past two months, Albanese is up eight and Dutton down eight. It’s the first time since May 2024 that Albanese has had a better net approval than Dutton in this poll.

Albanese led Dutton by 45.9-42.5 as preferred PM, his best lead in this poll since last September. By 42-40, respondents thought Dutton better suited to negotiate with US President Donald Trump than Albanese (47-36 in November).

The Coalition leads on important issues, but Labor has gained seven points on economic management and three points on cost of living since February.

There has been improvement for Labor across a range of polls in the past few weeks. The graph below has Labor leads in three of the past five national polls (two YouGovs and a Morgan), with the Coalition still ahead in Newspoll and Freshwater.

In analyst Kevin Bonham’s aggregate, Labor now leads by 50.5–49.5 using 2022 election flows, while it’s a 50-50 tie adjusting for a likely pro-Coalition shift in One Nation preferences.

Last Wednesday Trump imposed 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium imports into the US, including on Australia. I believe this will assist Labor as the tariff imposition will appear unjustified to most Australians, and the Coalition is the more pro-Trump party. If the stock market continues to fall, this will undermine support for Trump’s economic agenda.

Trump has threatened Canada with tariffs for much longer than Australia, and the centre-left governing Liberals have surged back in the polls to a near-tie with the Conservatives from more than 20 points behind, and have taken the lead since Mark Carney’s March 9 election as Liberal leader.

Labor retains lead in YouGov

A national YouGov poll, conducted March 7-13 from a sample of 1526, gave Labor a 51-49 lead, unchanged from the February 28-March 6 YouGov poll. YouGov is conducting weekly polls, and the previous poll was the first Labor lead in YouGov since July 2024.

Primary votes were 36 per cent Coalition (steady), 31 per cent Labor (steady), 13.5 per cent Greens (up 0.5), 7.5 per cent One Nation (up 0.5), 1 per cent Trumpet of Patriots (steady), 9 per cent independents (down one) and 2 per cent others (steady). YouGov is using weaker preference flows for Labor than occurred in 2022, and by 2022 flows Labor would have a lead above 52-48.

Albanese’s net approval improved three points to -6, with 49 per cent dissatisfied and 43 per cent satisfied, while Dutton’s net approval slid two points to -6. Albanese led Dutton as better PM by an unchanged 45-39.

Since the first weekly YouGov poll in late February, Albanese has gained six points on net approval while Dutton has slid four points. This is the first time Dutton has not had a better net approval than Albanese in YouGov since March 2024.

On the ongoing conflict caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, 69 per cent of Australians thought we should stand with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky, while 31 per cent wanted us to stand with Trump.

Labor regains lead in Morgan poll

A national Morgan poll, conducted March 3-9 from a sample of 1719, gave Labor a 51.5-48.5 lead by headline respondent preferences, a two-point gain for Labor since the February 24-March 2 poll. This is Labor’s second lead in the past three Morgan polls, after it had trailed in this poll since November.

Primary votes were 37 per cent Coalition (down three), 30 per cent Labor (up 1.5), 13.5 per cent Greens (steady), 5 per cent One Nation (up one), 10.5 per cent independents (steady) and 4 per cent others (up 0.5). By 2022 election flows, Labor led by 52-48, a two-point gain.

By 51.5-33, respondents said the country was going in the wrong direction (52-31.5 previously). Morgan’s consumer confidence index was down 0.8 points to 86.9.

Poll of teal-held seats has the teals struggling

Freshwater took a poll for the News Corporation tabloids of six seats held by teal independents. These are Curtin in Western Australia, Goldstein and Kooyong in Victoria and Mackellar, Warringah and Wentworth in NSW. The poll was conducted March 5-7 from an overall sample of 830.

Across the six seats polled, the Liberals had a 51-49 lead, representing a 5 per cent swing to them since the 2022 election. On these figures, the Liberals would gain four of these teal seats (Curtin, Goldstein, Kooyong and Mackellar).

Primary votes were 41 per cent Liberals (up two since 2022), 33 per cent teals (steady), 7 per cent Labor (down six), 7 per cent Greens (down two) and 12 per cent others (up six). Albanese and Dutton were tied at 39-39 on better PM. By 47-42, respondents opposed their local MP backing an Albanese Labor minority government.

The YouGov MRP poll that was conducted between late January and mid-February from a sample of over 40,000 had all the teals holding their seats. At the March 8 Western Australian election, swings to the Liberals were lowest in affluent Perth seats.

WA election late counting

With 70 per cent of enrolled voters counted for the WA election, the ABC is calling 43 of the 59 lower house seats for Labor, six for the Liberals, four for the Nationals and six seats remain undecided.

The Poll Bludger has Labor ahead in 47 seats, with the Liberals and Nationals ahead in six seats each.

On election night, it had appeared likely that an independent would win Labor-held Fremantle. However, the independent has performed badly on absent and postal votes, and Labor will retain.

In the upper house, all 37 seats are elected by statewide proportional representation with preferences, and a quota for election is just 2.63 per cent. With 63 per cent of enrolled counted, Labor has 15.8 quotas, the Liberals 10.5, the Greens 4.1, the Nationals 2.1, One Nation 1.35, Legalise Cannabis and the Australian Christians 1.0 each, an independent group 0.48 and Animal Justice 0.43.

On current figures, Labor will win 16 seats, the Liberals 10, the Greens four, the Nationals two, One Nation, Legalise Cannabis and the Christians one each and two seats are unclear (Liberals, independent group and Animal Justice contesting).

Counting of absents in the lower house has hurt the Liberals, so their vote is likely to drop further. Labor and the Greens will have a combined upper house majority.

Liberals hold Port Macquarie at NSW byelection

A byelection occurred on Saturday in the NSW Liberal-held state seat of Port Macquarie. Labor did not contest after finishing third behind the Nationals and Liberals at the 2023 NSW election with 19.2 per cent.

With 59 per cent of enrolled counted, The Poll Bludger is projecting that the Liberals will defeat the Nationals by 52.8-47.2, a 7.9 per cent swing to the Nationals since 2023.

Current primary votes are 34.2 per cent Liberals (down 4.1 per cent), 31.2 per cent Nationals (up 5.5 per cent), 12.8 per cent for an independent (new), 10.7 per cent Greens (up 3.7 per cent) and 7.9 per cent Legalise Cannabis (up 3.4 per cent).The Conversation

Adrian Beaumont, Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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