12 Comments

  1. Perfect-Werewolf-102 on

    Yeah the Nats are pretty dead, this must be the first poll since at least 1987 with the Liberals and Nationals being separate parties

  2. It has been a monumental fumble by the LNP

    Labor basically back where they were before Bondi.

  3. ALP stronger than they were before Bondi. That must be embarrassing for anyone who tried to politicise that tragedy.

  4. Vegetable-Advance982 on

    Lmaoooo 56.5% 2pp. I am concerned about the eventual rise of One Nation, but I suspect for the next 3 years we’re going to get to cheer on the deathmatch on the Right while wondering if Labor gets to 100 seats or not

  5. rolodex-ofhate on

    The (former) Coalition would be toast on those numbers. Imagine fumbling the post-Bondi free kick the Libs and Nationals had because David Littleproud threw his toys out of the cot.

  6. Jealous-Hedgehog-734 on

    No big bump in polling for National following shenanigans, they continue to lose ground to One Nation.

    As I said, One Nation just have more credibility on anti-immigration policy. No one is convinced Nationals have had a legitimate “come to Jesus” moment.

  7. When do we start carving the giant albanese bust out of the rocks at mouth of Sydney harbour?

    We might as well start soon because it dosnt look like the right side of politics could organise a root in a brothel , let alone an election campaign

  8. >Primary support for the Nationals was up 0.5% to 2.5%.

    Lmao, 2.5% and Littleproud thinks he can rule with an iron fist? Hahahaha.

  9. SurroundNo3631 on

    When you’ve got Labor at 30.5%, One Nation at 22.5% and the Liberals at 20.5% that 2PP has to be inherently unreliable unless you’re asking who these voters would allocate their preference to.

    For a party that’s increased its primary vote from 6% to 22% you can’t reliably assume a preference split from the 2025 election. I’m not saying the 2PP gap would be wider or narrower, I’m just saying mathematically it’s subject to a much wider margin of error.

    If these numbers were to remain the same heading into an election it becomes much more of a seat by seat contest. It’s a fundamentally less predictable system than what we’ve been used to.

    Moving someone’s primary vote is hard. Moving their preference much less so.

  10. 343CreeperMaster on

    primary for ALP is still a bit concerning, but it is good to see it recovering and the GRN primary staying relatively stable as well, still will always be concerned about One Nation, but these are good numbers

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