Coalition gains in federal Resolve poll, but Labor increases lead in Victoria
- Written by Adrian Beaumont, Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne
A Resolve poll[1] for Nine newspapers, conducted August 17-21 from a sample of 1,607, gave the Coalition 40% of the primary vote (up two since August), Labor 32% (down three), the Greens 12% (steady), One Nation 2% (down two) and independents 10% (up three).
Resolve is not publishing a two party estimate, but analyst Kevin Bonham[2] estimated a 50-50 tie, a two-point gain for the Coalition since July. Given the continuing COVID lockdowns in NSW and Victoria, this poll is bad for Labor.
The last Newspoll in early August was 53-47 to Labor, and the last Morgan, in early to mid-August, was 54-46. Either there has been a shift back to the Coalition in the last week or so, or this poll is an outlier. There should be a Newspoll on Sunday night.
A plausible reason for a Coalition rebound is that the vaccination rollout[3] pace has increased, particularly in NSW. In the UK, once there was some good news on vaccinations early this year, the Conservatives went from a near-tie to a high single digit lead[4] that they have not yielded. The Coalition is also pushing for an end to the lockdowns once vaccination rates are above 70%.
Criticisms of Resolve poll
The Resolve poll can be criticised for only giving primary votes and not a two party estimate. While two party figures can be calculated from the primary votes by analysts, the media will focus on the primary votes. Australia uses preferential voting, not first past the post. Resolve should conform to our electoral system.
Another criticism is the very high vote for independents (10% in this poll). At the 2019 federal election[5], independents won 3.4% of the vote. With Resolve offering independent as an option in all seats, voters who are unsure who they will vote for are likely to park their votes with independents.
Read more: Craig Kelly's move to Palmer's United Australia Party shows the need for urgent electoral law reform[6]
Other results from this poll
46% thought Scott Morrison’s performance in recent weeks was good and 46% poor. After rounding, his net rating was -1, unchanged since July. Anthony Albanese’s net rating dropped three points to -19. Morrison led Albanese by 46-23 as preferred PM (45-24 in July).
The Liberals and Morrison led Labor and Albanese by 44-19 on economic management[7] (41-25 in July). On COVID, the Liberals led by 37-22 (37-25 previously). This is the biggest Liberal lead on the economy since May.
By 62-24, voters wanted political leaders to stick to a national cabinet deal to ease COVID restrictions[8] once vaccinations reach 70% and 80% targets of all Australians aged over 16. By 54-27, voters did not think we would be able to completely suppress the virus again. 12% (down nine since July and down 17 since May) said they were unlikely to get vaccinated.
Essential and Morgan polls
In last week’s Essential poll[9], 8% (down three since early August) said they’d never get vaccinated, and a further 24% (down one) said they’d get vaccinated, but not straight away. By 75-10, voters supported mandatory vaccination for workers in occupations with high COVID transmission risks, such as hospitals and education.
The federal government had a 41-35 good rating for its response to COVID, up from 38-35 good in early August, but down from 58-18 in late May, before any lockdowns.
The NSW government’s response was rated good by 42%, down five from early August and 27 since early June. Despite the current lockdown, the Victorian government’s good rating rose two points to 56%. Queensland and WA have been rewarded for keeping COVID out, with Queensland’s good rating up six to 66% and WA’s up five to 87%.
A Morgan poll[10], conducted August 7-8 and 14-15 from a sample of over 2,700, gave Labor a 54-46 lead, a 0.5% gain for Labor since late July. Primary votes were 37.5% Coalition (up 0.5%), 37.5% Labor (up 0.5%), 12.5% Greens (steady) and 3.5% One Nation (up 0.5%).
Victorian Labor increases lead in Resolve poll
In a Victorian state Resolve poll[11] for The Age, Labor had 40% of the primary vote (up three since June), the Coalition 35% (down one), the Greens 10% (up one) and independents 9% (down three). Bonham estimated[12] a 56-44 Labor lead after preferences, a two-point gain for Labor.
This poll would have been conducted with the federal July and August Resolve polls from a sample of 1,106. Incumbent Daniel Andrews led Opposition Leader Michael O'Brien by 50-24 as preferred premier (49-23 in June).
Labor’s increased lead in Victoria comes despite strict lockdowns that have still failed to contain the current Delta outbreak of COVID. It appears voters will support lockdowns until we reach the 70% fully vaccinated target.
However, the 62-24 national support for easing restrictions once vaccination targets are met indicates the federal government is on a winner with this strategy.
Read more: View from The Hill: Achieving vaccine targets could be followed by a (pre-election) health 'pinch point'[13]
Biden’s ratings slump after Afghanistan withdrawal
I wrote for The Poll Bludger[14] on Monday that US President Joe Biden’s ratings have slumped after the Afghanistan withdrawal. In the FiveThirtyEight[15] aggregate, his ratings are now 47.6% approve, 46.9% disapprove (net just +0.7%). Biden had a +10 net rating in late July and +6 before Afghanistan.
Also covered: Canadian PM Justin Trudeau calls an election for September 20, two years early. And the Social Democrats surge in Germany, ahead of the September 26 election.
References
- ^ Resolve poll (www.smh.com.au)
- ^ Kevin Bonham (twitter.com)
- ^ vaccination rollout (www.theguardian.com)
- ^ high single digit lead (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ 2019 federal election (results.aec.gov.au)
- ^ Craig Kelly's move to Palmer's United Australia Party shows the need for urgent electoral law reform (theconversation.com)
- ^ economic management (www.smh.com.au)
- ^ COVID restrictions (www.theage.com.au)
- ^ Essential poll (essentialvision.com.au)
- ^ Morgan poll (www.roymorgan.com)
- ^ Victorian state Resolve poll (www.theage.com.au)
- ^ Bonham estimated (twitter.com)
- ^ View from The Hill: Achieving vaccine targets could be followed by a (pre-election) health 'pinch point' (theconversation.com)
- ^ The Poll Bludger (www.pollbludger.net)
- ^ FiveThirtyEight (projects.fivethirtyeight.com)