- by foxnews
- 27 Nov 2024
Support for both the major parties has dropped since the start of the federal election campaign, but Labor is emerging as the party most trusted to manage the cost of living pressures facing Australians.
At the mid-point of the six-week election campaign, the Guardian Essential poll of 1,500 respondents finds the primary vote for both Labor and the Coalition largely unmoved, despite billions of dollars in election promises being made as voters tune into the contest.
The challenge to connect with disengaged voters is also highlighted by the fact that 17% of people say they have not been paying any attention to the news, advertising or updates from the federal election campaign, and 33% saying they have only been paying little attention.
The Greens are polling 10%, the United Australia Party 4%, One Nation 3%, and independents and other parties 5%.
Six per cent of people are still undecided.
This change in methodology, adopted after the 2019 election, highlights the proportion of undecided voters in any survey, providing accuracy on the limits of any prediction.
When this question was asked a fortnight ago, 46% of respondents said they believed Australia was going in the right direction, with 37% saying we are on the wrong track.
As cost of living pressures take centre stage in the election campaign, with inflation at 20-year highs and expectations that interest rates will begin rising as soon as Tuesday, voters say hip pocket concerns have become the most important to them.
Four out of five (79%) of voters listed cost of living as important, with 47% ranking it very important. It is the most important issue, ahead of improving public services (69%), job security (60%) and climate change (54%).
Almost half of all voters rank paying down government debt and the relationship between China and Solomon Islands as important (47%), while the issue of boat turnbacks is seen as a priority by 41% of people.
On the cost of living, 40% of voters judged that Labor was best placed to manage the issue, compared to 30% who trust the Coalition on the issue, and 30% who deemed both parties to be no different.
Labor also outranked the Coalition on voter trust for improving public services such as health and welfare (44% to 26%), job security (38% to 29%) and the climate crisis (40% to 21%.)
The prime minister, Scott Morrison, has been campaigning on the risk of a change of government to Labor, seizing on the economic uncertainty to tell voters to stick with what they know rather than chance opposition leader Anthony Albanese.
Labor has been running a small-target campaign offering safe change, while also focused on promising voters cost of living relief through its childcare, housing, Medicare and energy policies.
In response to questions about the likely fate of the government, 56% believe that Labor will win the coming contest, compared to 44% who believe the Coalition will be re-elected.
A traveler who said he was flying on Delta posted a photo on Reddit showing that a passenger had their jacket draped over a seat, sparking a discussion in the comments section.
read more