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Coalition gains on Labor as Dutton closes gap: Newspoll

Anthony Albanese remains the preferred PM but Peter Dutton has narrowed the gap, Newspoll indicates. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)

Cold winds are buffeting Labor as the coalition catches a post-budget tailwind, according to fresh opinion polling.

The opposition’s primary vote has risen two points to 39 per cent in the latest Newspoll, conducted for The Australian between June 3 and 7.

It is the coalition’s strongest primary vote result since August 2021 when it was in power under Scott Morrison.

Labor recorded 33 per cent of primary vote support, falling one point since the previous Newspoll in May.

On a two-party preferred basis, the coalition and Labor are neck and neck at 50 per cent according to the June poll.

The political rivals were last tied in November 2023, but the coalition has not eclipsed Labor on a two-party preferred basis since November 2020.

Satisfaction with Anthony Albanese fell into negative territory, but the prime minister’s net rating of minus 7 still leads that of Peter Dutton, despite the opposition leader rising two points to minus 10 since May.

While more poll respondents still think Mr Albanese would make a better prime minister (46 per cent) than Mr Dutton (38 per cent), the opposition leader has narrowed the gap from 19 basis points to eight.

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3 Responses to Coalition gains on Labor as Dutton closes gap: Newspoll

cbrapsycho says: 10 June 2024 at 3:28 pm

Albanese needs to think about the party rather than himself, proactively doing some succession planning so they are led by a more impressive leader, one who can sell ideas more effectively. If the party is to get a second term, they need to be able to win voters over with their vision and Albanese has proven that he’s not the person best equipped for that task.

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Minger says: 10 June 2024 at 5:45 pm

@cbrapsycho
While I don’t disagree that Albo is a dud, a repeat of the Rudd-Gillard-Rudd fiasco chould deliver the PM-ship into an even bigger dud in Dutton. It (the fiasco) plus being a No-alition Leader of the Opposition worked for Abbott. Labor is between a rock and a hard place – keep Albo and risk the populace becoming further disenchanted with him, or kick an own goal by ditching him. Also would a better equipped person (I’m thinking Chalmers) have time to win back the lost support?

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cbrapsycho says: 10 June 2024 at 6:29 pm

It all depends on how a transition is made. The previous fiasco occurred due to back-stabbing and plotting against an existing leader, which makes the new leader appear untrustworthy and less attractive to voters.

If Albo supported a transition as succession planning in the interests of the country and the party, so worked with Chalmers, Plibersek, Jason Clare or whoever the party agreed was the best person to lead into the next election, the party would be seen to be forward thinking and responsible.

Shafting the leader is never acceptable and those involved in such exercises suffer afterwards as we’ve seen. The question is whether Albo is willing to do this and whether he even realises that it’s necessary. Everyone else does.

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