One Nation’s primary vote advanced 4 percentage points to 31 per cent from a previous poll conducted ahead of the May 12 budget, while the centre-left government slipped 3 points to 28 per cent, according to a Redbridge Group/Accent Research survey published in the Australian Financial Review. The poll sampled 1,005 voters between May 25 and May 28 and has a margin of error of 3.4 per cent.
The traditional centre-right Liberal-National coalition has hammered the centre-left government over the budget’s broken election promises, including a clampdown on tax breaks for property investors. Yet it has failed to reap any benefits, with the coalition’s primary vote slipping to 20 per cent from 22 per cent.
The party’s anti-immigration and economic nationalist message has been pitched at rural and regional Australia. The latest poll suggests it is beginning to hurt Labor in the outer suburbs of major cities too.
The downstream effects of the budget and another interest rate rise is Labor have lost more vote share
“The downstream effects of the budget and another interest rate rise is Labor have lost more vote share, but the Coalition aren’t the beneficiaries on a primary vote basis,” the Australian Financial Review cited Redbridge director Tony Barry as saying.
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