Angus Reid Global Monitor : Polls & Research

Australians Side with Ruling Labor Party

April 08, 2008
Abstract: (Angus Reid Global Monitor) - The governing party remains the most popular in Australia, according to a poll by Roy Morgan International. 55 per cent of respondents would vote for the Australian Labor Party (ALP) in the next election to the House of Representatives.

(Angus Reid Global Monitor) - The governing party remains the most popular in Australia, according to a poll by Roy Morgan International. 55 per cent of respondents would vote for the Australian Labor Party (ALP) in the next election to the House of Representatives.

The Coalition of Liberals and Nationals is second with 31 per cent, followed by the Australian Greens with seven per cent, and Family First with three per cent. Australia’s preferential voting system—where electors indicate an order of predilection for each contender, and the ballots from smaller parties are re-distributed—gives the ALP a 27-point lead over the Coalition.

Australia held a federal election in November 2007. Final results gave the ALP 85 seats in the 150-member House of Representatives. ALP leader Kevin Rudd was officially sworn in as prime minister in December, bringing an end to the 11-year tenure of Liberal leader John Howard as head of Australia’s government.

Howard failed to retain his seat in the Bennelong constituency and stepped down as Liberal leader. Brendan Nelson—a former defence minister—defeated former environment minister Malcolm Turnbull in an internal leadership ballot by just three votes.

On Apr. 2, Rudd met with European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso and declared: "I want to leave you with one clear message: the new Australian government is committed to building a new, positive partnership with Europe."

Polling Data

If a federal election for the House of Representatives were being held today, which party would receive your first preference?

 

Mar. 23

Mar. 9

Feb. 24

Australian Labor Party

55%

55.5%

56.5%

Coalition (Liberal / National)

31%

30.5%

31.5%

Australian Greens

7%

9%

6.5%

Family First

3%

1.5%

1.5%

Others

4%

3.5%

4%

Two-Party Preferred Vote

 

Mar. 23

Mar. 9

Feb. 24

Australian Labor Party

63.5%

65.5%

64.5%

Coalition (Liberal / National)

36.5%

34.5%

35.5%

Source: Roy Morgan International
Methodology: Telephone interviews with 2,019 Australian voters, conducted on Mar. 15, Mar. 16, Mar. 22 and Mar. 23, 2008. No margin of error was provided.