Another wave of the RedBridge Group-Accent Research tracking poll of 20 marginal seats for the News Corp papers is unchanged in recording a Labor two-party lead of 54.5-45.5 and primary votes of Labor 35% and Coalition 34%, with the Greens up a point to 14%. As the seat’s in question collectively went 51-49 to Labor in 2022, this points to a 3.5% Labor swing that makes it difficult to concur with the assessment of James Campbell of News Corp that it “points to a likely minority Labor government dependent on independents”. However, the poll does point to a widening in the Coalition’s already established advantage on firmness of voting intention, with 74% of Coalition professing solid voting intention, up seven points on last week, while Labor was unchanged in 59%, in defiance of a natural tendency for support to firm as the time approaches (or in some cases, after votes have already been cast). Presumably on the basis of state breakdowns that don’t appear in the report, Kos Samaras of RedBridge relates that “the most dramatic shift is unfolding in Victoria”. The poll was conducted April 15 to 22 from a sample of 1000.
Also:
• Linda Silmalis of News Corp reports “industry-commissioned polling” by KJC Research goes against the grain in finding the Liberals ahead not only in the normally conservative Labor-held Perth seat of Tangney (“49-45 on a two-party preferred basis, with 7% unsure”), but also in the Labor-held Queensland seat of Blair (46-41 with 13% unsure), with the Greens favoured in Richmond (39-34 with 27% unsure). Labor had the advantage in Hunter, leading 45-41 with 14% unsure. The polls were conducted on Thursday from sample of 600 in each seat. KJC Research’s record is limited but by no means poor: only in Chisholm did it drop the ball when it polled nine seats two months out from the 2022 election.
• Paul Sakkal of Nine Newspapers says glimmers of hope for the Coalition include “a significant rise in support for One Nation, which recently amended its voting tickets to give more support to Dutton”, which is said to be coming through in internal as well as public polling (though the point about how-to-vote cards is unpersuasive, since they invariably had the Coalition ahead of Labor to begin with), and “unusually strong levels of support in very safe Labor seats such as Gorton and Whitlam”.
• The Australian reports the regular SECNewgate Mood of the Nation survey records Labor opening up a blowout lead of 42% to 24% as best party to manage the cost of living, following tight results in the November September, November and February surveys. Anthony Albanese led Peter Dutton as the better leader to handle all seventeen issue areas canvassed, ranging from 36% to 34% on crime to 56% to 20% on welfare and social security.
• Alexi Demetriadi of The Australian reports the pro-Palestine Muslim Votes Matter organisation has “volunteers already descending on pre-polling stations at its target seats across the country” — those named being Werriwa, Tangney and Rankin — to disseminate how-to-vote cards that put the Liberals ahead of Labor. The organisation is not to be confused with The Muslim Vote, which is supporting independent candidates Ahmed Ouf in Blaxland and Ziad Basyouny in Watson, whose how-to-vote cards favour Labor.
• A Roy Morgan SMS survey in which respondents were asked without prompting to name their most and least trusted politicians produced a top five most trusted of David Pocock, Jacqui Lambie, David Crisafulli, Chris Minns and Roger Cook. This marks a contrast with federal Labor’s dominance in a similar exercise before the 2022 election, from which the top five were Penny Wong, Anthony Albanese, Tanya Plibersek, Mark McGowan and Jacqui Lambie. Leading the table on distrust were Peter Dutton, Clive Palmer, Donald Trump and Anthony Albanese, the 2022 leaders being Clive Palmer, Scott Morrison, Peter Dutton and Barnaby Joyce. The survey was conducted a while ago, from March 28 to April 2, from a sample of 1014.
• I took part in a podcast interview with Martin Drum of Notre Dame University on Thursday about the nature of modern campaigning and my general view of the situation for local news website Fremantle Shipping News.
• The single day early voting record set on Tuesday was broken on Wednesday and again on Thursday, prompting commentary such as an observation from Paul Sakkal of Nine Newspapers that the problem of the Coalition’s belated policy announcements was “more acute because early voting has soared since the last election”. However, the interruptions of Easter Monday and Anzac Day this week means this may not be quite as it seems. The three charts below record the numbers of votes cast in the first week of early voting both at the current election and in 2022 and 2025, showing how many more votes have been cast on each day individually this time around; cumulatively, showing the difference to be quite a bit more modest when the entirety of the weeks are compared (1,647,158 then, 1,787,211 now); and the latter as a percentage of the electoral roll, at which the current 9.9% is actually lower than the 10.7% from 2022. It remains to be seen if the daily rate or the weekly rate offers a better guide to what the numbers are likely to be next week.