Wednesday, July 8, 2026

DemosAU: Could Hare-Clark Help One Nation Shift Tasmania To The Right?

DemosAU Liberal 28 Labor 21 One Nation 21 Greens 14 IND 12 SF+F 2 Others 2

Seat estimate if these vote shares were recorded in election "held now" Lib 10 ALP 9 ON 8 Grn 4 IND 4

After a previous state poll which did not explicitly include One Nation, DemosAU have now included them in their Tasmanian state polling for the first time.  The party, which has been advertised for state registration, debuts on 21%, similar to the 19% it recorded in the May EMRS.  But if we add the Liberal and One Nation votes in the EMRS poll, we get 44%.  In the DemosAU poll, it is 49.

This raises a thought experiment.  Yes, we know One Nation is trashing the Liberal vote everywhere and that they would win seats from the Liberals in Tasmania right now.  But what if, by taking votes from Labor and increasing the overall right vote, they ended up taking a fourth seat for the right in Bass (where the right nearly won four last time anyway), a third seat for the right in Franklin (ditto) and - though this I think would be the hardest part - a third seat for the right in Clark?  (That's on the current boundaries; if the proposed new boundaries are accepted I expect similar scenarios to emerge).  

It's a very long way to the next election, or is it?  After the historic censuring of Premier Rockliff, as prospective Senator Stansfield notes in the latest Poll Position pod, at some point there will be another scandal.  And at that point Labor will have painted themselves into an even tighter corner than before. If they don't want to force another election that nobody wants and that now also floods the House with One Nation, they can either form a government nobody understands, or look comically impotent as they pass meaningless censure motions or do nothing.  

But if vote shares are still something like this whenever the next election does roll around, this poll raises the prospect that Tasmania could see a combined Liberal/One Nation majority.  And indeed thanks to the Hare-Clark system so often unfairly attacked from the right, Tasmania is the easiest place for that to happen!  In the single-seat jurisdictions the Coalition and One Nation combined can have a solid primary vote lead over Labor and the Greens combined and yet still lose elections, because the right vote is divided and the preference flows between orange and blue are not that strong.  But in Hare-Clark, that hardly matters: statewide primary votes by and large convert to seats.  Adjusting off the model in my last EMRS article, my estimate for this poll in an election "held now" on the current boundaries would be:

Bass 2 Liberal 2 Labor 2 One Nation 1 Green

Braddon 2 Liberal 2 Labor 2 One Nation 1 IND

Lyons 2 Liberal 2 Labor 2 One Nation 1 Green

Franklin 2 Liberal 1 Labor 1 One Nation 1 Green 2 IND

Clark 2 Liberal 2 Labor 1 One Nation 1 Green 1 IND

Total 10-9-8-4-4.  And none of these are even close enough for the disadvantage to One Nation of lacking incumbents or high profile candidates to shift them.  

I'm not sure a Liberal/One Nation government with a one-seat majority would last long before someone quit One Nation (or the Liberals!) but if it did it would be an unusual dynamic - One Nation dragging on the Liberals' right and under pressure to deliver for supporters, just as the Greens have dragged on Labor's left in the Field and Bartlett/Giddings years.   Tasmanian politics after many years of moderate domination in the Liberal Party just isn't used to seriously right-wing governments; we really haven't had them since Robin Gray and Ray Groom.  It is possible on such numbers that a power-sharing deal with Labor (the generally overtalked-up "grand coalition") would seem a better option for some Liberals - say each gets two years in office in the term - but I suspect not quite enough.  

All this said, this is only one poll, and EMRS has the stronger track record in the state and demonstrated why again last year.  

Arise ... Queen Kristie!

DemosAU have also polled opinion ratings for various Tasmanian politicians.  The question for these is simply "What is your opinion on the following people?" with options of positive, neutral and negative.

There weren't any massive movements in the latest sample but Kristie Johnston (+5, 22-17) recorded the only net positive rating ahead of Rockliff -3 (35-38), Josh Willie -6 (23-29), Peter George -8 (19-27), Craig Garland -9 (16-25), Rosalie Woodruff -12 (26-38), Guy Barnett -13 (21-34), Dean Winter -16 (18-34, but up seven points), and the left's favourite cartoon villain Eric Abetz -25 (17-42).  Slightly positive net ratings for MPs with low positive and negative scores don't mean an enormous amount but at least in this sample Johnston has "positive" scores on a par with several major figures and negatives well below the other listed crossbenchers.  

The poll also canvassed Preferred Premier with Rockliff leading Willie 41-32 (down two points on his lead last time).  Of interest here are the breakdowns among other party voters; intending Greens voters prefer Willie 51-21, intending One Nation voters prefer Rockliff 42-19 and intending IND voters prefer Willie 31-17.  Those Liberal voters still left in the fold prefer Rockliff 91-2 (!) while Labor voters prefer Willie 82-5.  These sorts of questions tend to skew to incumbents somewhat and Willie is still relatively low profile in the north.  

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Tas Liberal Senate Turnover As Duniam And Askew To Go

I had a piece in drafts almost ready to release for weeks about this, but perhaps just as well I didn't since further developments have rendered the draft somewhat out of date.   The last few weeks have seen major news in the leadup to the expected 2028 half-Senate election with the Tasmanian Liberal ticket to lose both its incumbents.  Incumbent since 2019 Wendy Askew was to retire at the end of the term but will now resign in coming weeks while incumbent since 2016 Jonno Duniam will quit by the end of this year.  Askew's successor will get something like 20 months and Duniam's successor about 17 in the Senate in the lead-up to the next election, assuming it is on schedule and not early. 

The preselection currently underway is for the next election but I would expect that the top two candidates will inherit the seats of Askew and Duniam unless there are twists regarding availability.  
While it may seem disastrous for the Liberals to be go in with no incumbents, in some ways it is an advantage to them compared to if just one incumbent departed now.  The party now has more flexibility in planning a 2028 ticket from scratch without, for instance, feeling pressured to choose a female candidate as the sole winner of the vacancy race as might have been the case had only Askew departed.  

Duniam has cited family (once a cliche, these days with younger politicians not so much) and also burnout (especially over the Liberals' recent leadership spill) as factors leading to his departure.  Duniam, as outgoing Shadow Minister for Home Affairs, was viewed as a pretty major player in the Coalition Senate team especially on national security.  It's quite common to see politicians quit parliament citing lack of family contact then turn up in a new demanding job, as was the case with Gavin Pearce's comically brief retirement from politics, but in some such cases what they are really quitting is Canberra - being a FIFO politician from the Apple Isle would take a toll on families.  We will see where Duniam, who is only 43, turns up next.  Askew has a much lower profile but has served as Chief Opposition Whip and Chair of the committee on Senators Interests, and is well regarded as among her party's more knowledgeable people on the Senate's operations. So between them they are leaving quite a gap to fill.

What are the stakes?

At the last Senate election the Liberals retained the seats of Claire Chandler and Richard Colbeck, but Colbeck's seat was in doubt for some time with a final winning margin of 3.06% over Labor after One Nation preferences.  (It is not true that One Nation's Lee Hanson was close to winning this seat; Hanson jnr in fact finished eighth).  The Liberals' second seat was at risk because of a strong Labor performance in a case where Jacqui Lambie took the fifth seat. Lambie intends to retire in 2031, and it is not expected that there will be a Lambie Network ticket at the 2028 election.  

However a new threat is apparent in current polling, which is that One Nation are polling so well nationwide that in an election "held now" they could win two seats to the Coalition's one in various states, with Tasmania being potentially one of these.  The underlying strength of One Nation in the state  has long been masked by the competing Lambie Network vote, and the Liberal vote in the state is weak.  Had JLN not contested, One Nation would have polled around 6.8% in Tasmania in 2025 (slightly lower than Queensland and higher than every other mainland state - though partly because of a smaller field of parties), though they would not have won a seat in 2025 because of the high Labor vote.  In 2022 had JLN not contested, One Nation would have won a seat.

There is also a possibility that if Labor has another strong election, Labor could win three seats in the state with the Liberals and One Nation on something like current numbers winning only one each.  This sort of four left two right result would have happened in 2025 had JLN not stood, though in that case it would have been two Liberals.  Although this seems unlikely at the moment with the government struggling to retain its primary vote in polls, the government also struggled in polling at times in the previous term, so this cannot be ruled out.

Overall at the moment the Liberals would be expected to win the top seat while the second seat is a maybe, maybe not.  The second seat firms up if One Nation support collapses though it has so far shown no real signs of doing so.

Who's (not) running or might run?

I will edit this section if/as news on candidates comes to hand.  At the moment we have one declared candidate and a fair amount of speculation but other names are not to my knowledge public.    

Brad Stansfield (declared candidate - announced June 12) is a former Liberal strategist and staffer who was a key player in the party's victories at the 2014 through 2024 state elections (but not 2025).  He was chief of staff to Will Hodgman for eight years, and before that to Eric Abetz for a few years when Abetz was a Senator.  In recent years he was also known as a partner in the Tasmanian public relations firm Font PR which had a large number of industry and political clients in the state and which hosted Fontcast.  After Font PR dissolved itself, Stansfield took over the long-running polling business EMRS which Font had previously acquired and has also been commenting on the Poll Position podcast.  He is also a part-owner of Tasmanian Country newspaper.

Stansfield has made a large number of commentary remarks about the state of the party for those looking for his positions on things.  In particular he strongly opposes imitating or forming strategic alliances with One Nation, and has also criticised a wide range of state and federal MPs who have quit the parties they were elected under.  He supported the Voice to Parliament (while criticising the woeful official Yes campaign) but I would not describe him as a typical Liberal moderate on that account; in a recent podcast with someone you might recognise he described his politics as libertarian-leaning.  He would be a rather different Senator - not an obvious "retail politician" (though that hardly matters in the Senate where name recognition among the general public is often low) but someone with a large amount of campaigning and public opinion experience.  

By the way as the podcast notes I have known this candidate intermittently for about 35 years through chess as well as politics - among other things he was joint Tasmanian Champion in 1993, at the time the youngest ever Champion though that record has since been surpassed.  

Sarah Courtney (reported for some time by some sources as "understood" to be running - now reported by The Mercury to be running) is a former state MHA for Bass, and also a financial analyst and viticulturalist and Chair of the Tasmanian Forest Products Association. Courtney was elected at the 2014 election and became Minister for Primary Industries and Water and Minister for Racing in 2018, later serving in a very wide range of other portfolios including Health Minister during the pandemic, Resources, Building and Construction, Women, Education, Skills, Training and Workforce Growth, Children and Youth,  Hospitality and Events and Disability Services.   Courtney, generally considered a moderate, was a popular MP and at times considered a future leader but resigned from Parliament in somewhat controversial circumstances in 2022.  

Jacki Martin (declared candidate - announced June 19) is a Latrobe Councillor and current advisor to Askew, and is or recently was State Treasurer of the party.  She was previously a long-term Commonwealth Bank branch manager at Ulverstone.  Martin has been on Latrobe council since the 2022 election, at which she was the sixth of nine candidates elected, winning at the first attempt.  Martin ran on the Liberal Senate ticket in 2025 in the generally uncompetitive number three position, polling 1289 below the line votes. 

Chris Gatenby (reported by The Mercury as running) is currently a Senior Advisor to Premier Rockliff, and has been an advisor or chief of staff to numerous state and federal Liberal MPs over the past decade.  He was a state candidate in Bass in 2024 and 2025, polling 1504 and 1227 votes respectively (the drop in 2025 being doubtless caused by Bridget Archer running).  The latter run means that he is a potential future state MP in the event of any casual vacancies in this term.  Gatenby also has a background in health, government relations and in campaigning in the UK.  He is a past State President of the Liberal Party.  Gatenby is considered a moderate.  

Former Deputy Premier and now backbencher Michael Ferguson was being reported as not ruling out interest but has now announced he isn't running.  

Overall Tas Senate Turnover

A potential result of these changes is that Tasmania could see a completely different lineup of Senators elected in 2028 to the start of the slate in 2022.  Peter Whish-Wilson (Greens) is about to depart, Anne Urquhart (Labor) has already been replaced by Josh Dolega after resigning to run for the Reps, Helen Polley (Labor) will be 71 in 2028 and might retire before the heat death of the universe and Tammy Tyrrell (JLN) is now effectively the third Labor Senator after quitting the JLN, briefly forming her own party then now joining Labor.  However it's possible in theory that Polley could continue for at least part of the term or that Tyrrell could be preselected for a winnable position on the Labor ticket.    

I am doubtful - but haven't checked - if any state has ever seen a complete turnover from the start of one six-year term to the start of the subsequent term since the abolition of slate voting in the mid-20th century.  There was the curious case of Queensland 2019 where none of the six elected Senators had served a three year term since the 2016 DD (four were new, and two had been disqualified during the term, though one of those was recontesting as an incumbent.)

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Essential Report Microblogging Disclaimers

Frequently I post federal polling results and calculations to the microblogging sites Twitter (X) and Bluesky (links to my accounts in sidebar); here is an example I posted today:


The standard items I include are the primary votes for all parties, any two-party preferred or Labor vs One Nation "shadow 2PP" issued by the pollster, and what I call "my conversion".  "My conversion" is a 2PP figure I get by applying my own estimate of 2025 election preference flows to the primary votes released by the pollster, and is the figure I use in my Labor vs Coalition 2PP aggregate and my Labor vs One Nation 2PP estimate, both of which can be seen on the sidebar together with a link to the methods page for them.   I have been including primary vote changes recently because of interest in whether One Nation is going up or down, but probably won't keep doing so for long.  (In fact the one shown has a typo in it, the Greens are down 1 not up 1).  

In the case of one particular pollster, Essential Report, I have to add a lot of disclaimers because of the unusual properties of that poll.  And I'm tired of typing them out so often so I have decided to put them in article form to link to in the future to save the time of doing so.  If this has the effect of causing or coinciding with some changes in some of the less credible aspects of Essential's polling, I will take that too.

So here we go:

1. Different Scale: Every other significant pollster publishes primary votes with undecided respondents in some way removed or reallocated.  However, Essential does the following: if a voter picks "Don't know" on the first voting intention question they are asked which party they are leaning towards.  If they again pick "Don't know" they are left in, creating an undecided figure that is usually 5% or 6%, so the primary votes attributed to parties and independent/other total 94-95 instead of c. 100.  

In theory this should mean that the parties all get slightly lower primary votes from Essential than on average from other pollsters.  In practice this doesn't happen because of:

2. Very Low Independent/Other readings:  Essential measures the independent/Other vote via a voting option of "Independent or other party" which appears near the bottom of the voting options list.  For whatever reason this attracts way lower numbers than other pollsters' independent/other options - numbers too low to be believable.  The average for the first half of 2026 has been 5.7% (6.0% after reallocating undecided) compared to 10.9% from all other pollsters.  This category polled 15.1% at the 2025 federal election, although it is very likely that other pollsters are right in finding a substantial slice of that has since moved to One Nation.  (I would not rule out some other pollsters having Ind/other a bit low too.  I think about half of the 5.5% minor right vote would have gone over; I am not sure how much of the independent or left minor vote has.)

3. Unusual 2PP Method:  Essential calls its Labor vs Coalition method "2PP+".  Instead of presenting a two-party figure that sums to 100 such as 51-49, Essential leaves undecided voters as undecided in the 2PP so the figure might instead be 48-46 with 6 undecided.  Essential started doing this after the 2019 election polling failure, arguing that in a close election it was necessary to stress that a slim lead was not conclusive and undecided voters could yet cause the trailing party to win.  As I pointed out at the time this reasoning placed too much weight on the apparently spurious excuse that undecided voters caused polls to be wrong in 2019.  The 2019 failure was more likely caused by bad sampling, overly simplistic weighting practices and herding or a herding-like phenomenon.

4. Aberrant Respondent Flows: Essential's 2PP+ is largely based on asking voters who support minor parties which of Labor and Coalition they would preference highest; if the respondent then says they don't know then the last-election preference split for that party is used.  This is basically a respondent preferences method but for whatever reason it produces flows to the Coalition that are stronger than the respondent flows from other pollsters (how much stronger varies) and much stronger than last-election preferences.  On average the Coalition in the 2025-8 term is doing around two points better on Essential's "2PP+" (with undecided removed) than it is on my last-election estimates.  At the same time, Morgan's respondent preferences on average have the Coalition doing one point worse than last-election preferences - something that there might actually be a reason for if One Nation are taking voting intention from the right-wing end of the Others pool.  These preference flows in Essential are so odd that they should have a careful look at their operations (in particular spreadsheet calculations and whether their panel adequately controls speeding respondents) to see if they are doing anything wrong.

5. House Effect: Even after using last-election flows for Essential to negate the impact of its weird respondent flows, Essential still has better numbers for the Coalition overall than other regular pollsters - it tends to get the Coalition's primary on the high side and the Greens on the low side compared with the average.  This doesn't mean it's necessarily wrong about these primaries but is worth keeping in mind when I post conversion figures for it that are lower for Labor than those for other regular pollsters.  For the term so far, Essential is running 1.3 points better for the Coalition on my 2PP conversions than my aggregate at the time of its releases.  Some less regular pollsters (Freshwater, Spectre and Fox&Hedgehog) may have similar properties but have only released a few polls each.  

The combined effect of aspects 4 and 5 is that Essential had the Coalition ahead in four of its five 2PP+ readings in the first half of 2026.  But only one other pollster (Fox&Hedgehog in late May) has had the Coalition ahead on a pollster-released 2PP at all (51-49), and that was also the only poll by anyone that converted to a Coalition lead even to one decimal (50.3-49.7) on my conversions.  Every other poll that released a 2PP had Labor ahead at least 51-49, and for polls without a pollster-released 2PP all converted to ALP leads, though one of these (late May DemosAU) would have rounded to 50-50 to the nearest whole number.  

I also note that Essential doesn't have a good accuracy record in recent years.  It was at the bottom of my final-poll accuracy tables for federal 2019, federal 2022 and the Voice 2023 and 8th out of 10 (ahead only of Freshwater and the once-off Ipsos) for federal 2025, which is not to say it cannot perform well in the future or should be entirely ignored.  

Friday, June 26, 2026

Hungry Lies: One Nation's Food Security Fibs

Please explain!

Yesterday I was posting some comments about how tweets on the Pauline Hanson twitter account mostly are not written by her, despite being frequently written in the first person.  Tweets signed "PH" or "-PH", the supposed signs that they are actually hers, seem to have largely dried up; after 23 in 2023 (mostly re the Voice) there were according to the advanced search function just two in 2024, none in 2025 and only two so far this year.  In the process I had a broader look at what else One Nation's social media was tweeting and came across a two-minute video for One Nation's current "Fire the Liar" campaign.  One claim, voiced in what appears to be Hanson's voice, caught my attention:

"Seven million Australians can only afford one meal per day.  In a country as prosperous as we used to be.  People are screaming out for change"

Of course, times are tough and food security is a problem for too many.  But the idea that there are seven million Australians only eating one meal a day, and doing so for purely financial reasons rather than as a chosen diet or because they are too busy working and/or parenting to eat, seems exceedingly far-fetched.  Interested to see if there was anything behind this at all, I posted the following challenge:


Many One Nation supporters on Twitter are extremely defensive if there is even a whiff of criticism of their party so I got quite a bit of abuse for this challenge.  At the printable end of these contributions were people suggesting I was loaded and overpriveleged, that I was a Labor supporter, that I did that not care about the poor, that I had never been poor myself, that I should "get out of Sandy Bay more often", and that I lived in an insular Tasmanian bubble and did not see disadvantage (ha, I'm closer to Glenorchy City than I am to Sandy Bay, and I spend far more time there at the moment).  None of these claims were even close to true and I would rather like to look some of these people in the eye and tell them the facts about these things in person, because it might surprise them, but really they do not deserve to know.  

Friday, June 12, 2026

"Independent Australia": The Worst Website In Australian Politics?

In an article way back in 2015 I noted that the faux-progressive website "Independent Australia" was independent of "Quality control, consistency, accuracy and editorial skill."  Has it got better since?  Well no, if a recent attempt to soothe reader concerns about the One Nation surge is any guide, it seems to have got even worse.  I've decided to write a whole piece about this trainwreck to explain how abysmal IA's standards are and why nobody should be enabling their output in any way.

The most recent case is an article attributed - I have no idea whether correctly - to a Dr Jason Foster of RMIT.  Even the qualifications of the claimed author are something IA cannot seem to get straight.  The RMIT website states that Foster "holds a PhD in Media and Communication from RMIT, focusing on the representations of history in film and other media."  IA however claimed his PhD covered "media representations, politics and national consciousness", a claim that has since, without acknowledgement of error, been removed.

Before I deal with what is uniquely bad about this article and IA's failed attempt (?) to fix it, I will pick off a number of the low-hanging fruit, many of which are common myths about elections.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Begging For Debunking: A Silly Article Re Stafford Preferences


It was as sure as night follows day, as sure as daylight savings fading the curtains (oh wait) that the Stafford by-election result would see the Queensland right again beating the drum for optional preferences.  On cue we have an op ed by Morgan Begg from the IPA in the Courier-Mail trying to argue that compulsory preferential voting is some kind of aberration that has saved Labor's seat with the aid of obscure leftoids.  Begg's arguments contain a remarkable number of errors, but are also typical of the misguided and poorly debated push to return to full OPV in Queensland.

Begg is probably not responsible for the headline but for starters compulsory preferential voting is hardly an "Absurd Qld voting quirk".  Rather it is the standard form of preferential voting as it exists federally and currently (with very minor differences) in four states - and as it has existed federally, continuously, for 108 years.  (OK between 1984 and 1996 we did have a federal savings provision which allowed for a voter to deliberately exhaust their preferences, but few voters knew about that). 

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Pre And Post Budget Federal Poll Roundup

2PP Aggregate 52.4 to Labor vs Coalition (term low, -0.8 since last week)

Shadow-2PP 52.9 to Labor vs One Nation (-0.6 since last week)

Labor would win election"held now" but most likely with only a small majority


This is my usual annual post about federal voting intention polling after the Budget, plus a summary of what's been happening in the months leading up.

The briefest summary of what happened in the months leading up is "not much".  In terms of my Labor vs Coalition two-party preferred aggregate, Labor dipped down to the high 52s in mid-January (off not a lot of polling at the time) but got back above 54 during Coalition leadership tensions in early February.  Since Angus Taylor replaced Sussan Ley Labor's 2PP has bobbed around the 53s with no real evidence of signal.

Monday, May 18, 2026

EMRS: The State Where No Party Has Votes

EMRS Lib 25 (-4) ALP 24 (+1) ON 19 (+5) GRN 14 (-1) IND 16 (+1) others 2 (-2)

Seat estimate off this poll if election "held now" Lib 8-9 ALP 10 ON 8 Grn 4-5 IND 4 others 0

The funniest thing about this week's EMRS poll is that it was taken before.  Before we found out on Friday that, in proof of assurances that TT Line couldn't possibly be insolvent because the government could just keep throwing it money, the embattled shipping company would be flicked a lazy half a billion dollars to keep it afloat.  Or perhaps I should better say, adrift.  Before we found out, also on Friday in federal budget week, that TasInsure, a "state-backed insurance company" floated out of nowhere in the 2025 election campaign in a desperate attempt to talk about anything at all except the stadium, had gone to the great bus mall in the ground and was being refashioned as a watchdog-shaped object.  And perhaps most significantly of all, before whatever lurks in this week's state Budget.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Stafford By-Election: Prospects and Live

Stafford (ALP 5.32%)
Luke Richmond (ALP) vs Fiona Hammond (LNP) and others
Cause of by-election: death of Jimmy Sullivan (ALP/IND)
ALP retain with c. 4.4% swing to LNP

---
Monday:  Not much more to see

Casey Briggs has tweeted that he understands there are not more than (and probably less than) 2000 postals to come, so further changes to the current 51.2-48.8 margin will be in tenths of a percent if that.

Sunday: Excuses excuses...

Steven Miles has been quoted offering a bizarre excuse for his party's poor result, claiming it was due to One Nation not running and saying "We will never know what the result would have been if they had run and not directed their supporters to vote for the LNP,".  Stafford is one of One Nation's worst seats in the state, had they run I estimate they would have got about 8%.  Most of their voters would have preferenced the LNP anyway.  Care of the 2017 election we have a window on what happens when One Nation recommends preferences to the LNP in some seats and Labor in others - the flow difference was around 10-12%.  So for an open ticket, half that.  This argument if it works at all isn't worth half a percent, it might be worth a tenth of the swing if that.  In fact not all One Nation voters would have even been aware that their party recommended (not "directed") its voters to vote for the LNP, so probably even less.  And some of those who were aware would not have obeyed.

Miles has also referred to Fiona Hammond's local profile, but that was already present in the baseline since she was the candidate last time.  Indeed her time as a councillor was more recent then.  

Another excuse quoted by The Australian is “Right-of-centre voters, after the deal with One Nation, weren’t left with many alternatives in a field of nine candidates, and so we have seen a splintering of the vote amongst other left-of-centre parties.’’  But in fact there were four right wing candidates (up one from 2024) and the three minor righties between them got a 0.3% swing on the combined One Nation and Family First primary from 2024.  It is true that Labor's primary suffered from the extra competition on the left - but that does not explain half of the primary vote swing against Labor flowing through to 2PP swing as well.