2PP Aggregate: 52.8 to Labor (-0.8 since last week)
Labor would comfortably win election "held right now"
This week has been a confusing week for many poll-watchers, and an amusing week for those of us who watch the antics of the poll-watching partisans. Newspoll was eagerly anticipated following its 55:45 to Labor three weeks ago, and widely expected to come out with more of the same if not then some, but pulled up at only 52:48. Oh well, the line went, maybe it was never 55:45 to begin with, after all Essential had only got out to 53s and the odd 54. But then Essential jumped to 55:45, so two polls not usually noted for volatility had delivered it not just in spades but also in opposite directions. At the moment we don't have a third opinion, since the others are very inactive lately.
In trying to decide between these competing figures, it is worth bearing in mind that Newspoll is now administered by Galaxy. Galaxy was the best pollster of the 2013 election, and the Galaxy/Newspoll stable triumphed again in 2016. Essential was poor in 2013, and while its final poll in 2016 was very good, its tracking performance suggests it was probably lucky or herding. So my aggregate comes down more on the side of Newspoll, crediting Labor with 52.8% 2PP.
Anyway, that is a recovery of sorts, but we have seen false dawns before. Here's the smoothed tracking graph:
For anyone with an interest in my input values, this Newspoll went in at 45.1% for the Coalition after considering the primaries, and the last three Essentials have been 46.9 (published 47), 46.7 (47) and 45.2 (45).
ELECTORAL, POLLING AND POLITICAL ANALYSIS, COMMENT AND NEWS FROM THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CLARK. IF YOU CHANGE THE VOTING SYSTEM YOU CHANGE VOTER BEHAVIOUR AND ANYONE WHO DOESN'T UNDERSTAND THAT SHOULDN'T BE IN PARLIAMENT.
Wednesday, March 22, 2017
Poll Roundup: Attack Of The Poll-Shaped Objects
Friday, March 17, 2017
White New Labor Leader, But Who Will Take Green's Seat?
Recount Update 3 April: The recount has started (see figures here). Shane Broad leads Brenton Best by 1044 votes with 2540 preferences to throw, meaning Brenton Best would need to get 70.6% of preferences if none exhausted, but probably a few will so he will need a higher share of those that do not. Making things harder for Best are that, for instance, a vote that was Bessell-Broad-Green will still come back to Broad, but a vote that was Bessell-Best-Green is not in the recount, so the bug continues to advantage Broad on the remaining votes. Furthermore among the remaining votes there is quite a slab from Paul O'Halloran (Greens) and Best annoyed many Greens voters in the last parliament. I cannot see how Best can possibly win this.
4 April: Broad has extended his lead by seven votes on the first two exclusions and Best now needs 74.4% of preferences if none exhaust. It may already be mathematically impossible.
11:30: The ABC has reported Broad is over the line.
12:20: Broad has won by a massive 1989 votes. On that basis even without all the benefits of the recount bug he probably still would have got over the line by 100-200 votes or so. The blowout in the margin was largely because preferences from Darryl Bessell flowed heavily to Broad in the recount, unlike preferences from Bessell in the election which had flowed heavily to Best. So voters who voted Bessell-Green or Green-Bessell (ignoring non-contesting candidates) saw the choice between Broad and Best completely differently to those who voted for Bessell then went straight to Broad or Best.
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It's been a huge day in Tasmanian state politics with the resignation of Labor leader Bryan Green and his unopposed (at least within the PLP) replacement by Rebecca White. White is the youngest ever Tasmanian Labor leader and will be the youngest Premier by a few to several months if she wins the next state election. (She is not, however, the youngest Labor leader nationally - Chris Watson, later to be PM, was probably one day younger when he became the first federal Labor leader. There may have been other younger Labor leaders in other states; I haven't checked. She is also not the youngest Tasmanian major party leader - Liberal Geoff Pearsall was 32 in 1979.)
Bryan Green is the second long-term Labor leader after Neil Batt (leader 1986-88) to not contest an election. While Green was uncompetitive in head-to-head matchups with Will Hodgman (even after allowing for the edge to the incumbent on such measures) he oversaw a time in which the parliamentary party was almost always unified in public and bloodletting following a massive loss in 2014 was contained.
4 April: Broad has extended his lead by seven votes on the first two exclusions and Best now needs 74.4% of preferences if none exhaust. It may already be mathematically impossible.
11:30: The ABC has reported Broad is over the line.
12:20: Broad has won by a massive 1989 votes. On that basis even without all the benefits of the recount bug he probably still would have got over the line by 100-200 votes or so. The blowout in the margin was largely because preferences from Darryl Bessell flowed heavily to Broad in the recount, unlike preferences from Bessell in the election which had flowed heavily to Best. So voters who voted Bessell-Green or Green-Bessell (ignoring non-contesting candidates) saw the choice between Broad and Best completely differently to those who voted for Bessell then went straight to Broad or Best.
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It's been a huge day in Tasmanian state politics with the resignation of Labor leader Bryan Green and his unopposed (at least within the PLP) replacement by Rebecca White. White is the youngest ever Tasmanian Labor leader and will be the youngest Premier by a few to several months if she wins the next state election. (She is not, however, the youngest Labor leader nationally - Chris Watson, later to be PM, was probably one day younger when he became the first federal Labor leader. There may have been other younger Labor leaders in other states; I haven't checked. She is also not the youngest Tasmanian major party leader - Liberal Geoff Pearsall was 32 in 1979.)
Bryan Green is the second long-term Labor leader after Neil Batt (leader 1986-88) to not contest an election. While Green was uncompetitive in head-to-head matchups with Will Hodgman (even after allowing for the edge to the incumbent on such measures) he oversaw a time in which the parliamentary party was almost always unified in public and bloodletting following a massive loss in 2014 was contained.
Thursday, March 16, 2017
WA Washup: Another One Bites The Dust
It's a familiar script. Five conservative state and territory governments have sought re-election since the Coalition took power federally and only one of the five (NSW) has survived. Western Australia joins Queensland, the Northern Territory and (less emphatically) Victoria as jurisdictions where Coalition incumbents have been given the boot in the last few years.
The outcome in WA has been on the cards for years, and the fact that the Barnett government lost breaks no new ground by itself. Defeat could be predicted as probable based on a combination of what I call federal drag (being of the same party as in power federally), the age of the state government, and the federal government's poor polling. Indeed even Colin Barnett's poor personal ratings alone suggested he was already likely to lose this election less than a year out from his very strong 2013 result. There's a strong case that Barnett should have been removed at least a year ago. Those who failed to do so look quite silly now, but they are geniuses compared to those who wanted to replace Mark McGowan with someone not even in the parliament because McGowan was thought to be too boring to win the election!
Monday, March 6, 2017
EMRS: Liberals Crash, But Hodgman Still Clobbering Green
EMRS Feb 2017: Lib 35 ALP 29 Greens 19 Ind/Other 11 One Nation 6
On these numbers a hung parliament would be inevitable (approx 11 Liberal, 10 Labor, 4 Green, though one more Liberal seat might fall to One Nation or the Greens)
EMRS Nov 2016: Lib 40 ALP 28 Green 18 Ind/Other 13 (One Nation not in readout)
On these numbers most likely result would have been a hung parliament (approx 12 Liberal, 10 Labor, 3 Green)
Current seat aggregate of all polls: Lib 12 ALP 10 Greens 3
Note: EMRS tends to skew to Greens and Others and against ALP. No evidence on skew for or against One Nation is known.
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Once again, Tasmanian phone pollster EMRS has released two of its quarterly polls, for November and February, in a single release. See also the trend tracker, which shows that the Liberal vote has been falling for four years now.
For the first time, One Nation has been included in the readout, and immediately the Hodgman Government has lost five points to 35%, its worst position of the term. Even the Roy Morgan series, which was obviously skewed against the Government (and hasn't been seen since October) never had it below 37.
On these numbers a hung parliament would be inevitable (approx 11 Liberal, 10 Labor, 4 Green, though one more Liberal seat might fall to One Nation or the Greens)
EMRS Nov 2016: Lib 40 ALP 28 Green 18 Ind/Other 13 (One Nation not in readout)
On these numbers most likely result would have been a hung parliament (approx 12 Liberal, 10 Labor, 3 Green)
Current seat aggregate of all polls: Lib 12 ALP 10 Greens 3
Note: EMRS tends to skew to Greens and Others and against ALP. No evidence on skew for or against One Nation is known.
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Once again, Tasmanian phone pollster EMRS has released two of its quarterly polls, for November and February, in a single release. See also the trend tracker, which shows that the Liberal vote has been falling for four years now.
For the first time, One Nation has been included in the readout, and immediately the Hodgman Government has lost five points to 35%, its worst position of the term. Even the Roy Morgan series, which was obviously skewed against the Government (and hasn't been seen since October) never had it below 37.
Patchy Polling In WA As The Final Week Begins
Going into the final week of the WA campaign, not much has changed from where it started a month ago. The relatively scant and yet surprisingly diverse nature of polling data available leaves poll-watchers free to choose their own adventure, from a comprehensive win for Mark McGowan's Labor opposition to a very close and messy race in which Colin Barnett's Liberals might even cling on in minority by the skin of their teeth. About the only thing the statewide polls agree on is this: following a shambolic and confused campaign, One Nation may have tanked.
The following table gives all the statewide polling known to me. The poll marked as "Essential" is known to me only from a Poll Bludger exclusive that describes it as Greens-commissioned Essential robopoll. That description places it at least two degrees of separation from anything we can place verified trust in but I mention it all the same. I've also given an average and a time-weighted (but not performance-weighted) aggregate, in each case excluding the Essential.
In this case though, I don't place that much confidence in aggregation methods. There is a major house-effect difference between the ReachTELs and the Galaxy/Newspoll stable, worth at least four points on each major party's primaries, and coming out at two or three on the 2PP only because ReachTEL use respondent preferences (which have been skewing massively to Labor). There's a pretty good chance here that someone's right and someone's wrong. We're not just seeing margin of error issues here - there would not be such large and consistent differences in the major party primaries by pollster if we were. (And no, voting intention doesn't bounce around this much in reality through a campaign either.)
The following table gives all the statewide polling known to me. The poll marked as "Essential" is known to me only from a Poll Bludger exclusive that describes it as Greens-commissioned Essential robopoll. That description places it at least two degrees of separation from anything we can place verified trust in but I mention it all the same. I've also given an average and a time-weighted (but not performance-weighted) aggregate, in each case excluding the Essential.
In this case though, I don't place that much confidence in aggregation methods. There is a major house-effect difference between the ReachTELs and the Galaxy/Newspoll stable, worth at least four points on each major party's primaries, and coming out at two or three on the 2PP only because ReachTEL use respondent preferences (which have been skewing massively to Labor). There's a pretty good chance here that someone's right and someone's wrong. We're not just seeing margin of error issues here - there would not be such large and consistent differences in the major party primaries by pollster if we were. (And no, voting intention doesn't bounce around this much in reality through a campaign either.)
Saturday, March 4, 2017
Groundhog Day: Group Ticket Nonsense Returns To WA
Glenn Druery will not say exactly what he's been paid to help micro-parties use preference-harvesting to win Upper House seats they don't deserve at the WA State Election. If it was only $5,000 per party plus a $50K win bonus as claimed (and denied), then his services have come pretty cheap. The game is the same as it ever was: to give parties with very little support a chance at winning they don't deserve, by exploiting inflexible voting systems to create preference flows that have nothing to do with the intention of voters. Druery trollishly describes this as an "outbreak of democracy". I will bet that he can scarcely believe his luck to still be in this business.
After the debacle that was the 2013 Senate election in WA, one would have thought WA would be the last place on earth that would let Druery still ply his trade. Alas, it looks like it will instead be the last place on earth that ever stops him. It was in WA in 2013 that Wayne Dropulich of the Australian Sports Party (whatever that was) surfed from 0.2% of the vote to a Senate seat as a result of preference-harvesting, only for his election to be annulled because the loss of some ballot papers caused an irrelevant tipping point to become irresolvable. (This, in turn, was a product of the group ticket system.) And it was then WA where the whole state's Senate election had to be rerun from scratch in 2014 at immense cost.
It seems quite a damning indictment on the Barnett government that it has had three and a half years since the 2013 debacle to clean up the state's similar Legislative Council voting system and hasn't even introduced a bill to that effect. By comparison, the model being considered in South Australia is pretty bad, but at least South Australia's government is trying. Whether WA's has just had too many other problems to care about democracy, or else has kept the system to deliberately salt the earth for its successor, I don't know.
WA's upper house has the worst state electoral system in the nation. It is badly malapportioned in favour of rural electorates, it has Group Ticket voting, and it has a ridiculous lack of savings provisions for votes that stray off the narrow path of exact formality. What we will see in the WA Upper House next weekend is barely even fit to be considered an election.
After the debacle that was the 2013 Senate election in WA, one would have thought WA would be the last place on earth that would let Druery still ply his trade. Alas, it looks like it will instead be the last place on earth that ever stops him. It was in WA in 2013 that Wayne Dropulich of the Australian Sports Party (whatever that was) surfed from 0.2% of the vote to a Senate seat as a result of preference-harvesting, only for his election to be annulled because the loss of some ballot papers caused an irrelevant tipping point to become irresolvable. (This, in turn, was a product of the group ticket system.) And it was then WA where the whole state's Senate election had to be rerun from scratch in 2014 at immense cost.
It seems quite a damning indictment on the Barnett government that it has had three and a half years since the 2013 debacle to clean up the state's similar Legislative Council voting system and hasn't even introduced a bill to that effect. By comparison, the model being considered in South Australia is pretty bad, but at least South Australia's government is trying. Whether WA's has just had too many other problems to care about democracy, or else has kept the system to deliberately salt the earth for its successor, I don't know.
WA's upper house has the worst state electoral system in the nation. It is badly malapportioned in favour of rural electorates, it has Group Ticket voting, and it has a ridiculous lack of savings provisions for votes that stray off the narrow path of exact formality. What we will see in the WA Upper House next weekend is barely even fit to be considered an election.
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
Poll Roundup: One Nation Soars As Liberals Squabble
2PP Aggregate: 53.8 (+1) to ALP
Labor would easily win election "held now"
Coalition's worst position of the current term so far
On current polling One Nation could win at least three lower house seats
Normally I go a couple of Newspolls between poll roundups these days, but this week's has been one of those Newspolls. Following a conveniently timed "Newspoll bomb" by former Prime Minister Tony Abbott, the Turnbull government has recorded a new worst set of figures, and leadership speculation is rife. This comes on top of a Fair Work Commission decision to cut penalty rates, which is seen as bad news for the government although the process was set in train and, until its outcome, supported by Labor.
We are still getting very little federal polling apart from the weekly Essential readings and the slightly less than fortnightly Newspolls. The latest Newspoll came in at 55-45 to Labor, the highest reading for the Opposition since March 2015. (In total during the Abbott Prime Ministership Labor recorded four 55s and one 57.) I've aggregated it at 54.8 after processing the primaries. The last few Essentials were more restrained (typically for Essential) at 52, 52 and 53 for Labor, which I aggregated at 52.4, 52,2 and 53.0. Overall, largely on the back of the recent Newspoll, my aggregate has for now gone to 53.8% in Labor's favour. This is the first time in this term that it has exceeded the 53.6 at which Tony Abbott was disposed of in the term before.
Labor would easily win election "held now"
Coalition's worst position of the current term so far
On current polling One Nation could win at least three lower house seats
Normally I go a couple of Newspolls between poll roundups these days, but this week's has been one of those Newspolls. Following a conveniently timed "Newspoll bomb" by former Prime Minister Tony Abbott, the Turnbull government has recorded a new worst set of figures, and leadership speculation is rife. This comes on top of a Fair Work Commission decision to cut penalty rates, which is seen as bad news for the government although the process was set in train and, until its outcome, supported by Labor.
We are still getting very little federal polling apart from the weekly Essential readings and the slightly less than fortnightly Newspolls. The latest Newspoll came in at 55-45 to Labor, the highest reading for the Opposition since March 2015. (In total during the Abbott Prime Ministership Labor recorded four 55s and one 57.) I've aggregated it at 54.8 after processing the primaries. The last few Essentials were more restrained (typically for Essential) at 52, 52 and 53 for Labor, which I aggregated at 52.4, 52,2 and 53.0. Overall, largely on the back of the recent Newspoll, my aggregate has for now gone to 53.8% in Labor's favour. This is the first time in this term that it has exceeded the 53.6 at which Tony Abbott was disposed of in the term before.
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