Prev = previous poll. *= As opposition leader. #=YouGov poll not branded as Newspoll. |
ELECTORAL, POLLING AND POLITICAL ANALYSIS, COMMENT AND NEWS FROM THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CLARK. YES THE LORD'S PRAYER SHOULD BE REMOVED FROM THE TASMANIAN PARLIAMENT, IF YOU WANT A RELIGIOUS OBSERVANCE AT THE START OF EVERY SITTING DAY HAVE ONE TO THE CLUE FAIRY INSTEAD.
Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Newspoll: Record Premier Ratings And A Very Strange Federal Poll
This week Newspoll polled state Premier approval ratings, but not voting intentions (perhaps because samples by state would have been too small for voting intention sampling). It was to be expected that several state Premiers would have very high approval ratings given their handling of the coronavirus crisis, but perhaps not that the figures would be quite so spectacular:
As high as Scott Morrison's current net rating of +40 is (more on that later), all the Premiers except Palaszczuk have beaten it. None of them were coming off a particularly high base, though the most recent polling for Victoria and WA is ancient. For Tasmania this is the first Newspoll of Premier satisfaction since the 2014 state election.
Labels:
Albanese,
Berejiklian,
COVID-19,
Daniel Andrews,
federal,
Gutwein,
Mark McGowan,
Marshall,
Morgan,
Morrison,
netsats,
netsats and 2PP,
Newspoll,
Palaszczuk,
pseph,
state,
state Premiers
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
Why Better Prime Minister/Premier Scores Are Still Rubbish
Advance Summary
The "better Prime Minister" or "better Premier" score in Newspoll polling is a frequent subject of media focus. This article explores the history of Newspoll preferred leader scores at state and federal elections and during terms and finds that:
* Better Leader scores are skewed indicators that favour incumbents by around 14-17 points at both state and federal level.
* Better Leader scores add no useful predictive information to that provided by a regression based on polled voting intention.
* If anything, Prime Ministers with high Better Prime Minister leads may be more likely to underperform their polled voting intention, but this is already captured in the relationship between polled voting intention and actual results.
* At state level, leading as Better Premier is a worse predictor of election wins or losses than leading on two-party preferred and having a positive net satisfaction rating. This is because Better Premier is a weaker predictor of vote share than polled 2PP and is also more skewed as a predictor of election outcomes than either.
The "better Prime Minister" or "better Premier" score in Newspoll polling is a frequent subject of media focus. This article explores the history of Newspoll preferred leader scores at state and federal elections and during terms and finds that:
* Better Leader scores are skewed indicators that favour incumbents by around 14-17 points at both state and federal level.
* Better Leader scores add no useful predictive information to that provided by a regression based on polled voting intention.
* If anything, Prime Ministers with high Better Prime Minister leads may be more likely to underperform their polled voting intention, but this is already captured in the relationship between polled voting intention and actual results.
* At state level, leading as Better Premier is a worse predictor of election wins or losses than leading on two-party preferred and having a positive net satisfaction rating. This is because Better Premier is a weaker predictor of vote share than polled 2PP and is also more skewed as a predictor of election outcomes than either.
Sunday, April 5, 2020
Morrison Breaks Two Newspoll Records Amid Coronavirus Crisis
The Newspoll just released deserves a special post in the absence of other polling, because of a couple of historic bounces for incumbent Prime Minister Scott Morrison. It should be stated from the outset that these records have fallen partly because Morrison was coming off a low base.
To give the numbers first, the government now leads 51-49 two-party preferred, a gain of two points from three weeks ago. The primaries are Coalition 42 (+2) Labor 34 (-2) Greens 13 (+1) One Nation 5 (+1) Others 6 (-2). (I have a concern that the new Newspoll methods may be overestimating the Greens' vote by naming only them and the majors on the initial screen). Scott Morrison leads Anthony Albanese 53-29 as "better Prime Minister", up from 42-38 last time, noting that Better PM is an indicator that tends to skew to incumbent PMs all else being equal (so 42-38 was actually a bad result for Morrison). Morrison has a net satisfaction rating of +26 (61 satisfied 35 dissatisfied), up 38 points from -12 (41-53) last time. Albanese has a net satisfaction rating of +9 (45-36), up 9 points.
What is notable overall here is that the government has only registered a modest bounce on voting intention but perceptions of Morrison's leadership have been changed dramatically by the crisis. This is indicative of a bipartisan mood where many voters are willing to say that although they support an opposition party, the government leader is doing a good job with this crisis. (One can hear similar from Victorian Liberal voters regarding Daniel Andrews.)
To give the numbers first, the government now leads 51-49 two-party preferred, a gain of two points from three weeks ago. The primaries are Coalition 42 (+2) Labor 34 (-2) Greens 13 (+1) One Nation 5 (+1) Others 6 (-2). (I have a concern that the new Newspoll methods may be overestimating the Greens' vote by naming only them and the majors on the initial screen). Scott Morrison leads Anthony Albanese 53-29 as "better Prime Minister", up from 42-38 last time, noting that Better PM is an indicator that tends to skew to incumbent PMs all else being equal (so 42-38 was actually a bad result for Morrison). Morrison has a net satisfaction rating of +26 (61 satisfied 35 dissatisfied), up 38 points from -12 (41-53) last time. Albanese has a net satisfaction rating of +9 (45-36), up 9 points.
What is notable overall here is that the government has only registered a modest bounce on voting intention but perceptions of Morrison's leadership have been changed dramatically by the crisis. This is indicative of a bipartisan mood where many voters are willing to say that although they support an opposition party, the government leader is doing a good job with this crisis. (One can hear similar from Victorian Liberal voters regarding Daniel Andrews.)
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