Final 2014 Polls Show Wide Labor Lead

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In the last two weeks we have had polls from Galaxy, Ipsos, Newspoll, Morgan and Essential. All give Labor at least a 52-48 lead, with three higher. Here is my final poll table for 2014, which includes polls released this week and last week.

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From a poll watcher’s point of view, it is good to see that Newspoll and Morgan are back to where they normally are, with Morgan more favourable to Labor than Newspoll. For the last two months, Newspoll has for some reason been more favourable to Labor than Morgan. Morgan leans to Labor by about 1.5% relative to other polls, so his current result is equivalent to a Labor Two Party Preferred (2PP) of 55% from another pollster. This week’s Newspoll had the total non-major party vote at 23%, which is about where other polls have had it. The two 52-48 Labor leads in the table are from pollsters that are not greatly respected yet.

A major caveat with these poll results is that none of the fieldwork occurred after the hostage siege on Monday. Concerns about terrorism helped the government recover to near parity in September, and it is probable that Monday’s hostage drama has helped the government. However, the hostage crisis is unlikely to help the government for long, as shown by the swing to Labor since terrorism concerns last peaked in late September.

Kevin Bonham’s poll aggregate is now at 53.7% 2PP to Labor, up 0.3% since last week. The Poll Bludger’s BludgerTrack is at 54.2% 2PP to Labor, also up 0.3%. Primary votes in BludgerTrack are 39.5% for Labor, 38.0% for the Coalition and 11.2% for the Greens. Labor’s primary vote has increased by 0.6% on last week at the expense of both the Coalition and the Greens.

Notes on These Polls

I discussed last week’s Ipsos here and Galaxy here.

After Fisher Recount, Labor Wins by Just Nine Votes

In the Fisher by-election, the Liberals were granted a recount after the first count gave Labor a 23 vote win. This recount carefully checked the formality of votes. As a result of a net 15 Labor votes being ruled informal, as opposed to a net one Liberal vote, Labor’s margin fell by 14 votes to nine.

The recount result is the final word from the Electoral Commission, and Labor’s Nat Cook will now take her seat in the SA lower house, giving Labor a majority government. The Liberals can appeal to the Court of Disputed Returns, but Cook will hold her seat until the Court decides the matter.

Victorian Upper House Results Finalised

Unlike the Senate, all 40 members of the Victorian upper house are elected at every Victorian election. At this election, Labor won 14 seats, down 2, the Coalition 16, down 5, the Greens 5, up 2, Shooters & Fishers 2, and the Sex Party, Democratic Labour Party and Vote 1 Local Jobs each won one seat.

The left parties (Labor, Greens and Sex) won a combined 20 seats. If the Coalition opposes a bill, Labor will need the Greens and at least two of the other five cross-benchers to pass it. Their most likely supporters seem to be the Sex Party’s Fiona Patten, and James Purcell of Vote 1 Local Jobs.

The Victorian Electoral Commission is now showing the Labor statewide 2PP win of 52.0-48.0 on its main results page. An Excel file can be downloaded that has the Labor vs Coalition 2PP results for all lower house seats.

I will do a detailed post on the upper house at the weekend.

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Adrian Beaumont does not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has no relevant affiliations.

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