“Dutton does not benefit from this directly,so this is more about some voters reassessing the prime minister,not defecting entirely.”
The Resolve Political Monitor surveyed 1600 eligible voters from Sunday to Thursday last week,a period of intense coverage of the AUKUS agreement before and after it was announced on Tuesday. The bulk of the voters responded before former prime ministerPaul Keating savaged the agreement at the National Press Club on Wednesday. The results have a margin of error of 2.4 percentage points.
Asked to name the party and leader they thought best to manage national security and defence,35 per cent chose Labor and Albanese,up from 32 per cent last month. Another 32 per cent chose the Coalition and Dutton,down from 35 per cent last month,while 7 per cent preferred someone else and 26 per cent were undecided.
There was no change on foreign affairs,however,with 41 per cent naming Labor and Albanese while 28 per cent chose the Coalition and Dutton.
Reed said the government’s lead on national security was small and the net change was not statistically significant,suggesting that many voters were absorbing the AUKUS news and reserving judgement.
“Despite the massive investment in submarines,the government has received no significant improvement in its handling of national defence,” he said.
“This may partly reflect the bipartisan nature of the policy and it starting under the previous government,but the cautious support we’ve measured for it also indicates voters are still assessing the deal.”
In the months after the May election,the survey showed voters favoured Labor and Albanese to manage almost every major policy.
The latest survey is the first this year in which Labor and Albanese have held the lead on national security and defence,but it also found the Coalition and Dutton took the lead on managing the nation’s finances.
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With the news about the AUKUS deal dominated by the $368 billion estimated cost over three decades,the survey found that 34 per cent considered the Coalition and Dutton to be best at managing finances while 31 per cent favoured Labor and Albanese. This compared to 34 and 35 per cent one month ago.
The government held a double-digit lead on healthcare,education,industrial relations,environment and climate,jobs and wages,welfare and benefits,responding to natural disasters and issues affecting women.
It held smaller leads on economic management,transport,managing COVID-19 and keeping the cost of living down.
Asked about immigration and refugees,34 per cent said Labor and Albanese were best to manage the issue while 27 per cent named the Coalition and Dutton. Another 14 per cent said others were better to manage the issue and 25 per cent were undecided.
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