hta.AU.The unprecedented polling collapse that just made a Coalition frontbencher Australia’s shock preferred PM

Why the budget has made Angus Taylor Australia’s shock choice as preferred PM

As the fallout continues from the budget, two new polls suggest that the Prime Minister’s popularity is taking a battering.

Anthony Albanese’s tax reform budget has gone down like the proverbial bucket of cold sick with Australians according to two new opinion polls.

A post-budget Newspoll commissioned by The Australian suggests voters’ disapproval of the broken promises is worse than Joe Hockey’s controversial 2014 budget, which threatened to introduce a $7 GP co-payment.

The poll traditionally asks the same core budget questions every year to provide a direct comparison with past budgets. This year’s result is the most unpopular budget since Paul Keating’s 1993 effort.

Labor insiders remain stoic however, suggesting the focus group research suggests property investors can be walked off the ledge once they are told the negative gearing changes are grandfathered, allowing existing investors to keep calm and carry on.

This view is reflected in the Newspoll finding on Labor’s primary vote, which remained static at 31 per cent, despite voters’ grumpiness over broken promises and One Nation jumping from 24 per cent to 27 per cent.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at a press conference in Sydney. Picture: NewsWire / Damian Shaw
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at a press conference in Sydney. Picture: NewsWire / Damian Shaw

According to News­poll, 47 per cent of Australians believe the “budget is driving a wedge between younger and older generations”, a clear majority think Labor’s housing reforms “will make no difference”.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has scored a minus 25 net approval rating, comparing poorly with the minus nine rating that was recorded following the Abbott government’s GP tax budget in 2014.

The 1993 budget handed down by the Keating government is considered the worst in Newspoll history, after Paul Keating infamously abandoned his promised “L-A-W” tax cuts..

Meanwhile, over at the Nine Newspapers, another shock and horror poll for the Labor Party finds that Angus Taylor is now voters’ preferred prime minister.

He is leading Prime Minister Anthony Albanese 33-30, with 37 per cent of people undecided.

The poll, conducted by Resolve Political Monitor, suggests quite the plunge since February, when the prime minister enjoyed a commanding 38-22 lead.

The federal government’s primary vote has slumped 3 percentage points to just 29 per cent and 36 per cent of people say their view of Labor had been damaged.

Leader of the Opposition Angus Taylor. Picture: Hilary Wardhaugh/Getty Images.
Leader of the Opposition Angus Taylor. Picture: Hilary Wardhaugh/Getty Images.

Why Aussies are less likely to trust Anthony Albanese

A clear majority of Australian voters trust the Albanese Government less due to broken budget promises on housing reform.

In the first national poll since Tuesday’s federal budget, voters are divided over whether the changes will work but more Australians back changes to negative gearing than the status quo.

Younger Australians are most likely to support overhauling negative gearing and capital gains tax, but they are also sceptical it will help them buy a home.

Broken promises

The poll was conducted by strategic campaign agency Wolf+Smith for Amplify, a nonpartisan community group founded by technology investor Paul Bassat.

A clear majority of Australians surveyed – 51 per cent – are less likely to trust the government as a result of the changes.

A clear majority of Australian voters trust the Albanese Government less due to broken budget promises on housing reform.
A clear majority of Australian voters trust the Albanese Government less due to broken budget promises on housing reform.

Nearly seven in ten Australians said the fact that changes to negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount were ruled out before the election was important to how they viewed the policies.

Amplify chief executive Georgina Harrisson said the data pointed to a fundamental problem for the government’s reform agenda.

“Half of Australians surveyed say they have less trust in the Federal Government after the Budget compared with before,” Ms Harrisson said.

Just 27 per cent believe the budget will be good for the country as a whole, compared to 40 per cent who think it will be bad.

“This dramatic fall in trust comes amid a backdrop of already declining trust in the ability of governments to solve the housing crisis,” she said.

The poll examined support for negative gearing changes.
The poll examined support for negative gearing changes.

Aussies who back the changes

More Australians support changing negative gearing than oppose it, with around 41 per cent in favour of restricting the tax breaks for landlords.

18-34 year olds are the most supportive cohort at 47 per cent in favour, with only 21 per cent opposed – the strongest net positive of any age group.

Middle-aged Australians (35-54) sit in the middle at 41 per cent support and 28 per cent opposed.

Those aged 55 and over are the least enthusiastic, with support dropping to 36 per cent and opposition rising to 31 per cent, making it the only age group where the gap between supporters and opponents nearly closes.

However, real concerns exist that it could increase rents, and sceptical younger Australians aren’t convinced it will improve their lives.

The survey of 1002 people was conducted on May 13 – the morning after Treasurer Jim Chalmers handed down the budget.

The poll asked Australians to consider what they believed the impact of the changes would be.
The poll asked Australians to consider what they believed the impact of the changes would be.

Just 27 per cent believe the budget will be good for the country as a whole, compared to 40 per cent who think it will be bad.

Just 27 per cent believe the budget will be good for the country as a whole, compared to 40 per cent who think it will be bad.
Just 27 per cent believe the budget will be good for the country as a whole, compared to 40 per cent who think it will be bad.

Support for capital gains tax changes

The poll found that 41 per cent of respondents support replacing the capital gains tax discount with indexation for investment properties.

Only one in four voters – 26 per cent – oppose the move.

Support was even stronger for the abolition of negative gearing on existing properties, with 53 per cent backing the change compared to 27 per cent opposed.

Labor voters led the charge at 51 per cent support for the negative gearing changes, while Coalition voters were more divided, with 42 per cent opposing them.

Renters and younger Australians were among the most enthusiastic supporters across both measures.

The poll found that 41 per cent of respondents support replacing the capital gains tax discount with indexation for investment properties.
The poll found that 41 per cent of respondents support replacing the capital gains tax discount with indexation for investment properties.

Voters were far less convinced the reforms would actually solve Australia’s housing shortage.

Nearly four in ten respondents said the budget’s housing measures would be “fairly ineffective”, while a further 18 per cent called them “very ineffective”.

Only 27 per cent thought they would be effective.

Ms Harrisson said the public’s desire for reform remained intact, but came with conditions.

“What they want is reform that is honest about its aims, credible in its design, and genuinely focused on the thing that will solve the crisis: building more homes.”

Amplify noted that fieldwork was conducted within hours of the budget being delivered, with large “unsure” cohorts across multiple questions suggesting opinion is still forming.

Ms Harrisson said that created both a risk for the government.

“It has been less than a week since the Budget was handed down. The community is yet to be properly engaged on the substance of the changes.

“Our research tells us that when the community is excluded from the conversation, or when commitments made to them are walked back, the damage goes beyond any single policy.”

The poll was conducted online using research-only panels and weighted to match the general population, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 per cent.

 

Source: https://www.news.com.au/national/politics/broken-trust-why-aussies-are-less-likely-to-trust-anthony-albanese-and-renters-are-worried/news-story/ded8d1db8b4bbac5faeb530d73c2611c?