'; ?> Polls Blog | What The People Want
Polls Blog
Global Warming analysis January 2010
Saturday, 27 February 2010 21:52 | Written by Graham Young

Our polling shows that there has been a decline in those people who believe that Global Warming is manmade, and that it will be catastrophic, since we polled last time. There has also been a collapse in support for the CPRS.

Faith in the official government view of global warming has been shaken with a statistically significant decline in concern about Global Warming. This is not matched by a corresponding growth in those who are unconcerned. Rather the decrease is being transferred to the numbers of those who are unsure.

 
January Omnibus - Most Important Issue
Saturday, 27 February 2010 17:26 | Written by Graham Young

Climate Change continues to be the most important issue, followed by Economy. The newcomer this quarter is Population which has zoomed from 7% to 22%. Health and Water have also had a substantial increase. One surprise appearance this month is Rudd. It's taken a while, but just as John Howard had a strong "loathe" factor, Kevin Rudd appears to be developing one too. Most prime ministers do, and Rudd has escaped this factor for a surprisingly long time.

 
January Omnibus - the Quant
Wednesday, 24 February 2010 21:04 | Written by Graham Young

First Preference Index

Our January quantitative results tend to confirm what we have been seeing in the randomised telephone polls conducted by Newspoll and Nielsen - Labor is not travelling as well as it was, but it is still doing OK.

It's important to remember that our primary purpose is qualitative polling not quantitative, but because of the large scale of our responses it is possible to get an indication of general trends.

The First Preference Index is an attempt to measure those trends, and so far it is tracking pretty much in line with the polls.

 
Real man versus metro man
Tuesday, 26 January 2010 23:56 | Written by Graham Young

Tony Abbott's election seems to have produced a step change in the political conversation and the early evidence says this is a problem for the government, although not necessarily a benefit for the opposition. This is demonstrated by a large drop in approval for the Prime Minister among a sample of 1,989 voters surveyed by my organisation but little net move in that of the Opposition Leader.

This is deceptive. When you look more closely at the Liberal figure there has been a large shift here too, but in composition rather than size with stronger approval figures from conservative Coalition voters and a drop in approval from the centre.

 
Queensland qual: the leaders November 09
Monday, 14 December 2009 02:28 | Written by Graham Young

It looks like the relationship between Premier Anna Bligh and the electorate is terminal. The electorate has lost trust in her, and I suspect it doesn't matter what she does she can never win it back. This loss of trust stems from broken promises after the last election.

Bligh only just won the election by a negative campaign against opposition leader Lawrence Springborg, and declaring that only she could manage the economy. While there was a big swing against the government during the election campaign enough voters came back to the government by election day for the ALP to win. Events since have alienated a further slice of the electorate.

 
Most important issue: Qld Nov 09
Monday, 14 December 2009 01:12 | Written by Graham Young

While Queenslanders think the state is heading in the wrong direction, they are much more relaxed about the economy now than they were during the election, as the table below, which measures the relevance of concepts demonstrates.

 
Queensland quant: voting intentions and leaders November 09
Sunday, 13 December 2009 07:36 | Written by Graham Young

The Queensland Labor Party has a huge problem. Its voter base is disillusioned and hollowed-out. Normally compared to the published quantitative polls our samples lean to the left. In Queensland they are increasingly leaning to the right. This means that Labor's supporters are demoralised and not prepared to come out for them, and conversely, the LNP's supporters are. energised Judging from our respondents enough have defected from Labor to infer a 5% swing away since the last election. Most are not changing to the LNP, but they are giving first preferences to Greens and not all are returning. The two tables below illustrate this.

 
CEOs looking to hire
Tuesday, 08 December 2009 09:13 | Written by Graham Young

According to a media release from the CEO Institute:

Queensland seems to have weathered the worst of the global financial crisis, with 77% of CEOs having positive views on the economy and 60% saying they were likely to hire in the next six months, according to the inaugural CEO Financial Index.

I'm sure that's right because we did the survey. You can download the report by clicking here.

The release continues:

 
Does today's poll on ETS contradict yesterday's?
Monday, 30 November 2009 09:13 | Written by Graham Young

Yesterday The Australian and The Courier Mail ran polls from Newspoll and Galaxy which said the Liberals would lose seats if they rejected Malcolm Turnbull's position on an ETS. They claimed this on the basis of the public's view of global warming. This commentary was unsupportable on the basis of the polling.

Today The Sunday Mail has published polling by Glaxy which shows the public disagreeing with Turnbull's position. How are the polls to be reconciled?

 
<< Start < Prev 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Next > End >>

Page 24 of 33