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Tuesday, 22 March 2016 10:06 |
Written by Graham Young
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Our latest research, conducted late last year, shows that Malcolm Turnbull has always been on probation. He held support from the right of the political spectrum, as they had nowhere to go, and attracted significant support from previous ALP voters, and even a substantial number of Greens voters.
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Tuesday, 22 March 2016 09:59 |
Written by Graham Young
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Malcolm Turnbull’s popularity seems a lot like Kevin Rudd’s on the basis of our polling. So will it disappear just as quickly and catastrophically for his own party?
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Tuesday, 13 October 2015 07:57 |
Written by Graham Young
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Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has inherited a nation deeply divided on issues around immigration, refugee policy and arrivals from Islamic countries, research by the Australian Institute for Progress has revealed.
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Wednesday, 15 April 2015 06:47 |
Written by Graham Young
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It’s a truism that voters vote against the party they most dislike and for the party they least dislike. So our elections are grudge matches where the winner is only grudgingly approved. Or that’s the way it usually is.
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Monday, 13 April 2015 21:06 |
Written by Graham Young
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On their own the quantitative results from the exit poll don't tell us a lot, but comparing them to the first set of results tells us how effective the campaigns were.
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Thursday, 26 March 2015 14:19 |
Written by Graham Young
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If the Liberal Party wins this state election they might owe as much of their success to Sydney traffic as they owe to Mike Baird's high approval rating.
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Monday, 23 March 2015 22:25 |
Written by Graham Young
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The New South Wales election result looks like it will be much different from the Queensland one. This may be partly because voters have seen in Queensland that governments can lose large majorities in just one term.
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Tuesday, 17 March 2015 17:27 |
Written by Graham Young
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The New South Wales coalition government is not impregnable. It may have won 64.2% of the two-party preferred vote at the last election, but that is not their real margin.
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Wednesday, 04 March 2015 15:07 |
Written by Graham Young
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What our quantitative polling told us was that the minor party preference vote was crucial to this election and it eventually settled with Labor. What I'm going to attempt to answer in this post is why that happened.
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