Forum

 
  Back to OzPolitic.com   Welcome, Guest. Please Login or Register
  Forum Home Album HelpSearch Recent Rules LoginRegister  
 

Pages: 1 2 3 ... 6
Send Topic Print
Thrilling Newspoll result (Read 8863 times)
juliar
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 22966
Thrilling Newspoll result
Apr 23rd, 2018 at 10:46am
 
The Lefties have been dreading it - a good NewsPoll result for the future of Australia.

Where is Polly Waffle after his humiliating embarrassment over his 30th NewsPoll birthday stuff up. Is he trying to hide by changing his dumb moniker ?

Mal has got a sympathy vote now and is surging ahead as voters tire of HillBilly's endless LIES and are warming to Mal's endless TRUTH.





Coalition narrows gap in latest Newspoll as PM defends resisting banking inquiry
Paul Karp Mon 23 Apr 2018 08.07 AEST First published on Mon 23 Apr 2018 07.39 AEST

...
Malcolm Turnbull remains preferred prime minister in the latest Newspoll. He was in Europe for much of the period when the poll was taken. Photograph: Lukas Coch/EPA
Turnbull says delay helped put ‘customers first’ as poll shows government behind the opposition 49% to 51% on the two-party-preferred measure

Malcolm Turnbull has admitted the Coalition made a “political mistake” by refusing to set up a royal commission into banks for so long but has defended the decision, arguing it helped put “customers first”.

Turnbull’s attempt to staunch criticism of the government’s delay comes as the Coalition has recovered in the Newspoll, trailing Labor by 49% to 51% in two-party-preferred terms, its best position since September 2016.

Labor has demanded the government establish a compensation scheme for victims of banking misconduct, attempting to seize the initiative as Turnbull government ministers including the financial services minister, Kelly O’Dwyer, struggle to deal with the fallout of the royal commission’s revelations after just three weeks of hearings.

At a press conference in Berlin overnight Turnbull conceded in hindsight that “politically, we would’ve been better off setting one up earlier”. “But as it is turned out, I think we put customers first,” he said.

Turnbull argued the Coalition had introduced measures to protect customers and the banks would have argued against them on the basis no reforms should be undertaken until the commission had reported back.

“You know, whichever way you want to analysis it, you can’t live your life backwards. I made the call and I take responsibility.”


The Coalition’s performance has come under intense scrutiny because a fortnight ago Turnbull recorded his 30th consecutive Newspoll defeat, passing the marker he set for Tony Abbott as one reason to challenge his leadership.

The one-point recovery to 49-51 in Monday’s poll is within its 2.5% margin of error and preferences were the difference, with the primary votes of the Coalition and Labor remaining unchanged on 38% and 37%.

Turnbull’s satisfaction rating jumped from 32% to 36%, while 53% of respondents said they were dissatisfied with his performance, down from 57%.

Bill Shorten’s satisfaction rating also rose slightly, from 32% to 34%, and dissatisfaction with the Labor leader fell from 57% to 54%. Turnbull remained preferred prime minister at 38% to Shorten’s 35%.


Turnbull was in Europe for much of the period when the poll was taken, attending the Commonwealth heads of government meeting and preparing for Anzac Day events.

The political fortnight since the last poll has been dominated by the shocking revelations at the banking royal commission and a messy debate within the Coalition about whether it had discussed potential cuts to the immigration rate.

Among respondents to the Newspoll, 56% said the immigration rate was too high, compared with 28% who said it was about right and 10% who said it was too low.

Turnbull’s limited admission on banks comes as Bill Shorten raises the stakes by calling for the government to offer a full apology.

In a letter to Turnbull the opposition leader said an extension for the inquiry, an apology and compensation scheme were the “least the government can do”.

The former prime minister Tony Abbott and former deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce have both admitted they were wrong to oppose the royal commission into Australia’s financial sector, after revelations AMP repeatedly lied to the regulator and the Commonwealth Bank continued to charge fees to clients who had died were uncovered by the commission.

The heads of Australia’s biggest banks have also apologised for both the conduct and fighting the inquiry.

Senior government ministers have refused to concede it was wrong in principle to oppose the royal commission. On Sunday O’Dwyer repeatedly deflected questions on the point and defended the delay by telling ABC’s Insiders the government had acted in a “sober and deliberate” manner.

Later, Joyce told ABC that O’Dwyer should have ditched “speaking notes” and taken responsibility for government decisions.

“I know where Kelly is. She’s got the talking points. ‘These are your speaking notes, say this’,” Joyce said.

“Screw them up, throw them away, and speak down the barrel [of the camera] about what’s the truth. This is wrong, we’re going to deal with it, I take responsibility for it, I’m going to act on it and next question.”

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2018/apr/23/coalition-narrows-gap-new...
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Bam
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 21905
Gender: male
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #1 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 10:52am
 
juliar wrote on Apr 23rd, 2018 at 10:46am:
The Lefties have been dreading it - a good NewsPoll result for the future of Australia.

A Newspoll that still shows the government behind with an insignificant movement within the MoE is not good news for the government.

It's now 31 Newspoll losses in a row (almost a record) and this bad government is still on track to lose the next election due to their mismanagement and ineffectual governing.
Back to top
 

You are not entitled to your opinion. You are only entitled to hold opinions that you can defend through sound, reasoned argument.
 
IP Logged
 
Its time
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Boot libs out

Posts: 25639
Gender: female
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #2 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 10:54am
 
Labor still I repeat still in front , juliar must've went to the school that said 49 was more than 51  Grin
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
greggerypeccary
Gold Member
*****
Online


Australian Politics

Posts: 131547
Gender: male
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #3 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 10:54am
 

"Malcolm Turnbull has admitted the Coalition made a “political mistake” by refusing to set up a royal commission into banks for so long ..."

...
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
lee
Gold Member
*****
Online


Australian Politics

Posts: 16427
Gender: male
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #4 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 10:58am
 
Its time wrote on Apr 23rd, 2018 at 10:54am:
Labor still I repeat still in front , juliar must've went to the school that said 49 was more than 51  Grin



And Bill still running second. Wink
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
juliar
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 22966
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #5 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 11:05am
 
The disgruntled disappointed Lefties are furiously SPAMMING to take their minds off of their failed HERO HillBilly.

Mal's precarious rigging of Newspoll is like sitting on the lid of a boiling kettle as the TRUTH struggles to get out and show the Libs are ahead by a country mile.





Coalition closing gap despite 31st Newspoll loss
23/04/2018 1min

...
Mal is smiling and HillBilly is scowling and the pensioners are preparing to butn HillBilly at the steak

VIDEO: Feel the joy as Australia shoves the union parasites into the garbage can


Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has secured the Coalition's best two party-preferred Newspoll result since September 2016.

The latest figures show the government has cut Labor's lead to 51-49, but the result remains a mixed bag for the Prime Minister.

The outcome is the 31st straight defeat for Mr Turnbull, but the Prime Minister remains the more popular choice for the top job compared to Opposition Leader Bill Shorten.

https://www.skynews.com.au/details/_5774808035001



DANGER!! DANGER!! DANGER!!  The union controlled Labor Party will wreck Australia

...



Back to top
« Last Edit: Apr 23rd, 2018 at 11:42am by juliar »  
 
IP Logged
 
matty
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 11055
East Sydney
Gender: male
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #6 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 11:06am
 
Its time wrote on Apr 23rd, 2018 at 10:54am:
Labor still I repeat still in front , juliar must've went to the school that said 49 was more than 51  Grin


Did you go to school at all? "Must've went"? You use 'went' as past tense, 'gone' as past participle/present perfect.

Back to top
 

BILL SHORTEN WILL NEVER BE PM!!!!
 
IP Logged
 
matty
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 11055
East Sydney
Gender: male
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #7 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 11:08am
 
I think that this result is a combination of two things - first a dead cat bounce and secondly an indictment on both parties; people don't like either, they just want the current government gone.
Back to top
 

BILL SHORTEN WILL NEVER BE PM!!!!
 
IP Logged
 
Its time
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Boot libs out

Posts: 25639
Gender: female
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #8 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 11:11am
 
matty wrote on Apr 23rd, 2018 at 11:06am:
Its time wrote on Apr 23rd, 2018 at 10:54am:
Labor still I repeat still in front , juliar must've went to the school that said 49 was more than 51  Grin


Did you go to school at all? "Must've went"? You use 'went' as past tense, 'gone' as past participle/present perfect.



Another one that thinks 49 is more than 51 , losers , losers everywhere  Grin
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
juliar
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 22966
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #9 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 11:50am
 
The battered baffled bewildered and bothered Lefties furiously SPAMMING surges on just like Mal. Anything to take their minds off of Labor's certain defeat at the election.

Libs will win on the economic growth with exports surging and unemployment down and continuous exposure of union attempts at wrecking Australia.

And the unions control every aspect of the Labor Party. Do you want the unions wrecking Australia ?


...
The Lefty way
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
greggerypeccary
Gold Member
*****
Online


Australian Politics

Posts: 131547
Gender: male
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #10 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 11:55am
 


"The outcome is the 31st straight defeat for Mr Turnbull ..."


...
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
juliar
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 22966
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #11 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 12:02pm
 
Bit of the usual SPAM by the gecko.

The union brown nosers in the union controlled Labor Party are worried that HillBilly is as popular as a pork chop in Jerusalem and are toying with a Krudd/Gillard/Krudd event.

But Mal has it all covered by artificially propping HillBilly up by rigging Newspoll.

Mal wants the unpopular unelectable toxic pariah HillBilly there at the election at all costs.






Bill Shorten’s links with CFMEU ‘are hurting Labor’
BRAD NORINGTON ASSOCIATE EDITOR The Australian12:00AM April 23, 2018

...
The CFMEU is seen as a key player in helping Bill Shorten shore up his leadership.

Bill Shorten’s closeness to the construction union is fanning discontent among members of his frontbench who claim the Labor leader’s “transactional” deals with its rogue officials risk damaging the party’s brand.

With the federal election possibly 12 months away, several senior Labor MPs from the Opposition Leader’s shadow cabinet say his ­efforts to consolidate his numbers inside the ALP by forging ever-stronger ties with the Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union and its Victorian leader, John Setka, are a negative for voters.

They say Mr Shorten’s pact with the CFMEU — which began with written undertakings he gave in return for its support when he first became leader in 2013 — has turned into a relationship of dependence.

The CFMEU is seen as a key player in helping Mr Shorten on immigration policy, a revised factional alignment in his Victorian ALP powerbase and an attempt at blocking ALP national president Mark Butler’s bid for a second term.

Close to half of federal Labor’s 21-member shadow ministry is understood to have concerns that CFMEU demands have been ­expanding since Mr Shorten’s agreed — in return for a CFMEU pledge of support — that an ALP government he led would scrap the nation’s building industry regulator, the ABCC.


While details were still to emerge, it seemed clear to some that the CFMEU wanted the return of industry-wide pay claims, an almost unfettered right to strike and an end to hefty court fines for lawlessness on building sites.

“Everything is transactional,” a senior frontbencher said. “The CFMEU doesn’t hand out ice-creams for free. I’d expect more, and Bill Shorten has one response to a request. It’s ‘yes’.”

Another said it was clear the CFMEU had staked its claim on certain safe seats in Victoria as a condition of supporting Mr Shorten under a working agreement devised in December.

“No doubt the CFMEU will be wanting its pound of flesh,” one frontbencher told The Australian.


A spokeswoman for Mr Shorten did not respond to a request for comment about his CFMEU ties. The CFMEU was his adversary when he led the Australian Workers Union.

There is no imminent destabilisation campaign against Mr Shorten’s leadership inside his party as its discipline remains strong, in public, with confidence high that the government can be defeated next year.

But members of Mr Shorten’s team worry he is not popular with voters and could be a drag on the ALP’s electoral ­success.

Some do not rule out leadership rumblings — especially inside the NSW ALP that has traditionally made and unmade federal party leaders. A frontbench source said: “There’s no one in the NSW right who doesn’t have a problem with him. And he wouldn’t win a ballot in the caucus if there was one held now.”

While Mr Shorten’s Victorian support base is generally behind him, there is still nervousness among several frontbenchers.

Potential contenders if Mr Shorten’s leadership did start to unravel include Anthony Albanese, who stood against him in 2013, and other NSW-based MPs Chris Bowen, Tony Burke and Tanya Plibersek. There has been speculation about a future leadership team including Victorian Richard Marles.


https://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/bill-shortens-links-with-cfmeu...


Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
greggerypeccary
Gold Member
*****
Online


Australian Politics

Posts: 131547
Gender: male
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #12 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 12:11pm
 


"The outcome is the 31st straight defeat for Mr Turnbull ..."


...
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
juliar
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 22966
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #13 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 12:21pm
 
The gecko troll's silly SPAMMING continues. Small things amuse small minds.

And Mal has returned to the election winning sunshine.


If Newspoll shift becomes the trend trend, watch Labor turn on HillBilly in his daggy slept in blue soots.
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
greggerypeccary
Gold Member
*****
Online


Australian Politics

Posts: 131547
Gender: male
Re: Thrilling Newspoll result
Reply #14 - Apr 23rd, 2018 at 12:28pm
 


"The outcome is the 31st straight defeat for Mr Turnbull ..."

...
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Pages: 1 2 3 ... 6
Send Topic Print