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Australia News LIVE: Heat Deaths to Soar From Global Warming, Report Warns; Support for Coalition Has Plummeted to New Low
Internal conflicts and leadership challenges have led to the Coalition's historic low primary vote of 27 percent in Newspoll, while minor parties like One Nation and the Greens gain support.
- The latest Newspoll shows the Coalition's primary vote collapsed to 27%, its worst ever since tracking began in 1985.
- This result follows internal Coalition conflict, including Sussan Ley sacking Jacinta Nampijinpa Price over refusal to support her leadership amid divisions on migration and climate policy.
- Meanwhile, Labor leads 58-42 on a two-party preferred basis, with One Nation's primary vote rising from 6.4% to 10%, benefiting from ongoing immigration debate.
- Jim Reed, a pollster, noted voters unhappy with major parties on immigration turn to One Nation, while environmental concerns draw support to the Greens at 13%.
- The polling signals growing minor party support and challenges for the Coalition, suggesting it may take multiple election cycles to recover from its current political unpopularity.
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13 Articles
13 Articles


Newspoll: Coalition slumps to worst-ever primary vote
Opposition Leader Sussan Ley has capped off a miserable week — which included dumping Jacinta Price from the frontbench — by recording the Coalition’s worst primary vote in Newspoll history.
·Australia
Read Full ArticleLey and Coalition slump to polling low – Sunraysia Daily
Andrew Brown and Katelyn Catanzariti/ AAP SENIOR Liberals have admitted the party has a mountain to climb to win back voters after the Coalition and Opposition and Member for Farrar Sussan Ley plunged to its worst-ever primary vote in Newspoll history. The poll published on Monday shows the Coalition sitting on a primary vote of […] Subscribe or Login to see the rest of the content.
Coverage Details
Total News Sources13
Leaning Left5Leaning Right3Center1Last UpdatedBias Distribution56% Left
Bias Distribution
- 56% of the sources lean Left
56% Left
L 56%
11%
R 33%
Factuality
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