National takes a hit in Roy Morgan poll
In the month since the previous Roy Morgan poll, Labour has jumped
In the month since the previous Roy Morgan poll, Labour has jumped
The National Party has taken a 4.5 percentage point hit since the departure of former Prime Minister John Key on December 5 but the Labour Party continues to poll below 30% despite a 5.5 percentage point jump in support, according to a regularly volatile opinion poll conducted by Australian pollster Roy Morgan.
In the month since the previous Roy Morgan poll, which put National at 50% and Labour on 23%, National has dropped to 45.5% support and Labour jumped to 28.5 percent. Combined with the Greens, unchanged at 14.5%, a centre-left coalition commands 43% support, just short of National.
Winston Peters' New Zealand First party was down half a point to 7.5% support.
The poll may not capture the full impact of the change as the sample of 872 landline and mobile telephone users started on November 28, a week before Mr Key resigned and covering Labour's trouncing of National in the Mt Roskill by-election, on December 3. It ended on December 11. Of all electors surveyed 5.5%, down one point, didn't name a party.
The Roy Morgan poll is the first long time series poll to come out since Fairfax Media did a snap poll on the evening of December 5, just after Key announced he was leaving politics, leading to his replacement by Bill English and the appointment of a new cabinet last weekend.
"If a New Zealand election were held now, the latest New Zealand Roy Morgan Poll shows it would be a very close result," the polling agency said.
Among the government's three support partners, the Maori Party slipped half a point to 1% support, Act fell half a point to 0.5% and there was no measured support for United Future.
Roy Morgan also measured a hit to the government confidence rating, which fell 10 points to 131. New Zealanders saying the country was "heading in the right direction" fell 6.5 percentage points to 58.5% while pessimists rose by 3.5 percentage points to 27.%.
(BusinessDesk)