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Home / New Zealand

Polls set stage for a box-office year in New Zealand politics

By Toby Manhire
The Spinoff·
9 Feb, 2022 04:00 AM10 mins to read

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The polls paint a picture. Photo / Tina Tiller

The polls paint a picture. Photo / Tina Tiller

Originally published by the Spinoff

The third major poll of the year has landed, and the lay of the land as we approach an election year is becoming clear.

Call it a blessing, call it a curse, but the three-year term means an election is constantly lurking. In New Zealand it is always election year, the year after an election, or the year before an election. We're in that last category now. Though we may not yet be halfway through the term, every time the words "next year's election" are used, the minds of politicians will tighten in focus. And as the parliamentary year begins, three publicly released polls across recent weeks offer a useful summary of the terrain ahead.

On Monday night the first Newshub/Reid Research poll for the year was published. That came a week or so after the first poll by Kantar (formerly Colmar Brunton) for 1News. On January 21, results from a Curia poll for the Taxpayers' Union lobby group were revealed. Each of the polls surveyed 1000 voters and between them covered the periods January 10-17 (Curia), January 22-26 (Kantar), and January 22 to February 4 (Reid), meaning they provide a good glimpse between them of the lay of the land.

What do they say? The table below includes the change in support from each organisation's previous poll. In the case of both the broadcasters, that was in November last year; for the TPU/Curia, it was mid-December.

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The first and most obvious conclusion to draw is that Labour is not – barring some miracle – going to win another single-party majority. The 2022 result was an MMP aberration, born of (a) overwhelming popular backing for pandemic management and (b) overwhelming despair at the state of the main opposition party. To varying degrees, neither is true today. It is inconceivable at this point that either of the two biggest parties could govern alone.

In that light, compare the sides of the house. On the above numbers, Labour and the Greens are sitting on 51.6 per cent, a lead of about nine points over National and Act, which are on a combined 42.3 per cent. A comfortable gap, but hardly a yawning chasm. It's a lot less, certainly, than that 2020 blowout, when there was a distance of almost 25 points between the two blocs.

The leaders

The challenge for the centre-right, therefore, is clear enough: add at least five percentage points, and take them off the centre-left, not each other.

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Some preliminary thoughts on the task ahead for the parties below, but first, let's repeat the poll-average exercise in the preferred prime minister stakes.

The big leaps in the Luxon change for the broadcast polls are explained by the fact that he was a backbench, relatively low-profile MP when they last surveyed, in November 2021.

In her package on Sunday evening, Newshub political editor Jenna Lynch measured Luxon's popularity today (17.8 per cent picked him as preferred PM in the Reid poll) against his predecessors at the same early stage of their leaderships. She said:

"When you compare Luxon's first preferred prime minister poll as leader with Judith Collins' first as leader back in late 2020 – 14.6 per cent – and Simon Bridges' 9 per cent, Luxon looks pretty good."

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"But Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and former Prime Minister Sir John Key are the ones he'll want to be compared with. When Ardern took over as Labour leader, her preferred prime minister result was 26.3 per cent, while Key debuted on 24 per cent. "

"As Luxon acknowledges, he faces a year of presenting himself to the electorate – a very long job interview – to hoist that. "

The Kantar/1News, meanwhile, had a headline-grabbing finding: that Luxon had beaten Ardern on net approval rating. His net approval was plus-22; hers plus-15. That's a big boost to National spirits, but should come with a grain of salt – the numbers look slightly different when you add in those who didn't take a view. Luxon's numbers were 42 per cent approve, 20 per cent disapprove and 37 per cent don't know/refused to answer 37 per cent. Ardern's were, respectively, 52 per cent, 37 per cent and 11 per cent. For Luxon, the coming months are a critical opportunity to win that approval from those who are on the fence.

Labour

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern. Photo / Mark Mitchell

In her "opening up" speech last week and her statement to Parliament yesterday, Ardern attempted to cast her gaze beyond the pandemic, with a laundry list of policy priorities and a lot of use of the word "future". The election, very likely, hopefully, will be fought on alternative post-Covid prospectuses. But the virus is not going anywhere in a hurry.

The Government's Covid management has attracted more criticism in the last weeks than probably ever before, particularly in relation to the steel ramparts of the MIQ system – an issue that found a casus Bellis and exploded – as well as the sluggish at best efforts to secure timely stores of rapid antigen tests. The Government will hope the "opening up" announcement last week has taken some of the air out of the MIQ rancour, though Newshub polling was almost complete when it happen, so doesn't measure its impact.

The broadly positive polling for Labour may also come down to the simple fact that, for most of us (or at least those who are vaccinated and not involved in sectors that depend on large gatherings or international tourists), it was a classic Aotearoa summer. We may get a shock when Omicron seeps properly through the population, bringing risk to the unvaccinated and the vulnerable, applying pressure to the health system and disrupting work and home lives in a whole lot of ways. If the anecdata about people eschewing tests despite symptoms is true, by the way, then the Government will need to move sooner rather than later to reduce isolation periods.

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But the catastrophising in parts of the media, whether in the UK or in New Zealand, where one broadcast anchor yesterday lamented "scandal after scandal after scandal", is just plain overblown, especially compared with the plight and popularity of so many of Ardern's counterparts around the world.

For those demonstratively scratching their heads over the failure of Ardern and Labour's numbers to nosedive, the most compelling answer lies in these two charts, which measure, first, Covid-19 deaths and, second, the severity of restrictions over the course of the pandemic. Neither will be enough to win the 2023 election, but they tell a story that is not easily forgotten.

National

There was a discernible skip in the step of National MPs when they gathered for their summer retreat in Queenstown, enabled presumably because they no longer have such stiff necks from constantly looking over their shoulders. Luxon may not be the finished article, but he is intelligent, relatively optimistic, and doesn't walk around lighting fuses. His speech on day one at Parliament yesterday was cogent, and he has assembled a capable team around him. As he is at pains to remind everyone, however, there is a long way to go, and – especially on his favoured issues like productivity and education – the bone could use some flesh. The task of the National Party is not just to hold the Government to account, but to propose an alternative vision of this country so that come the next election New Zealand people will be able to see a National Government in waiting, ready to go. Don't take my word for it – those are the verbatim words of Luxon in the house yesterday.

National Party leader Christopher Luxon. Photo / George Heard
National Party leader Christopher Luxon. Photo / George Heard

Luxon has in recent times sought to stress that National isn't just economically focused, but cares about people, about issues of social justice, equality and wellbeing. The international speaker at National's getaway in Queenstown was David Cameron – or would have been, had he not had to withdraw after coming down with Omicron. The choice was no accident, however: the former UK Tory prime minister sought to define himself as champion of Modern Compassionate Conservatism, the Big Society and climate-friendly husky-hugging. Instead, National MPs ended up with an address from Cameron's once-right-hand man, George Osborne, who is best remembered for an altogether less cuddly advancement of austerity when he was in charge of the UK finances.

And while that is absolutely not the image in which Luxon and Simon Bridges would wish to be cast, it remains, as ever, true that the National Party vote relies on putting back together a reputation for sound economic stewardship, particularly as the country deals with the rising cost of living. Luxon evinces an admiration for Barack Obama, but 2023 success is better defined by the message famously pasted on the wall of Bill Clinton's 1992 campaign HQ: It's the economy, stupid.

Act

Act leader David Seymour. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Act leader David Seymour. Photo / Mark Mitchell

If spinning is an important skill for government, then Act could not be more ready. In an email sent out after the Newshub poll on Monday night, Seymour told supporters that it "has Act on 8 per cent, up on our 2020 election result", before observing that "Act plus National are down four". Curiously, there was no mention of Act's number being cut in half.

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Seymour is right, however, to emphasise that Act remains above its election result of 7.6 per cent. Seymour and his indefatigable backroom team have successfully erased any shred of the long running impression that Act's existence relied on the Epsom beneficence of National. For a good stretch there, Seymour was single-handedly the most effective opposition party.

And yet the rules of political gravity remain: if the trend continues, MPs will get ants in their pants. In that light, it was notable that Seymour in Parliament yesterday chose to name-check and big-up each member of his caucus. The exercise went well, apart from when he introduced one of his MPs as "Simon Bridges".

Greens

Green Party co-leaders James Shaw and Marama Davidson. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Green Party co-leaders James Shaw and Marama Davidson. Photo / Mark Mitchell

The Greens' support has so far proved more solid than anyone's, sitting just under 10 per cent, up from an election result just shy of 8 per cent. That's despite the sometimes uncomfortable place the party takes, sort of kind of maybe in government but also not. And despite the fact they've had a low profile in media of late. It's a fair assumption that while Act picks up voters on the right dissatisfied with National, the Greens are scooping up voters who think Labour too centrist. Even if their MPs or members wanted to (they almost all don't), the chances of the Green Party declaring that they could work in government with National ahead of the next election are close to zero.

In his speech to Parliament yesterday, co-leader James Shaw hinted at some of the wealth transfer to the rich that emerged from the Covid response but stopped short of going directly there. He made a case, however, that the Greens' mixture of environmental and social priorities stemmed from the same place. "The root cause of all of these crises ... is an economic system that privatises benefit and socialises cost. It will not be transformed by incremental action," he said.

In the short term, Shaw's priority will be getting as wide as possible cross-party support for the Emissions Reduction Plan, which was kicked from last year to this May.

Te Pāti Māori

Te Pāti Māori co-leaders Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Te Pāti Māori co-leaders Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. Photo / Mark Mitchell

As long as the Māori Party can secure an electorate seat, it's tracking to bring two MPs at least to Parliament again. As witnessed in the "divorce the royalty" call on Waitangi weekend, the party has found a fresh energy with Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer at the helm. It's not at all out of the question that they could end up with an important, pivotal even, share of the house after the next election.

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