Jim Chalmers

Easy Liberal wins likely in byelections in Robert's and Morrison's seats; support for rise in JobSeeker

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, May 9, 2023

There has been recent speculation that former Liberal PM Scott Morrison will also soon retire, which would mean a byelection in his New South Wales seat of Cook.

Key Points: 
  • There has been recent speculation that former Liberal PM Scott Morrison will also soon retire, which would mean a byelection in his New South Wales seat of Cook.
  • At the 2022 federal election, Robert won Fadden by a 60.6-39.4 margin over Labor, while Morrison won Cook by a 62.4-37.6 margin over Labor.
  • At the April 1 federal Aston byelection, Labor had a 6.4% swing in its favour to overturn a 52.8-47.2 Liberal margin at the 2022 election.

Pre-budget Essential poll: 53-41 to Labor including undecided

    • Primary votes were 33% Labor (down one), 32% Coalition (up one), 14% Greens (steady), 5% One Nation (down one), 2% UAP (down one), 8% for all Others (down one) and 5% undecided (up one).
    • Despite the Coalition’s primary vote gain, Labor increased their two party lead.
    • That suggests respondent preference flows to Labor were stronger than previously.
    • By 52-22, voters supported allowing New Zealanders who have lived in Australia for at least four years to become Australian citizens.

Morgan poll: 53.5-46.5 to Labor


    In last week’s weekly federal Morgan poll, conducted April 24-30, Labor led by 53.5-46.5, a three-point gain for the Coalition since the previous week. Primary votes were 36% Labor, 35.5% Coalition, 13% Greens and 15.5% for all Others. I believe this is Labor’s worst result in a Morgan poll since late November 2022.

UK local elections were disappointing for Labour

    • I covered Thursday’s United Kingdom local government elections for The Poll Bludger.
    • The Conservatives lost over 1,000 councillors, but Labour only had a nine-point margin over the Conservatives on the BBC’s Projected National Share.

Incumbents easily re-elected at Tasmanian upper house elections

    • Every May two or three of Tasmania’s 15 upper house seats are up for election for six-year terms.
    • On Saturday there were elections in Rumney, Murchison and Launceston.
    • These results mean the status quo in the upper house is retained.