Watch FIFA World Cup 2026™

LIVE, FREE and EXCLUSIVE starting June 12 2026

Leadership chaos hands Coalition worst poll result in a decade

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has flagged a 2019 election, hoping his reshuffled ministry will have time to reverse the political damage of Friday’s leadership spill which has been reflected in the latest Newspoll.

File image of Prime Minister Scott Morrison
File image of Prime Minister Scott Morrison Source: AAP

The Morrison government has been confronted with an opinion poll that shows the Coalition’s primary vote has fallen to 33 per cent, marking the lowest result since Brendan Nelson was opposition leader in 2008.

The Newspoll shows Labor surging ahead on two-party preferred, now leading the government 56 - 44. Bill Shorten also emerged as the preferred prime minister ahead of Scott Morrison.

Finance minister Mathias Cormann said the result was “not surprising” but the government was now “back to work”.

The News Corp poll surveyed 1,783 voters between Friday and Sunday after last week’s extraordinary leadership upheaval, which saw Mr Morrison edge out Peter Dutton and Julie Bishop to become Australia’s 30th prime minister.

Poll drops are common after leadership instability.

Elections analyst Kevin Bonham noted the last result that was actually worse for the Coalition was the 43 – 57 result in February 2015, when then-PM Tony Abbott faced a challenge after famously offering a knighthood for Prince Philip.

“After that one the really terrible polling for the Coalition only lasted about three weeks,” Mr Bonham wrote on Twitter.

“It will be interesting to see how this compares.”

Mr Morrison has already reshuffled his cabinet, with rival challenger Peter Dutton returned to Home Affairs.

Immigration, though, will be separated from Mr Dutton’s responsibilities and given to newly promoted Liberal MP David Coleman.

Angus Taylor, the former cybersecurity minister, has been handed the fraught energy portfolio. The demise of the emissions reduction targets in Malcolm Turnbull’s energy plan formed the context for the leadership challenge.

Mr Morrison said further government intervention to support farmers with drought recovery was the “immediate priority” of his new government and said would work closely with the Nationals on the matter.

Nationals leader Michael McCormack told ABC Radio the new prime minister had “listened” to his concerns and said there would “have to be” a top-up to the Turnbull government’s spending on rural household support.  


2 min read

Published

Updated

By James Elton-Pym

Presented by Justin Sungil Park




Share this with family and friends


Follow SBS Korean

Download our apps

Listen to our podcasts

Get the latest with our exclusive in-language podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on SBS

Korean News

Watch it onDemand

Stream now