Turnbull leads Coalition to 29th consecutive Newspoll loss

The prime minister is facing a self-imposed deadline. In 2015, he said it was necessary for him to replace Tony Abbott as leader because the government had lost 30 Newspolls in a row.

Labor have taken the lead against the Malcolm Turnbull-led coalition in the latest Newspoll. (file)

Labor have taken the lead against the Malcolm Turnbull-led coalition in the latest Newspoll. Source: AAP

Malcolm Turnbull is now just one bad opinion poll away from the 30-loss streak he used to justify replacing Tony Abbott as Liberal leader, with today's Newspoll revealing the Coalition trails Labor 47-53 on a two-party preferred basis. 

The poll, published today in the Australian, is the 29th straight loss for the Coalition under Mr Turnbull's leadership. 

Earlier this month prime minister Tony Abbott said Mr Turnbull would have to explain why he should remain leader if he reaches the symbolic milestone. 

"It was the prime minister who set this test, and I guess if he fails the test it will be the prime minister who has to explain why the test was right for one and not right for the other," Mr Abbott told 2GB Radio at the time. 

Back in 2015, Mr Turnbull said the run of poll losses proved Mr Abbott was on a downward trajectory. 

“We have lost 30 Newspolls in a row," he said on the day he announced his leadership challenge. "It is clear that the people have made up their mind about Mr Abbott’s leadership."

The latest Newspoll of 1597 voters also shows Labor's primary vote climbing to 39 per cent against the Coalition's unchanged 37 per cent.

Labor's first preference vote has not been as high since Mr Turnbull ousted Mr Abbott in September 2015, the newspaper reported.

The poll also lifted Opposition Leader Bill Shorten's satisfaction rating to 34 per cent, two points ahead Mr Turnbull's 32 per cent.

But the prime minister was still the county's preferred leader, leading Mr Shorten 39-36.

The Greens' and One Nation's primary votes remained unchanged at nine per cent and seven per cent, respectively.

- with AAP


Share

2 min read

Published

Updated

By James Elton-Pym, Justin Sungil Park




Share this with family and friends


Follow SBS Korean

Download our apps
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
Independent news and stories connecting you to life in Australia and Korean-speaking Australians.
Ease into the English language and Australian culture. We make learning English convenient, fun and practical.
Get the latest with our exclusive in-language podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on SBS
Korean News

Korean News

Watch it onDemand