“The positive public mood jumped in our December track as the year ended and respondents were telling us that they were glad to be downing tools and switching off after a year of COVID,floods,war and cost of living pressures.”
Asked to name the party and leader they thought best to manage major policies,voters chose Labor and Albanese on 16 policies and preferred the Coalition and Dutton on national security and defence by a single percentage point,a result within the margin of error.
Labor and Albanese held a narrow lead on national security and defence in the Resolve Political Monitor in August,the first survey conducted after the May election,but lost the lead in subsequent surveys. The latest poll showed 33 per cent of voters backed Labor and Albanese on the issue while 34 per cent backed the Coalition and Dutton and 26 per cent were undecided.
On foreign affairs and trade,however,45 per cent preferred Labor and Albanese while 24 per cent named the Coalition and Dutton and 24 per cent were undecided.
On economic management,37 per cent of respondents preferred Labor and Albanese while 29 per cent named the Coalition and Dutton and 26 per cent were undecided.
On managing the COVID-19 situation,36 per cent named Labor and Albanese as the best to handle the issue while 21 per cent backed the Coalition and Dutton,with 33 per cent undecided.
The government also held a double-digit lead on key measures of political performance when voters were asked which party and leader were communicating well,listening,offering strong leadership and had a vision for the country.
Asked which side was honest and trustworthy,for instance,35 per cent named Labor and Albanese while 13 per cent named the Coalition and Dutton and 39 per cent were undecided.
Asked which side was competent,44 per cent named Labor and Albanese while 19 per cent named the Coalition and Dutton and 27 per cent were undecided.
Former prime minister Scott Morrison held a narrow lead over Albanese before the election last May when voters were asked about their preferred prime minister,but the results changed dramatically after the election when Albanese took power and Dutton was elected to the Liberal Party leadership.
While 36 per cent of voters named Albanese as their preferred prime minister in the Resolve survey immediately before the May election,that jumped to 55 per cent in the August survey and had remained around that level ever since.
Asked the question in the latest survey,55 per cent of voters chose Albanese,up from 54 per cent in December,and 20 per cent chose Dutton,up from 19 per cent in December. This means Albanese maintained his lead of 35 percentage points.