Off the wire
US Open men's singles results  • US Open women's singles results  • Tokyo stocks drop from the bell as investors take profits  • Australian police seize 45 kg ice, worth 34 mln USD  • (G20 Summit) Spotlight: Hopes high for G20 Hangzhou summit to revitalize world trade  • Xinhua world news summary at 0030 GMT, Aug. 30  • U.S. defense chief urges Turkey to stay focused on anti-IS fight  • Portugal's Guterres holds lead in informal tally to succeed retiring UN chief  • Marijuana regulation does not encourage consumption, says Uruguay's president  • 70 police killed in Rio de Janeiro in 2016  
You are here:   Home

Australian PM's approval rating slips as parliament resumes

Xinhua, August 30, 2016 Adjust font size:

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull's voter popularity has fallen to a new low on Tuesday, while support for his Liberal National Party (LNP) coalition has also dropped since the July 2 election which Turnbull won narrowly.

The Newspoll, which surveyed more than 1,600 Australian voters, coincides with the resumption of the parliament, in which the 45th government is set to be sworn in later on Tuesday.

Turnbull's problems begin at the top; the Newspoll revealed the PM's satisfaction level had fallen to 34 percent - the lowest since he ousted former Prime Minister Tony Abbott from the top job in September last year. His dissatisfaction rating has soared to 52 percent, up 5 points from the July 2 election.

For the first time since taking over the position, Turnbull's net satisfaction rating had fallen below that of Opposition Leader Bill Shorten. Turnbull's net satisfaction rating came in at -18 points, 4 below Shorten's -14 points (36 percent satisfaction and 50 percent dissatisfaction).

As was the case prior to the election, the two-party preferred vote has the LNP government and the opposition Labor Party deadlocked at 50 percent apiece.

Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce shrugged off questions regarding the poll results, saying it was impossible to read too much into them considering the parliament hadn't even been sworn in when the poll was taken.

"You will drive yourself crazy if you start worrying about polls at the start of the political term," Joyce told the Nine Network on Tuesday.

The parliament resumes on Tuesday, with the government set to continue its push for a same-sex marriage plebiscite, budget savings reform and debate the future of the racial discrimination act. Endit