New PM Jacinda Ardern drives surge in New Zealand
Government Confidence
In November
support for the newly elected Labour/NZ First/Greens
Government was 54.5% (up 6% since early October) ahead of
the outgoing National/Act NZ Government on 41% (down 5.5%)
with minor parties outside Parliament attracting the
remaining 4.5% of
support.
• Support for
Labour/NZ First is at 44.5% (up 7% since early October), a
slight increase from their election result of 44.1% while
coalition partners the Greens are on 10% (down
1%).
• Support for the outgoing National is at 40.5% (down 5.5%) and down 3.95% from their election result of 44.5% while their right-wing colleagues Act NZ are stuck unchanged on 0.5%.
• Of the parties outside Parliament
it was new party ‘The Opportunities Party’ (TOP) which
attracted the most support at the election (2.4%) without
winning a seat and support for TOP is now at 2% while
support for the Maori Party is at 1.5%, up slightly from
their election result (1.2%).
Government
Confidence Rating surges in November after Jacinda Ardern
confirmed as PM
Government Confidence increased substantially during November after New Zealand First chose to form Government with the Labour Party installing Jacinda Ardern as New Zealand’s new PM.
The Roy Morgan Government Confidence Rating jumped 15.5pts to 146.5pts in November (the highest for nearly eight years since January 2010 early in the reign of Prime Minister John Key) with 66.5% of NZ electors (up 8% from October) saying NZ is ‘heading in the right direction’ cf. 20% of NZ electors (down 7.5%) that say New Zealand is ‘heading in the wrong direction’.
Michele Levine, CEO, Roy Morgan Research, says Jacinda Ardern has brought a new level of confidence to New Zealanders with the generational change she represents promising more engagement with solving pressing issues including Homelessness & Child poverty:
“Jacinda Ardern was finally
declared the victor of New Zealand’s tight election in
mid-October when NZ First Leader Winston Peters announced
his party would form Government in support of Labour rather
than the existing National-led
coalition.
“Since Peters made the
announcement, just over a month ago on October 19, Ardern
has stepped into the role with consummate professionalism
and already embarked on several key overseas trips to
Australia, Vietnam and the
Philippines.
“As is customary Ardern’s
first overseas trip in early November was to Australia to
meet Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull and from there it was
onto the APEC Leader’s Meeting in Da Nang, Vietnam and
from there to the East Asian Summit in the Philippines at
which Ardern met world leaders including US President Donald
Trump, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Chinese
President Xi Jinping.
“Ardern’s
rise to the top job has seen an unprecedented spike in the
Roy Morgan Government Confidence Rating – with 66.5% (up
8% since October) of New Zealanders saying New Zealand is
‘heading in the right direction’ contributing to a Roy
Morgan Government Confidence Rating of 146.5 – the highest
in nearly 8 years.”
Electors were asked:
“If a New Zealand Election were held today which party
would receive your party vote?” This latest New
Zealand Roy Morgan Poll on voting intention was conducted by
telephone – both landline and mobile – with a NZ wide
cross-section of 887 electors during October 30 – November
12, 2017. Of all electors surveyed 2% (down 1.5%) didn’t
name a party.
Roy Morgan New Zealand
Interactive Voting Charts
These interactive
charts allow a deeper look at voting patterns in New Zealand
over varying timeframes and provide election observers with
the ability to pinpoint key turning points for the political
parties.
View interactive New Zealand Election charts
here.