May 02 2008

Morgan: 61.5-38.5

This week’s Morgan poll combines two weekends’ worth of face-to-face polling, producing a large sample of 1891 voters. Labor leads 61.5-38.5 on two-party preferred (with Labor down 1 per cent on last week’s phone poll and 0.5 per cent on the previous face-to-face), and 54.5 per cent to 33.5 per cent on the primary vote.

Other news:

• Voters in two of the districts which form Tasmania’s 15-member Legislative Council, Huon and Rosevears, will go to the polls tomorrow to rubber-stamp the re-election of sitting independents Paul Harriss and Kerry Finch. Tasmanian super-pundits Peter Tucker and Kevin Bonham have more here and here. I’ll have something up tomorrow, including my annual audit of upper house divisions and half-hearted live coverage of the count.

• Antony Green’s ABC Elections page has been given a revamp. From this I learn for the first time that draft redistribution proposals for the Northern Territory parliament were unveiled last week, on which Antony has much more.

• The Lindsay pamphlet case came before a Sydney court on Tuesday. Greg Chijoff, estranged husband of Liberal candidate Karen Chijoff, has pleaded guilty and will be sentenced next week. Jackie Kelly’s husband Gary Clark and Right faction powerbroker Jeff Egan have pleaded not guilty and will be back in court in late May. One of the remaining two charged has sought an adjournment, and the other has had his charge dismissed by Magistrate Pat O’Shane, who unfortunately felt it necessary to complain of a “political climate of divisiveness and disharmony” from which the country had “moved on”. She was on firmer ground in complaining that the penalty provided by Section 328 of the Electoral Act – a $1000 fine – was inadequate for the alleged offences, though whether her proposed new offence of “racial slander” would be a suitable remedy is another matter.

• As the new government moves to reform public election funding arrangements that boost Pauline Hanson’s coffers each time she runs for the Senate, Glenn Milne reveals Hanson has moved $200,000 of such funding out of a bank account for her United Australia Party and into one controlled by herself and a friend. Hanson, who should know a thing or two by now about the public funding laws, insists it’s all above board.

Thomarse in comments answers (courtesy of News Radio) an oft-heard question: the Federal Court will resume hearing Labor’s appeal against the Liberals’ 12-vote victory in McEwen on May 24.

58 comments

May 02 2008

Built to spill

The West Australian today carries a “snap” Westpoll survey of 413 voters showing 50 per cent think the beleagured Troy Buswell should resign as state Opposition Leader following the revelation of his chair-sniffing indiscretion. The poll also has Buswell in third place as preferred Liberal leader with 12 per cent support, behind former leaders Matt Birney (21 per cent) and Colin Barnett (19 per cent). These figures will further stir a pot which could yet come to boil either with Buswell’s resignation (suggested as a serious possibility by “several MPs” cited in The West), or at the spill motion to be called on Tuesday by party whip Graham Jacobs with the backing of front-bencher John Day.

The favoured scenario among most of the anti-Buswell group is a return by Barnett, who stepped aside after leading the party to defeat at the previous election. However, Barnett seems determined to follow through with his plans to quit politics, and a successor has already been preselected for his blue-ribbon western suburbs seat of Cottesloe. The other obvious contender should surely be Birney, Barnett’s immediate successor, whom the party foolishly dumped for the unelectably mediocre Paul Omodei at the first whiff of a bad opinion poll. Birney too had proclaimed his intention to jump ship at the coming election, but is now reconsidering. But for whatever reason, there is reportedly a view that Birney has considerably less party room support now than at the time of his one-vote defeat at the hands of Omodei in March 2006.

The circumstances of that fiasco are worth revisiting, as it was widely believed in the party that Troy Buswell swung the outcome after pledging his vote to Birney and then supporting Omodei. Hillarys MP Rob Johnson, who had built a high media profile as Shadow Justice Minister, declared at the time: “His cowardly and gutless disloyalty will be the start of his demise and I think you will find the shining star of Troy Buswell will diminish over the coming months. Let me tell you, if he is the future of the Liberal Party then God help the Liberal Party.” Johnson’s prediction initially appeared to be misplaced, with speculation soon emerging that Buswell was preparing a move against the floundering Omodei. The party’s disastrous showing at the February 2007 Peel by-election confirmed Omodei’s likely status as a stop-gap leader, and he spent the rest of the year battling the perception he would be gone after the federal election was out of the way.

Just as Buswell’s plot neared fruition in January, the Albany Advertiser published a well-timed letter by Omodei’s electorate officer Ron Scott, alerting the world at large to the “bra-snapping” incident involving a Labor staffer in a parliamentary office. Significantly, there were also hints at the time of other skeletons in the closet which Buswell’s foes might see fit to expose at the appropriate juncture. Buswell then announced he would not proceed with his challenge after all, as he needed “more experience in the House and more time to develop before I could be considered for that position”. This prompted the West Australian to editorialise that the party “must persuade Troy Buswell that while his behaviour in Parliament last October was juvenile, stupid and not befitting of a member of Parliament, it was not so reprehensible that he need rule himself out of leadership contention”. This echoed the feeling in the party room, and Buswell was prevailed upon to pursue a leadership vote which Omodei ultimately did not contest. Rob Johnson confirmed his ongoing hostility to Buswell by throwing his hat into the ring, but reportedly found little support.

Other episodes of discontent with the Buswell ascendancy underscored the perception that the new leader had a less than soft touch with the opposite sex. Shadow Tourism Minister Katie Hodson-Thomas, who two days earlier claimed Buswell had made “inappropriate remarks” to her in front of a “large number” of male colleagues, announced on the morning of the spill that she would not contest the coming election. The only other female Liberal in the lower house, Shadow Attorney-General Sue Walker, did not show up for the spill and kept herself out of contact for the following fortnight. She then emerged to announce she was quitting the Liberal Party to contest the election as an independent, damning Buswell as “untrustworthy”. Another departure from the party was former deputy leader Dan Sullivan, a Matt Birney loyalist who had been left homeless after the redistribution abolished his seat of Leschenault. The West Australian recently reported Sullivan was “considering forming a special interest party to run for an Upper House South-West seat”.

As well as the two former leaders, some less familiar hopefuls have been testing the leadership waters (nobody has mentioned Omodei, who in any case is pursuing an upper house berth after the redistribution left his seat vulnerable to the Nationals). Shadow Treasurer Steve Thomas – like Buswell a newcomer at the 2005 election representing a seat in the south-west – says he will “consider his options” if the spill motion succeeds. However, Thomas faces the difficulty that his seat of Capel has been abolished, forcing him to compete with popular Labor member Mick Murray in the new seat of Collie-Preston, which by Antony Green’s reckoning has a slight notional Labor majority. Deputy leader Kim Hames says he will oppose the spill motion, but The West Australian “understands” he will nominate if it succeeds. Rob Johnson, whom many in the party suspect of being the source for the Sunday Times’ report on Buswell’s chair-sniffing activities, has ruled himself out, saying he does not expect the spill motion to succeed in any case.

All of which would leave Alan Carpenter eagerly eyeing his election date calendar. Western Australia does not have fixed terms, so in theory he can call an election for the Legislative Assembly at any time. However, he faces two very significant complications. One is familiar from the federal level: while terms for the lower house are flexible, the Legislative Council has a fixed expiry date of 21 May 2009, and its election must be called no earlier than a year before that date. Given the minimum 31-day period that must follow the issue of the writs, the earliest possible date for an election for both houses is June 21. The second difficulty relates to the ultimate date of expiry of the next Legislative Assembly, which depends on the date of the first sitting of parliament after the election (there is presumably an equivalent to the requirement of Section 5 of the Australian Constitution that the first sitting of parliament take place no later than 30 days after the return of the writs). If this comes after August 31, the next Assembly will expire on January 31, 2013. Otherwise it will be a full year earlier – in which case simultaneous elections at the subsequent poll will be impossible, as the earliest date for a Legislative Council election will be June 2012 (the expiry date being May 2013). Carpenter is thus effectively constrained from calling an election before August, for a date earlier than September.

UPDATE (3/5/08): Today’s West Australian offers remarkable talk of a party split if Buswell does not step aside. One “senior delegate” quoted by the paper predicts he will agree to do so, but there are no shortage of opinions to the contrary. In any case, The West says the spill motion is set to fail by between three and seven votes out of 31, although Amanda O’Brien of The Australian reports “it is believed many have not made up their minds what to do”. The West says that if Buswell goes, deputy leader Kim Hames is “likely to defeat Shadow Treasurer Steve Thomas in a leadership ballot”.

UPDATE (4/5/08): Another tumultuous day for the Liberals as Paul Omodei quits the party and declares Buswell “unfit to lead” after effectively being rejected for upper house preselection by the state council conference. Last month local preselectors voted to give Omodei the safe number two spot on the South West ticket, which itself followed an initial ballot that reduced him to unwinnable number four. This was overturned by the party’s appeals committee on the grounds that eligible delegates had not been invited to the meeting. For whatever reason, the party’s state council conference has now decided to reinstate the original outcome, putting Omodei behind Robyn McSweeney, Nigel Hallett and Barry House (those who think this an unconscionable way to treat a senior front-bencher are reminded that Omodei refused to stand and fight in the lower house seat of Blackwood-Stirling because he risked losing to the Nationals). As well as Buswell himself, Omodei is blaming Senator Mathias Cormann and state upper house MP Peter Collier, operatives of a faction known as the “northern alliance” due to its power base in the northern suburbs. The conference also decided not to proceed with threats to block the preselection of Rob Johnson, after the unnamed woman at the centre of the chair-sniffing incident vehemently denied he was the source of last week’s Sunday Times story. It’s not all one-way traffic though: this week the Sunday Times reports of rumoured inappropriate behavior by Alan Carpenter at a party social event four years ago. The claim is strongly denied by Carpenter, but he might have hoped for a more emphatic statement of support by witness Louise Pratt, former state upper house MP and soon-to-be Senator.

UPDATE (5/5/08): Reports in The West Australian and The Australian give an impression Buswell will narrowly survive today’s spill motion, if only for the want of a credible alternative. Four months after arguing that “juvenile” and “stupid” behaviour by Troy Buswell “was not so reprehensible that he need rule himself out of leadership contention”, The West Australian today offers a front page editorial which begins:

Today is the day of reckoning for the WA Liberal Party: if it retains Troy Buswell as leader, the party will be condoning sexual harassment in the workplace, treachery and dishonesty. By dumping him, MPs will show they are prepared to implement the ideals their party has long advocated.

The matter of Buswell’s honesty was of no concern to the paper in January: now it talks of “the ease with which he employs deviousness and downright dishonesty in a bid to achieve his personal ambition”. We are even told that Buswell’s “knifing of another of his leaders, Paul Omodei” showed he “had not lost his appetite for hacking down those ahead of him on the greasy pole” – an interesting interpretation of actions The West had openly advocated. The paper’s call for Buswell’s departure has been echoed elsewhere in the media by The Australian’s state political reporter Amanda O’Brien and in various television news bulletins by the ubiquitous Peter van Onselen, Edith Cowan University academic and John Howard biographer. Van Onselen told the Sunday Times yesterday he had been approached by “several senior Liberals seeking advice on how to form a new party”, apparently with a view to usurping the established Liberal Party as the Nationals’ coalition partner. The ranks of conservative independents in parliament now includes recently disaffected Liberals Sue Walker and Dan Sullivan along with the established Elizabeth Constable and Janet Woollard (many Liberals would dispute the conservative credentials of the latter), and is soon to be joined by Paul Omodei (who has not yet formally resigned, and is threatening to show up for the spill motion). The West also reports that the initiator of the spill motion, Graham Jacobs, is refusing to comment on his future with the party if Buswell survives.

UPDATE (6/5/08 3pm): ABC Radio reports the spill motion has been defeated.

60 comments

Apr 30 2008

Newspoll: 51-49 to Labor in NSW

Newspoll has released a survey of New South Wales state voting intention, showing Labor pulling ahead to a narrow two-party lead in March-April after the parties were locked together on 50-50 in January-March. However, the headline figure is Morris Iemma’s satisfaction rating of 28 per cent, which is the lowest recorded for a Premier of New South Wales since Newspoll began in 1985 (compare it with Brendan Nelson’s current rating of 38 per cent). This has transferred directly to his dissatisfaction rating, up from 52 per cent to 56 per cent. However, Iemma still retains a narrow lead over Opposition Leader Barry O’Farrell as preferred premier, of 36 per cent to 33 per cent. The Coalition has maintained a lead on the primary vote, of 38 per cent of 35 per cent. The Greens account for most of the balance, being on 14 per cent compared with 9.0 per cent at the March 2007 election. This is the first poll conducted entirely after the Wollongong City Council scandal became known to the public.

67 comments

Apr 28 2008

North Carolina and Indiana minus one week

Minus one week and two days, to be precise. Next Wednesday our time, North Carolina Democrats will elect 115 delegates, 77 by district-level proportional representation and 38 by statewide PR*. Indiana will elect 72 delegates, 47 by district-level and 25 statewide. Both are primaries, which have been doing better for Hillary Clinton that caucuses. However, the polls have Barack Obama ahead in both states – commandingly so in North Carolina (51.3 per cent to 35.8 per cent, according to Real Clear Politics’ fortnight average), narrowly in Indiana (46.3 per cent to 43.3 per cent). North Carolina will have a “modified” primary open to independents and registered Democrats; Indiana will have an open primary, meaning all voters can participate. And let us not forget Thursday’s caucuses for the Pacific island of Guam, at which three delegates will be selected by a closed caucus.

* Correct me if I’m wrong here (or anywhere else), somebody.

822 comments

Apr 23 2008

Pennsylvania Democratic primary live

This post will be progressively updated to follow the count in the Pennsylvania Democratic primary, starting from when I get out of bed (by which time it might well be all over). Real Clear Politics’ poll average shows a slight narrowing in Hillary Clinton’s lead since last week, from 47.4-40.4 to 49.5-43.4.

11.30am AEST. CNN reports Clinton leads 53-47 with 20 per cent of precincts counted. Their exit poll, if I’m reading it correctly, points to a result of about 52-48. They called it a “win” for Clinton about half an hour ago, for what that’s worth.

12.30pm. Clinton has just given a speech to claim victory of one kind or another: she now leads 54-46 with 75 per cent of precincts reporting.

12.50pm. As Obama gives his speech, the CNN’s count clicks over to 55-45 with 78 per cent of precincts reporting. They are giving Clinton 52 delegates to Obama’s 36 on television, but their web page is holding back on 37-31.

2.20pm. With 98 per cent of precincts reporting, Clinton’s has a lead of 54.8-45.2, which is at the higher end of market expectations.

1387 comments

Apr 21 2008

Newspoll: 61-39

The latest Newspoll shows an increase in Labor’s federal two-party lead to 61-39 from 59-41 a fortnight ago. Kevin Rudd’s lead over Brendan Nelson as preferred prime minister has narrowed marginally from 73-9 to 71-10. No word yet on the Liberal leadership preference questions which Newspoll was apparently asking respondents over the weekend (see the update on the previous Morgan post).

UPDATE: Graphic now available. The favoured Liberal leader is Malcolm Turnbull (25 per cent) ahead of Peter Costello (23 per cent), Brendan Nelson (15 per cent), Julie Bishop (13 per cent) and Tony Abbott (6 per cent). Support for the three proposed leadership teams (Nelson/Bishop, Turnbull/Robb, Costello/Turnbull) divided about evenly, while Turnbull leads Wayne Swan as “preferred Treasurer” 35 per cent to 29 per cent. In spite of everything, Brendan Nelson’s satisfaction rating is a presentable 38 per cent.

484 comments

Apr 18 2008

Morgan: 62.5-37.5

Morgan has released two sets of federal poll results: a mid-week phone poll of 765 respondents, and a face-to-face poll of 897 respondents conducted last weekened. Morgan has gone against normal practice by using “preferences distributed by how electors say they will vote” for the headline two-party measure for the phone poll, which puts Labor’s lead at 64-36. The more reliable “preferences distributed by how electors voted at the 2007 election” has it at 62.5-37.5, down from 63.5-36.5 last week. The face-to-face poll has it at 62-38, the same as the previous such poll conducted a fortnight ago.

Other news:

• The main starters are in place for the Gippsland by-election. The Nationals have nominated Darren Chester, staffer to state party leader Peter Ryan; Labor has nominated Wellington Shire mayor Darren McCubbin; and the Liberal candidate is Central Gippsland Health Service bureaucrat Rohan Fitzgerald. Gerard McManus of the Herald Sun reports Labor internal polling has them on 36 per cent to the Nationals’ 32 per cent and the Liberals’ 19 per cent, which after preferences would mean a comfortable win for the Nationals.

• On Monday, The West Australian published a Westpoll survey of 406 voters concerning federal voting intention in Western Australia, which had Labor leading 62-38 – a 16 per cent turn-around from the federal election. A question on preferred Liberal leader had Peter Costello on 19 per cent, Malcolm Turnbull on 18 per cent, local hero Julie Bishop on 17 per cent, Brendan Nelson on 12 per cent and Joe Hockey on 11 per cent. The survey also gauged support on a republic, finding 51 per cent support against 33 per cent outright opposition, with 70 per cent supporting a referendum on the matter to coincide with the next election (leaving aside the small matter of the model being proposed).

• Norm Kelly, member of the Australian National University’s Democratic Audit and former Western Australian Democrats state MP, peruses the government’s recently announced package of electoral reforms and finds fault with the move to tie public campaign funding to verified expenditure (clearly introduced to prevent a repeat of Pauline Hanson’s $200,000-plus windfalls from her recent Senate campaigns), which he says will disadvantage minor parties in its proposed form.

• Radio National’s The National Interest program had an interesting item recently on campaign funding laws in New York City and Canada. The practice of the former makes it very hard to understand why donations for last year’s federal election won’t be disclosed until February next year (to the extent that they still need to be disclosed at all, following the Howard government’s disgraceful 2006 “reforms”).

• The Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters is inviting submissions for its inquiry into the 2007 federal election, which will be received until Friday, May 16.

• I have just had to cough up $400 for annual site hosting, so now would be a good time for those who like to make the occasional donation.

UPDATE: Victorian Greens upper house MP Greg Barber drops by in comments to plug a parliamentary inquiry into the state’s donation disclosure laws. Reader ShowsOn tells us he has been Newspoll-ed, and that we can expect Tuesday’s poll to feature responses on who would make the best Liberal leader out of Brendan Nelson, Julie Bishop, Peter Costello and Malcolm Turnbull; who would make the best leadership team out of Nelson/Bishop, Costello/Turnbull and Turnbull/Andrew Robb; and who out of Turnbull and Wayne Swan would be best at handling the economy.

381 comments

Apr 15 2008

Pennsylvania minus one week

A merciful mid-campaign lull precluded the need for a “minus two weeks” thread, but things are well and truly picking up again now. Real Clear Politics’ Pennsylvania Democratic poll average has Hillary Clinton leading Barack Obama 47.4 per cent to 40.4 per cent, which is not as much as she would like. However, the most very recent poll from SurveyUSA puts it at 56-38 (UPDATE: Whoops, that’s not the most recent poll after all. There have been quite a few others since that have been around the RCP average). Statistical anomaly, or Obama’s elitist chickens coming home to roost? I report – you decide.

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