Newspoll: One Nation rises above Coalition, Albanese takes hammering after Bondi attack

Jacob ShteymanAAP
CommentsComments
VideoLabor and Coalition support drops.

Politicians will return to Canberra early as they pay respects to the victims of the Bondi terror attack and try to rush through legislation to ensure it never happens again.

Parliament will be recalled on Monday to mark a condolence motion for the victims of the December 14 massacre, during which 15 people were killed by gunmen targeting a Jewish celebration.

The House of Representatives will convene as the first two major polls of the year show Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s personal standing with voters has taken a hit since the Bondi tragedy.

The first Newspoll conducted for The Australian since November shows Mr Albanese’s personal approval rating down five points to 42 per cent and Opposition Leader Sussan Ley’s up two to 28 per cent.

The Newspoll has One Nation (up seven to 22 per cent) ahead of the coalition (down three to 21 per cent) on primary vote, with Labor down four to 32 per cent and the Greens down one to 12 per cent.

Read more...

The Resolve Political Monitor poll for Nine Newspapers, conducted in the aftermath of the Bondi massacre, shows Mr Albanese’s approval rating down five points to 35 per cent.

It has Labor’s primary vote down two points to 30 per cent, followed by the coalition (steady at 28 per cent), One Nation (up two to 18 per cent) and the Greens (down two to 10 per cent)

Environment Minister Murray Watt has used the latest poll to criticise the Coalition while on Sunrise with Barnaby Joyce on Monday morning.

“I want to congratulate Barnaby Joyce for becoming the opposition leader in Australia. They’ve overtaken the Coalition. And I think this explains why you’re seeing so much division within the Coalition,” he said.

“We’ve seen over the last few months a large element of the federal Coalition who are terrified by the growth of One Nation. It’s what’s drifting them further and further to the right and making it harder for them to reach decisions on important things, like the legislation we’ve got in front of us this week in Parliament.”

While Mr Joyce refused to attack Sussan Ley’s leadership. “I think that what One Nation has done has given people license for an alternative. We’re very humbled by the vote. We understand it’s just an indicator. It’s not a vote at an election, but it inspires us to continue the work, work very hard.

“And when you’ve got to make a choice between political correctness or looking after Australians, we’ll look after Australians first,” he said.

The government initially planned to introduce an omnibus bill criminalising hate speech and strengthening gun laws, before widespread opposition from across the political aisle forced a move to split the legislation into two.

The firearms legislation will enable a promised gun buyback, which was agreed in a national cabinet deal with the states and territories to tighten gun laws following the attack.

One of the gunmen, Sajid Akram, was a licensed holder of six firearms despite his son and fellow attacker Naveed having previously come on the radar of ASIO for links to Islamic extremists.

Fresh figures from the Department of Home Affairs showed there were a record 4.1 million firearms in Australia - more than at the time of the Port Arthur massacre three decades earlier.

Both bills will now be introduced to the House of Representatives on Tuesday morning, when they will be quickly sent to the Senate thanks to Labor’s majority in the lower house.

A parliamentary inquiry called to conduct a snap review into the proposed legislation is due to report back by Monday morning.

With the Greens’ support, the government expects the gun legislation to be enshrined into law, but the fate of the hate speech changes is less clear.

Labor maintains hope it can strike a deal with the opposition to usher the contentious legislation through the Senate on Tuesday evening, but senators are preparing for a marathon sitting that could drag on into Wednesday morning.

The Greens are opposed to the hate speech measures, concerned they will risk political freedoms such as the ability to protest Israel’s war in Gaza, as well as changes increasing the power of the home affairs minister to cancel visas.

The coalition has signalled it is willing to salvage Labor’s “failed laws” but its MPs are worried about the impact on freedom of speech, even after a contentious racial vilification component was removed.

Lifeline 13 11 14

beyondblue 1300 22 4636

Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.

Sign up for our emails