Seasoned politicians and political observers follow the opinion poll ratings of the various parties in a way others might consider obsessive. But they never get too hung up on any specific poll result, focusing instead on the trend of a series of polls over time upon which to base their assessments.
Even then, the poring over the entrails of the various
parties' poll ratings runs secondary to the attention they pay to one other
important poll figure. The "is the country on the right or wrong
track" question is considered to be the far more accurate reflection of
the real political mood of the country, and therefore the best guide to the likely
outcome of the next election.
For example, a Roy Morgan poll taken a few weeks before
Labour’s landslide election victory in October 2020 recorded 71% of respondents
feeling the country was heading in the right direction, with less than 20%
considering it was moving in the wrong direction. By contrast, a similar poll
earlier this week showed just 29% of respondents now believe the country is on
the right track, with 61% considering New Zealand was moving in the wrong
direction.
Successive Roy Morgan polls have shown the right track/wrong
track indicator turned negative in early 2022, about the same time all the
major polls started recording National polling ahead of Labour for the first
time since early 2020, before the arrival of the pandemic and the subsequent
“Covid” election. These results also parallel Roy Morgan’s consumer confidence
polls which have shown consumer confidence has been negative since early 2022.
Although individual party rankings have bounced around a
little in the same period, the underlying trend is undeniable. The electorate’s
disposition has been largely negative for about twenty months now, and that
trend is strengthening. In such circumstances, any government faces immense
difficulties in restoring public confidence that it can turn things around.
Right now, as the opinion polls show the election horse
race between the various parties moving inexorably in favour of the
centre-right bloc, the major parties’ responses to the long-term confidence
trends are similarly intensifying. Labour understands, if it does not
appreciate, these current feelings of uncertainty and declining confidence, and
so is trying to structure its campaign around reassuring voters that it is best
equipped to lead them through during these trying times.
It will therefore focus on the positive, although
declining, approval ratings of the Prime Minister, in direct contrast to the
far less positive responses to National’s leader. Labour will try to buttress
this with some bold new policy announcements, like last week’s leak that GST
will be removed from fresh fruit and vegetables. In that respect, its recently
revealed “In it for You” slogan captures neatly the party’s message that here
is the government, and the Prime Minister in particular, with their sleeves
rolled up, just getting on with the job of responding pragmatically to the
“bread and butter” issues worrying New Zealand households today. It is a simple
and straightforward strategy, with an implicit defiance of its critics
reminiscent of Jim Bolger’s infamous “Bugger the polls” comment so many years
ago.
Whether it will work, given the seemingly now entrenched
view that New Zealand has been moving in the wrong direction under Labour for
some time now is a highly contestable point. But it is the only card it has
left to play. In doing so, it will need to be mindful of cynicism that these
yet unannounced policies are simply being rolled out now because the election
situation looks dire, when they could have been introduced at any point during
the last six years Labour has been in power.
National also understands the importance of the right
track/wrong track sentiment. As the Opposition, it knows it has little
influence on current policy direction. But it also knows it is extremely
difficult for incumbent governments to win re-election when a substantial
number of voters thinks the country is heading in the wrong direction. So, its
focus is more on reinforcing current negative voter sentiment, rather than
wooing them with bold new policies. Hence its slogan to “Get New Zealand back
on track”. Where specific new policies have been released, such as the roading
announcements of recent weeks, they have harkened back to the direction of the
previous National-led government, when a majority of voters felt the country
was moving in the right direction. It is likely any further policy
announcements will be similarly strategically designed.
Even New Zealand First appears to understand the
significance of the right track/wrong track question, promising to “Take our
country back”, although the “back” it envisages is a time most New Zealanders
are not old enough to remember. In any case, it conveniently overlooks that it
was part of the government whose actions led to the current level of wrong
track sentiment.
In this environment, there is consequently plenty of scope
for potential support parties likely to be in the next Parliament such as ACT,
the Greens and Te Pati Maori to be bolder in their policy offerings, as they have been. They
can afford to do so, knowing that while their more outlandish pledges will
appeal to their core supporters they will never be implemented fully by either
of the major parties, so they will be free to campaign on them again at the
2026 election.
The election is likely come down to the country’s future
direction. Therefore, the outcome is more likely to reflect the negative
sentiment of the last couple of years, rather than any positive reaction to
bold, new policies unveiled in the last minute heat of an election campaign.
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