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Poll shows Labour/Greens/Te Pāti Māori with enough support to form Govt

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Mon, 10 Feb 2025, 3:55pm
Labour leader Chris Hipkins is closing the gap on Christopher Luxon in the preferred PM rankings, according to one poll. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Labour leader Chris Hipkins is closing the gap on Christopher Luxon in the preferred PM rankings, according to one poll. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Poll shows Labour/Greens/Te Pāti Māori with enough support to form Govt

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Mon, 10 Feb 2025, 3:55pm

A new poll shows support for the coalition Government鈥檚 three parties has fallen behind that of Labour, the Green Party and Te P膩ti M膩ori, which together could form the next Government.

The latest Taxpayers鈥 Union-Curia poll, released this afternoon, found support had risen for both major parties since the last poll in January 鈥 National getting a 2.3-percentage-point boost to 31.9% and Labour inching up 0.4 points to 31.3%.

The Green Party jumped more than any other party, rising by 3.7 points to 13.2%, while Act (0.8-point drop to 10%), New Zealand First (1.7-point drop to 6.4%) and Te P膩ti M膩ori (0.9-point drop to 4.4%) fell.

Based on those numbers, the coalition parties wouldn鈥檛 be able to form the Government as they could only muster 59 seats, two short of a 61-seat majority.

However, a potential coalition between Labour, the Greens and Te P膩ti M膩ori would achieve the 61-seat target on these numbers.

Te P膩ti M膩ori co-leaders Rawiri Waititi (left) and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. Photo / Marty Melville
Te P膩ti M膩ori co-leaders Rawiri Waititi (left) and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. Photo / Marty Melville

The poll was conducted between February 2-4, closing the day before the parliamentarian p艒whiri at Waitangi and ahead of the celebrations for the national day. A total of 1000 people were polled via landline, mobile phone and online. It had a 3.1% margin of error.

More people believed the country was moving in the wrong direction, according to the poll. About half of respondents believed New Zealand was headed in the wrong direction, while 34.2% supported the country鈥檚 direction. That gave a net result of -15.8%, down 1.8 points on the last poll.

As for the preferred Prime Minister ratings, the gap between National鈥檚 Christopher Luxon and Labour leader Chris Hipkins was closing with Luxon dropping 3.8 points to 20.7% while Hipkins had increased 2.3 points to 17.6%.

Taxpayers鈥 Union spokesman James Ross said the results signalled the Government鈥檚 failure to 鈥渇ix the current economic bonfire鈥.

鈥淚t鈥檚 no coincidence the proportion of people who think New Zealand is heading in the right direction keeps plummeting.

鈥淚f a poll showing they鈥檇 lose power if there was an election held today isn鈥檛 a wake-up call, nothing will be.鈥

Adam Pearse is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team, based at Parliament. He has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2018, covering sport and health for the Northern Advocate in Whang膩rei before moving to the Herald in Auckland, covering Covid-19 and crime.

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