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Australia PM heading for crushing election defeat: poll

Australia's Labor government is heading for a crushing defeat in this year's election, a poll showed Tuesday as a senior minister blamed the party's bloodletting for driving voters to the opposition.

Updated on: Mar 26, 2013 08:40 AM IST
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Australia's Labor government is heading for a crushing defeat in this year's election, a poll showed Tuesday as a senior minister blamed the party's bloodletting for driving voters to the opposition.

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Prime Minister Julia Gillard's popularity has crashed after an "appalling" week in which a veteran cabinet minister called for ex-prime minister Kevin Rudd to challenge her leadership.

Rudd refused and Gillard retained power but four ministers who backed the challenge quit or were sacked, forcing a second cabinet reshuffle in as many months.

The Newspoll survey taken after the farcical episode shows Labor were first choice for only 30% of voters, while satisfaction with Gillard dived from 32% two weeks ago to 26% -- its lowest level in 19 months.

"I don't comment on opinion polls but I don't need a poll to tell me that last week the Labor Party had an appalling week," Gillard told broadcaster ABC.

"When we present to the Australian people self-indulgently talking about ourselves there are consequences."

Foreign minister Bob Carr, forced to publicly declare his loyalty to Gillard last week after a report said he had lost confidence in her, said the disunity within Labor was hurting the party.

"I think there's nothing at all surprising in all this but it is a challenge to all our colleagues to put the events of the past week thoroughly behind us and to simply have a conversation with the Australian people who, I believe, don't want an Abbott government," he told Sky News.

"They don't, but they are being driven into the Liberal camp and into Abbott's column by Labor's behaviour."

The botched Rudd coup against Gillard has seen some Labor figures criticise the government's direction just six months ahead of the September 14 election.

The Newspoll survey of 1,136 voters found the conservative Liberal/National opposition coalition would easily win the election, securing 58% of the vote compared to Labor's 42% once the preferences of minor parties were distributed.

 
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