Newspoll: 53-47 to Labor

A fortnight of sound and fury ends with exactly the same set of voting intention numbers from Newspoll as last time.

After a week of post-Ipsos hype, The Australian reports the latest Newspoll finds absolutely no change whatsoever on voting intention since a fortnight ago: Labor’s two-party lead is at 53-47, and the primary votes are Coalition 37%, Labor 39%, Greens 9% and One Nation 5%. Scott Morrison is down one on approval to 42% and up three on disapproval to 48%, while Bill Shorten is down one to 35% and up two to 53%. Morrison’s lead as preferred prime minister is unchanged at 44-35. The poll was conducted Thursday to Sunday from a sample of 1582.

Author: William Bowe

William Bowe is a Perth-based election analyst and occasional teacher of political science. His blog, The Poll Bludger, has existed in one form or another since 2004, and is one of the most heavily trafficked websites on Australian politics.

1,194 comments on “Newspoll: 53-47 to Labor”

Comments Page 22 of 24
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  1. C@tmomma @ #1046 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:55 pm

    Greensborough Growler @ #1004 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:13 pm

    C@tmomma @ #997 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:06 pm

    My one little old lady focus group, with family and friends stretching from Junee in NSW to Mt Isa in Queensland, told me today that Climate Change is happening now! And we should hurry up and do something about it!

    Who needs a Leigh Sales/Scott Morrison interview!?! She doesn’t!

    The problem is the facade that the Libs are saying they are doing something.

    She sees right through the cant, the obfuscation and the acts intended to mislead and give an impression of action.

    Good for her. I hope her network is the same!

  2. Darn says:
    Monday, February 25, 2019 at 8:39 pm
    Someone sent this to me today. It’s off topic, but well worth a look. You won’t be disappointed.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjcA6PuoCfs
    ———————————–
    Thank you. I first heard Sonny Terry when I was about 14 and have been a mouth harp fan ever since. That was a great performance on a much underrated instrument.

  3. Rex Douglas

    Faine has been lazy for years apart from ‘urgent’ matters such as bushfire coverage.

    Sadly Melbourne ABC listeners are going to have to put up with Faine ‘going through the motions’ for the rest of the year until his retirement.

    What a bet that he walks soon after the Federal election rather than November 2019?

  4. Darn says:
    Monday, February 25, 2019 at 8:39 pm
    Someone sent this to me today. It’s off topic, but well worth a look. You won’t be disappointed.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjcA6PuoCfs
    ———————————–
    Thank you. I first heard Sonny Terry when I was about 14 and have been a mouth harp fan ever since. That was a great performance on a much underrated instrument.

  5. Puffy:

    In my view what we’re seeing with this govt is sheer arrogance that they can do what they want and simply brazen away any blow back. The excuse Cormann gave for the Helloworld flights are just laughable – of ‘the dog ate my homework’ variety. And if you watched Insiders you would’ve seen Tim Wilson’s look of shock that he was being rebuked by the Speaker for using a parliamentary committee for such brazen political purposes. He clearly did believe that what he was doing was all above board and tickety boo.

  6. Habby @ #1044 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:21 pm

    Re gifts

    Many years ago when I worked in the Victorian public service I did a good job for a dairy farmer I was working with. He gave me a $5 lottery ticket as thanks.

    I went to my boss and said I’m in a dilemma, the purchase price of the lottery ticket is under the value for it to be declare on the gift registry however if I win it will be well over the requirement for declaration!!

    If you had won first prize, I don’t think you would have cared!

  7. Talking about Mensa, I once engaged in a somewhat casual Dip ED. This included large oscillations between lectures, pracs in the schools, and sessions at the Nott to deal with what looked like my likely professional fate. The issue of the value of, and the constraints on, IQ tests with respect to education policy and practice came up.

    So, I had a burl at various IQ tests.

    I got zero IQ for one test but then it was in a language I could not read. This was an insightful experience. (The best teaching English-as-a-second language lesson I have ever received was by a lecturer who opened the class in what I seem to remember was a Kenyan language. None of us adult students knew what we were supposed to do or when. We made repeated efforts to do the right thing. One person was praised for ‘success’. The rest of us were mocked for failure. We did not know why we were being upbraided. We wanted to please and we felt shame at our failure. As with us, so with remote Indigenous kids. Great, great learning for TESL teachers!)

    This was extreme, but IQ tests have difficulty with addressing cultural issues and with the different language experiences of testees.

    Naturally these technical issues became tangled in major shitstorms relating to race and IQ. We all know that lower IQ tests demonstrate that Africans have a lower IQ on average than Caucasians, right? This is exactly what a professor at a major US university argued. In public. Brave chap.

    Anyone who has walked with a traditional owner in Arnhemland quickly learns that what might constitute traditional IQ would look extremely difficult from western IQ. There is independent research to support this. Specific tests show that Indigenous people in remote locations have a superior spatial relations and materials recognition, sorting and memory component to their IQ compared with urban non-Indigenous people: think looking at and remembering a tray with fifty different stones, sticks and leaves in it, sorted into arrays. Indigenous teenagers will generally be better at that than we are. Genetic? Or environmental?

    It has since become evident that IQ tests also run into serious issues relating to gender. Girls have soft brains because they play with dolls, right? They are not so good at maths, right?

    I found that it was quite easy to increase my ‘IQ’ by 20-30 points by learning the patterns of questions found in IQ tests and practicing the appropriate problem solving techniques. Naturally we are urged by the owners of IQ tests to only do the test once. But here is the thing. Different individuals will bring to their first test some equivalent experiences of doing the tests more than once. This relevant life experience varies enormously by the individual.

    It was also interesting to note the patterns of the sorts of questions where I readily went much further into the tests than with other sorts of questions. I could look at a set of, say, eight pictograms with a mix of shapes, lines, continuities, sizes, angles and without having to do a logical and serial thinking sorting out, point straight away to the one that was different. Or to the one that was the last on in the series. That sort of stuff. I was good at language patterns (probably because I grew up bilingual, could already speak and write a third language and could already read a fourth language). I found most difficulty with tasks that might broadly be construed as algebraic. This sort of differential ability in different elements of IQ leads to interesting questions such as: which sorts or sets of questions should be weighted and how?

    Then there are issues related to emotional intelligence. I once had a staff member whose policy nous was absolutely streets ahead of everyone (including me) in the work area (I am talking about high end policy development which requires complex language, logic and maths skills, etc, etc,etc. But there was nothing but conflict in the policy development process. It turned out that she was always rubbing her colleagues up the wrong way. It was only when I pointed out to her that being right (and she was ALWAYS right!) was not the only thing that mattered. Bringing along people was critical. It had simply never occurred to her that she had to let other people contribute to the policy process if she wanted buy in and to bring them along.

    All this is from half century old memory so it has probably changed since then and my memories about it are all a bit scrambled and dulled.

    I would be reasonably certain that my test IQ would have declined by 30 or 40 since then. I don’t do IQ testy things much anymore.
    OTOH, there are bits of my intelligence now that no IQ has ever tested. The other day I was out photographing birds when a chap from Sydney arrived. He was after a specific species. Without having to think about it I pointed one out to him. He could not see it. It was not his eyesight that was the problem. It was his understanding of the species-specific disruption in the landscape patterns we were looking at. I can see a speck in the distance and. with almost no clues, nearly always tell what the species is. There might be up to 2-300 species that are possible. This sort of stuff does not come up in IQ tests. Well, it did not then.

    Anyhoo, IMO, IQ tests are an interesting tool for personal learning with a grain of salt being the most useful tool.

  8. Socrates @ #1039 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:45 pm

    Michael A

    Interesting re Adani and the EPBC Act. The Qld Labor govt was very weak in appproving the mine in the first place on multiple counts, including water and the Finches. Normally the Feds rule on EPBC based on state advice but they don’t have to. There appears to be ample ground to revisit Adani.

    As for the political reaction, I do not believe most of central Qld cares about Adani per se. They care about jobs. Other projects could provide those. As I have said before, Labor should remind Qlders who paid for the last big flood reconstruction. It wasn’t the Liberals.

    You just have to look at Newcastle and the Latrobe Valley after the shutdown of the Heavy Industry in Newc and the Power Station in the Latrobe. Both places are blooming now! New types of businesses have been attracted to the areas. Human ingenuity and an eye for a bargain in the initial depressed value period usually does the trick.

  9. Habby @ #1044 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 5:51 pm

    Re gifts

    Many years ago when I worked in the Victorian public service I did a good job for a dairy farmer I was working with. He gave me a $5 lottery ticket as thanks.

    I went to my boss and said I’m in a dilemma, the purchase price of the lottery ticket is under the value for it to be declare on the gift registry however if I win it will be well over the requirement for declaration!!

    LOL! By reverse context, I received a beautiful orchid pot plant as a gift for helping one of our stakeholders with a problem she was experiencing with her CEO. When she gave it to me it was full of beautiful, blooming orchid flowers. It naturally took pride of place on the coffee table in our living room.

    It’s now on life support because I seriously cannot keep plants alive. Should I un-declare this gift to the board owing to the fact that it’s likely to die in the next few weeks anyways?!

  10. Ms Downer’s cheque looks like it was made for multiple uses – note how the details (recipient, amount, date) were written in by hand. It has a shiny surface meant for an erasable texta or permanent marker.

    What I am implying is that she was intending to hand out multiple ‘cheques’ and try to deprive Ms Sharkie of the publicity. Fortunately she has been caught in the act.

  11. Pedant
    Cheers. It was Sales that was talking about asylum seekers arriving by plane in the thousands over the last 4 years.

  12. Greensborough Growler @ #1050 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:57 pm

    C@tmomma @ #1046 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:55 pm

    Greensborough Growler @ #1004 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:13 pm

    C@tmomma @ #997 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:06 pm

    My one little old lady focus group, with family and friends stretching from Junee in NSW to Mt Isa in Queensland, told me today that Climate Change is happening now! And we should hurry up and do something about it!

    Who needs a Leigh Sales/Scott Morrison interview!?! She doesn’t!

    The problem is the facade that the Libs are saying they are doing something.

    She sees right through the cant, the obfuscation and the acts intended to mislead and give an impression of action.

    Good for her. I hope her network is the same!

    She is the matriarch. They listen when she speaks.

    I never ask her leading questions with my own bias overt, just general questions about current topics, so it is gratifying when she comes back at me with such clear-eyed perception.

  13. When a minister (or worse, a Prime Ministet) looks a 1-on-1 interviewer in the eye and says he’s decreased emissions, or unemployment, or taxes or whatever, it takes a very brave (if not foolhardy) interviewer to contradict him. If the minister repeats the false assertion, a subsequent contradiction by the interviewer is tantamount to calling the minister a liar.

    The minister treats the purpose of the interview not as an argument, but as an occasion for the interviewer to faithfully reproduce whatever the minister wants reproduced. If the interviewer argues that’s editorialization, not unbiased news gathering. If the interviewer works for the ABC, that goes double, or triple.

    If the interview takes place at a doorstop, or a press conference, the minister can simply turn away from the questioner and take a Dorothy Dixer from a friendly journo, or attack the questioner’s employer. The genuinely probing interviewer or interrogator has no hope.

  14. Confessions says:
    Monday, February 25, 2019 at 8:59 pm
    Puffy:

    In my view what we’re seeing with this govt is sheer arrogance that they can do what they want and simply brazen away any blow back. The excuse Cormann gave for the Helloworld flights are just laughable – of ‘the dog ate my homework’ variety. And if you watched Insiders you would’ve seen Tim Wilson’s look of shock that he was being rebuked by the Speaker for using a parliamentary committee for such brazen political purposes. He clearly did believe that what he was doing was all above board and tickety boo.
    —————————-
    It is called ‘born to rule’ and has been the fatal attitude that has destroyed every ruling class government. That is if you ignore their basic incompetence. That comes from the inbreeding.

  15. Player One @ #1063 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 9:02 pm

    Rex Douglas @ #1046 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:51 pm

    You gotta love these big unions. They’ll do anything to maximise their membership numbers in order to dictate Labor policy. Power gone mad.

    Yeah, including working on behalf of their members!

    How bloody dare they?

    I often wonder about these so-called Greens who are so anti ‘Big Union’. Or, more correctly put I guess, pro small, weak unions.

  16. sonar 822pm

    Some talk here about Kashmir…..a positive perhaps…..
    https://www.npr.org/2019/02/24/695105941/against-the-odds-a-pro-soccer-team-in-kashmir-is-close-to-winning-indias-top-tit

    Nicest news I have read all day – thanks.

    Thinking of the colder climate in northern India, I do remember once seeing a photo of England playing cricket I think in Dharamshala right up against the Himalayas, and they were all wearing long-sleeved jumpers which was I’m sure was a first for an England team in India. It must be one of the best views from a major cricket ground anywhere in the world.

  17. Scotty is very Liberal with the truth.

    ‘You need a character test to get on a plane’. Sales was flummoxed, and said nothing.

    If you are applying for a migration visa, family reunion, spousal etc, with the clear intention of living permanently in Australia, you get background checked. Moreso if you are from certain regions.

    If you have a tourist visa, working holiday etc no background check. You just fly in, and if so inclined, overstay and at the alloted time, claim asylum.

    Verdict: Scotty is Liberal with the truth.

  18. steve davis @ #1050 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:27 pm

    The line of the night for me from Morrison was “You need a character test to get on a plane”.

    rotflmao

    The Libs would be walking everywhere.

    Confessions @ #1063 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:32 pm

    Habby @ #1044 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 5:51 pm

    Re gifts

    Many years ago when I worked in the Victorian public service I did a good job for a dairy farmer I was working with. He gave me a $5 lottery ticket as thanks.

    I went to my boss and said I’m in a dilemma, the purchase price of the lottery ticket is under the value for it to be declare on the gift registry however if I win it will be well over the requirement for declaration!!

    LOL! By reverse context, I received a beautiful orchid pot plant as a gift for helping one of our stakeholders with a problem she was experiencing with her CEO. When she gave it to me it was full of beautiful, blooming orchid flowers. It naturally took pride of place on the coffee table in our living room.

    It’s now on life support because I seriously cannot keep plants alive. Should I un-declare this gift to the board owing to the fact that it’s likely to die in the next few weeks anyways?!

    Do it a favour and gift it to a green-thumb. It is the only humane thing to do!

  19. Bushfire:

    The only journos really who understand the parties’ responses to AGW are Lenore Taylor, Katherine Murphy, and Laura Tingle. I’d love it if one of these journalists were able to interview Morrison about direct action or whatever it is that he’s proposing to give his party cover as it limps towards the election. But unfortunately none of them are.

    There was an ABC journalist 10 years ago who unravelled Tony Abbott in a 730 or Lateline interview when it came to direct action, but unfortunately he was despatched to the Drum or similar facile program.

  20. Rex Douglas @ #1046 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:51 pm

    You gotta love these big unions. They’ll do anything to maximise their membership numbers in order to dictate Labor policy. Power gone mad.

    The Greens have been past beneficiaries of union donations from the Electrical Trades Union and Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union, and benefitted from a National Tertiary Education Union campaign at the 2013 election.

    But relations with the movement were soured in 2016 by the Greens’ refusal to delay support for the Coalition’s Senate voting reform, a decision that construction unions believe led to a double dissolution and the restoration of what they perceive as an anti-union regulator, the Australian Building and Construction Commission.

    https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2018/may/19/greens-endorse-union-campaign-to-strengthen-bargaining-powers

    A troll and his BS.

  21. On the question of what is a bribe. I spent most of my working life moving between the public sector and a union job. Taking advantage of the secondment rules. later in life i accepted a large checque from my public sector employer and pissed of. I then worked in the private sector. What I discovered was what was seen as bribery in the public sector was just business in the private sector. Free lunches, bottles of good whisky, tickets to big events. It was all just normal business activity. I rejected most of it but the whisky found my point of corruption.

  22. C@tmomma @ #1070 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:37 pm

    Player One @ #1063 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 9:02 pm

    Rex Douglas @ #1046 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:51 pm

    You gotta love these big unions. They’ll do anything to maximise their membership numbers in order to dictate Labor policy. Power gone mad.

    Yeah, including working on behalf of their members!

    How bloody dare they?

    I often wonder about these so-called Greens who are so anti ‘Big Union’. Or, more correctly put I guess, pro small, weak unions.

    AND then they persecute Centrelink recipients to death.

  23. Bushfire Bill @ #1065 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:05 pm

    When a minister (or worse, a Prime Ministet) looks a 1-on-1 interviewer in the eye and says he’s decreased emissions, or unemployment, or taxes or whatever, it takes a very brave (if not foolhardy) interviewer to contradict him. If the minister repeats the false assertion, a subsequent contradiction by the interviewer is tantamount to calling the minister a liar.

    The minister treats the purpose of the interview not as an argument, but as an occasion for the interviewer to faithfully reproduce whatever the minister wants reproduced. If the interviewer argues that’s editorialization, not unbiased news gathering. If the interviewer works for the ABC, that goes double, or triple.

    Ok. Point taken. Sales had no choice. Which leads me to ask who set up the interview? And a sigh, that’s probably not relevant either. All I remember is brag and smirk.

  24. It is called ‘born to rule’ and has been the fatal attitude that has destroyed every ruling class government. That is if you ignore their basic incompetence.

    The incompetence only goes so far in explaining the scandals. After all, ministers are advised by the APS who presumably have some idea what they are doing, and can advise on risk etc with specific actions or decisions.

  25. Late Riser says:
    Monday, February 25, 2019 at 9:18 pm
    Bushfire Bill @ #1065 Monday, February 25th, 2019 – 8:05 pm

    When a minister (or worse, a Prime Ministet) looks a 1-on-1 interviewer in the eye and says he’s decreased emissions, or unemployment, or taxes or whatever, it takes a very brave (if not foolhardy) interviewer to contradict him. If the minister repeats the false assertion, a subsequent contradiction by the interviewer is tantamount to calling the minister a liar.

    The minister treats the purpose of the interview not as an argument, but as an occasion for the interviewer to faithfully reproduce whatever the minister wants reproduced. If the interviewer argues that’s editorialization, not unbiased news gathering. If the interviewer works for the ABC, that goes double, or triple.

    Ok. Point taken. Sales had no choice. Which leads me to ask who set up the interview? And a sigh, that’s probably not relevant either. All I remember is brag and smirk.
    ——————————-
    Maybe Sales was happy to accept the brag and smirk impression.

  26. Nine/Fairfax trying to make Labor the centre of the story about Morrison making a captain’s pick on choosing Ita Buttrose as ABC Chair. How can Labor, in opposition, voluntarily distance itself from a process in which it has no role anyway?

    Labor distances itself from the ABC chair process, but has no qualms with the result

    By Max Koslowski

    Labor has accused the government of edging towards “political interference” by hand-picking Ita Buttrose as the ABC chair-in-waiting, but begrudgingly accepts she is competent, qualified and well-respected.

    https://www.canberratimes.com.au/politics/federal/labor-distances-itself-from-the-abc-chair-process-but-has-no-qualms-with-the-result-20190225-p51058.html

  27. No Victorian MPs on Qanda tonight, wonder what gives??

    ABC Q& Averified account@ Q & A
    12 hHá 12 horas
    Tonight: #QandA is live from Melbourne with @jordanbpeterson, @AlexHawkeMP, @terrimbutler, @CateMc3273, and @vanbadham. 9.35pm AEDT on @ABCTV

  28. onfessions says:
    Monday, February 25, 2019 at 9:21 pm
    It is called ‘born to rule’ and has been the fatal attitude that has destroyed every ruling class government. That is if you ignore their basic incompetence.

    The incompetence only goes so far in explaining the scandals. After all, ministers are advised by the APS who presumably have some idea what they are doing, and can advise on risk etc with specific actions or decisions.
    ———————
    That’s where the born to rule comes in. How can a pissing public servant think they can advise someone who was born to rule.

  29. turnbull described direct inaction as “a fig leaf by a party determined to do nothing” and, more succinctly, “bullshit”.

    Why is this not quoted back to the LNP (and to himself when he was PM)?

    Labor should remind voters of this, point out that emissions are going up, that many of the ERF schemes are extremely dubious in terms of avoided emissions and additional (i.e. they would have happened regardless of the funding – I can point to several examples within my industry.

    On the basis of this policy statement: https://cdn.australianlabor.com.au/documents/Climate_change_action_plan_fact_sheet.pdf and the fact that my local ALP member is brilliant and left-progressive, I think I’m going to give my first preferences in the lower house to labor; Greens in the senate. The plan isn’t perfect, but it’s comprehensive and pragmatic and will allow a combination of technological advancement, the market and progressive tightening of targets when needed. The Greens ‘policy’ is a list of motherhood statements with no practical detail. The ALP policy is clear about the what, how and when – it is a brave document in this time of anti-science and will see Australia make up for the lost years since 2013 and lost decades since 1996. I’d love to see the greens give this support, get it place, and then over the next few years help tighten targets if needed. Personally, I think once the legislative frameworks in in place, the market will rapidly de-carbonise – we have the technology to do it, and a bit of political will will see rapid change.

  30. So, the takeout from the 7.30 interview is that Morrison approves of asylum seekers getting on planes and blowing holes in our borders because they are of the right character!?!

  31. “All I remember is brag and smirk.”

    and really what has he got to brag and smirk about? There’s a story that when President Roosevelt died in the final days of WWII, Goebells who was holed up in the Hitler bunker with the Russians closing in, got up on a table and did a dance, convined as he was that his death would surely splinter the US-British alliance, and somehow turn the war around for the nazis.

    Morrisson smirking at his “victories” reminds me of the self delusion posessed by the nazis in those final days of the war, as their world crumbled around them.

  32. the real dave, it depends entirely on where you are coming from. I have an Iraqi friend who had to wait weeks and jump through all sorts of hoops to obtain a tourist visa to australia.

  33. And vaguely on the topic, the podcast They Walk Amongst Us has recently aired a fascinating episode dealing with a con-man in the UK who convinced men and women he was an MI5 operative living undercover because of death threats from the IRA. He had different people living in hiding with him for years, including his wife and two children who almost starved to death. One woman was reduced to homelessness and physical/mental deterioration after eight years of following his directions. The families of these people handed over hundreds of thousands of pounds to help their sons/daughters but he took all the money.
    (This is not a murder episode.)

    It is almost unbelievable but indicates what a good con-artist can do to people.
    https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/they-walk-among-us-uk-true-crime/e/58462877
    And my interest is, how about the leaders and politicians doing almost the same thing, convincing people fantasy is real, and using stoked fears to control them. The first is an extreme, for sure.

  34. So, the takeout from the 7.30 interview is that Morrison approves of asylum seekers getting on planes and blowing holes in our borders because they are of the right character!?!

    Excellent point. Someone in Labour should pick it up:

    In an apparent major Border Security policy shift, Prime Minister Scott Morrison appears to have given the green light to asylum seekers, as long as they pre-qualify for refugee status by passing the character test and obtaining a visa prior to arrival by air.

    I must say ScoMo’s answer stumped me too. But I’m not being paid $400k to cut through the spin and get to the heart of the issue by asking the Hard Questions, as Leigh Sales is.

  35. I did some work for the ATO in 2005 which involved a compulsory interview of a foreign national here on holiday on the Gold Coast. Pretty funny. The ATO could find out when anyone cleared customs.

    A coffee break was a chance for everyone to pay their own way.

  36. I must say ScoMo’s answer stumped4 me too. But I’m not being paid $400k to cut through the spin and get to the heart of the issue by asking the Hard Questions, as Leigh Sales is.

    🙂 But didn’t we just work out that the Sales interview was actually a character test for Morrison, and she did good and he smirked.

    More seriously, that character-test-by-air sounded like another “brilliant response” someone primed him with, hoping for an opportunity to slip it in for a brilliant goal.

  37. I’m calling it a night. If anyone wants to leave a guess for the next Essential poll, which might be out tomorrow morning, I’ll harvest and credit. Currently guesses are running at:
    PB mean: ALP 53.9 to 46.1 LNP
    PB median: ALP 54.0 to 46.0 LNP
    No. Of PB Respondents: 41

    Night all.

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