skippy. wrote on Mar 23
rd, 2013 at 12:29pm:
Maqqa wrote on Mar 23
rd, 2013 at 10:56am:
Last time anyone looked - the polls has Abbott in front of the PM when asked about the preferred PM. Rudd was not part of that equation
Actually that's not true, the last polls had Gillard back in front by a fair margin. Now if someone as buggered as her is preffered over phony tony he must be a dead sh it. I don't intend to vote at all in the election, while I vote Greens I would have to preference one of the majors, and Labor do not deserve my preference. As for the Libs under Abbott I will not be a part in installing a total nut case as PM. You wankers that support this prick are going to have to take every bit of the blame for the women basher becoming PM.
Last time anyone looked - the polls has Abbott in front of the PM when asked about the preferred PM. Rudd was not part of that equation [/quote]
Actually that's not true, the last polls had Gillard back in front by a fair margin. Now if someone as buggered as her is preffered over phony tony he must be a dead sh it. I don't intend to vote at all in the election, while I vote Greens I would have to preference one of the majors, and Labor do not deserve my preference. As for the Libs under Abbott I will not be a part in installing a total nut case as PM. You wankers that support this prick are going to have to take every bit of the blame for the women basher becoming PM. [/quote]
The latest Nielsen poll offers little hope for Ms Gillard and her government, with Labor's primary vote at 31 per cent.
The Tony Abbott-led coalition remains steady on 47 per cent, less than six months out from the September 14 election.
The two-party preferred split has the government on 44 per cent and the opposition at 56 per cent - a six per cent swing to the coalition from the 50-50 result in 2010 and a landslide victory if carried through to election day.
The telephone survey of 1400 people taken last week shows Opposition Leader Tony Abbott is now preferred prime minister by 49 per cent of voters against Ms Gillard's 43 per cent - down two points.
Voters also prefer a Kevin Rudd-led Labor Party by two to one, with 62 per cent opting for Mr Rudd against Ms Gillard's 31 per cent.
But Ms Gillard has dismissed any prospect of being "tapped on the shoulder'' by senior ministers, saying it was much speculated on but "just won't happen''