http://au.news.yahoo.com/latest/a/-/latest/17236469/support-for-labor-dismal-as-...Despite polling showing federal Labor has failed to stimulate voter support with its budget, Prime Minister Julia Gillard says she remains focused on "things that matter".
The latest Galaxy poll, released on Sunday, found about 48 per cent of voters felt worse off under the government's budget, announced last week.
Asked of her party's ability to claw back support before the September 14 election, Ms Gillard pointed to Labor's efforts.
"The focus here is on things that matter to the Australian people," the prime minister told reporters in Canberra on Sunday.
"I have been working hard with the team particularly in recent weeks. We have been so focused on the things that matter for our nation's long-term future: securing disability care, now seeking to secure school funding improvement and better ways of working in Australia's schools."
Galaxy analyst David Briggs said voters appear to have switched off federal Labor and history suggests the party will have trouble regaining confidence before the election.
"There were no sweeteners in the budget," Mr Briggs told Network Ten.
"The big difference between this year and last year is that in 2012, 23 per cent of voters thought they would be better off and now it's only 14 per cent."
Labor's support rose one percentage point and the coalition's dropped one point in the latest poll, but on a two-party preferred basis the government was stagnant at 46 per cent and the coalition on 54 per cent.
"When Labor has a really good week in politics the polls don't move," Mr Briggs said.
"When Labor has a really bad week the polls don't move and that suggests to me the voters are either not engaged, or even worse, are just not listening."Asked if federal Labor could make up the numbers needed to win the September 14 election, the pollster said: "It's looking very unlikely".
The government did find support from a majority of the 1006 voters polled for its cuts to the baby bonus, with 64 per cent agreeing it was a good idea.
Independent Senator Nick Xenophon agreed the outlook for federal Labor appeared grim.
"I think that even if (Treasurer) Wayne Swan gave every voter a solid gold baseball bat for the budget, most of them would still use it on the government," he said.
"People have stopped listening."Ms Gillard said voters will have the final say.
"It's the nation's choice: better schools, putting our kids first, or school cutbacks and a lesser standard of education. That's the choice, and I'll be making that choice very clear in the weeks to come," she said.