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Australia’s far-right party leads in national poll for first time

By Thomson Reuters May 31, 2026 | 10:07 PM

SYDNEY, June 1 (Reuters) – Australia’s far-right populist party One Nation overtook the ruling Labor party in a national opinion poll for the first ​time, buoyed by voter discontent over the ‌centre-left government’s recent budget measures.

• Primary support for One Nation rose four percentage points to 31% from a month earlier, according to a closely watched poll by Redbridge Group and Accent ‌Research.

• ​The ruling centre-left Labor party ⁠polled at 28%, down ⁠three points.

• Support for the conservative coalition opposition fell two points to 20%.

• The polling comes after the government’s May 12 budget introduced the biggest ​changes to property taxes in decades, to tackle intergenerational inequity.

• The results suggest the proposed measures ⁠failed to win over voters, ⁠and were especially unpopular with the Gen ​X and Baby Boomer cohorts.

• But it also appeared ​unpopular among younger Australians it aims to benefit.

• ‌Just 26% of Millennials and 13% of Gen-Z voters believed the budget would be good for them, it showed.

• Labor was still ahead of One Nation ⁠51% to 49% on a two-party-preferred basis, when respondents distribute preferences under Australia’s ranked-choice voting system.

• The poll of 1,005 ⁠voters, with ‌an error margin of 3.4%, was ⁠held between May 25 and May 28.

• ​Since ‌its 1997 launch, One Nation, led by ​Pauline Hanson, ⁠has had only a peripheral presence in Australia’s parliament.

• But its recent resurgence came after it tapped into voter anxieties over high living costs, economic uncertainty and anti-immigration sentiment.

(Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing ​by Clarence Fernandez)