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Australia’s property tax overhaul unpopular with voters, polls show

By Thomson Reuters May 17, 2026 | 11:08 PM

SYDNEY, May 18 (Reuters) – Australia’s centre-left government is facing voter blowback after breaking election promises to roll out the biggest changes to investment taxes in decades in its latest budget, ​according to two closely watched polls.

• The government last week ‌said it would limit capital gains tax discounts and negative gearing on assets to address intergenerational inequity.

• The policies have been criticised for skewing home ownership towards older and wealthier investors.

• A Newspoll survey conducted after the budget’s release found ‌47% ​of voters believed it would be bad ⁠for the economy.

• Some 60% ⁠of voters said the housing measures were a “step in the wrong direction” or would “make no difference.”

• The budget had a minus 25 net approval rating and was the most unpopular in decades, ​the poll, which surveyed 1,252 voters, said.

• But the Labor government’s primary vote remained unchanged at 31%. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was ⁠voters’ preferred leader, with his approval ⁠rating also steady at minus 17%.

• Opposition leader Angus ​Taylor’s approval rating improved one percentage point to minus 12% but support ​for the conservative-coalition opposition dropped one point to 20%. The ‌far-right One Nation party’s vote increased 3 points to 27%.

• A separate Resolve poll that surveyed 1,800 voters found the budget dented Labor’s primary vote, falling 3 points to 29%.

• Support flowed to One Nation, ⁠up 2 points to 24%, instead of the coalition, which polled at 23%.

• Taylor became voters’ preferred prime minister, leading Anthony Albanese 33% to ⁠30%.

• The budget was ‌unpopular among older voters, property investors and property ⁠owners, with about 40% in each category saying ​Labor’s broken ‌promises damaged their view of the party.

• Younger ​Australians and ⁠renters were less hostile to the measures, the poll said.

• Tax reform around property investment in Australia is politically risky. Labor vowed it would not change housing taxes during its 2025 election campaign, before securing a second term in a landslide win.

(Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing ​by Thomas Derpinghaus)