Scott Morrison is having a great crisis.
The latest Newspoll shows the prime minister’s approval rating at 66%; three months ago it wallowed at 37%. He leads Anthony Albanese 56% to 29% as preferred prime minister; in January he trailed by 39% to 43%.
Scotty from marketing has been reborn as the Comeback Kid. Hawaiian holidays and belligerent bushfire victims are distant memories
Two factors are at work here. First and foremost, he has handled the coronavirus crisis well. He acted quickly to address both the health emergency and the economic collapse. He listened to the medical experts and co-operated with the premiers and chief ministers through the national cabinet. And he has been very visible.
The second factor is the rally-around-the-flag effect. A rise in public support for leaders and governments often occurs in times of national crisis, usually attributable to patriotism, political bipartisanship and/or increased media coverage.
The Economist says this effect has contributed to significant popularity gains for many world leaders since the outbreak of the pandemic. Among those leaders analysed by The Economist, none has gained more than Morrison. To paraphrase his predecessor, there’s never been a better time to be the Australian prime minister.
Interestingly, the dramatic rise in Morrison’s popularity has not been matched by support for the Coalition. The latest Newspoll has it ahead of Labor by just 51 to 49 on a two-party-preferred basis. That’s a relatively minor change from the pre-pandemic position in January when Labor was ahead by 51 to 49.
Compare this with the position across the Tasman where the poll numbers for New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and her Labour Party have both jumped.
A Newshub Reid Research poll released on Monday gives Ardern a preferred prime minister rating of 59.5%, up 20.8 points since February. Support for Labour is at 56.5%, up 14 points over the same period, at the expense of its opposition.
What explains the marked difference between the polling in Australia and New Zealand?
In each case the government has “flattened the curve” and acted decisively to shore up the economy. On a per-capita basis the low death toll in each country has been similar. If the public is pleased with the results you’d expect a boost in the polls for both the prime minister and the party in government.
Part of the explanation for Morrison’s solo surge is that he was coming off a low base in January. His mishandling of the bushfire disaster was very much a personal failure not a government one. He was the leader missing in action as Australia burned.
By comparison his handling of the pandemic has looked heroic and a major leap in his individual polling should not surprise.
But Morrison’s ascent is not just a recovery from the slump triggered by the bushfire debacle. His preferred PM ranking is now well above where it was before that.
In contrast, the Coalition’s two-party-preferred numbers remain within the same narrow range. Since last year’s election Morrison’s stakes have risen but those of his party have not. There are several reasons for this.
First, much of Australia’s success in handling the crisis is attributed to the bipartisan national cabinet. The focus of public attention is on the individuals in that forum and Morrison, NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian and Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews have been the big winners rather than their parties.
Second, the unwelcome taint of internal division lingers around the Coalition. No one doubts that Barnaby Joyce wants Michael McCormack’s job as leader of the Nationals, and Malcolm Turnbull’s recent book reminded everyone of Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton’s aspirations to power.
Third, the Coalition has been in power for seven years. Time erodes party loyalty. By comparison, Morrison’s prime ministership is relatively new.
Many Australians are prepared to give the new guy a chance. They hope they might finally have a PM who will deliver competence and compassion and who will last more than a couple of years.
After more than a decade of provisional prime ministers, the country is desperate for a “keeper”.
Morrison has a lot more work to do to achieve that status. Unfortunately for him, the government has already had “the best” of this pandemic. Putting the country in lockdown and throwing money at Australians was the easy bit.
The real challenge starts now: opening up society and the economy while containing the virus and withdrawing massive financial support.
If he’s not careful, he may see his popularity snap back well before the economy does and drag down his party with it.
How quickly we forget. Cast your mind back to May last year and you might recall an election where the vast majority of coalition runners were no-where to be seen- it was Morrison v Shorten’s labour (a lot of who did show their faces – but you wouldn’t know from the media coverage. So it is no surprise that Morrison has again cornered the viewing public’s attention. Whenever another minister pops up they usually broke it. (Thats the flip side of a person being “woke”.)
I find it hard to see where Morrison has handled this pandemic well . I think any enquiry will tell us why he hasn’t .
I think his bacon has been saved by the state premiers, and the fact that there has been little unfavourable coverage by the media.
He was slow to close borders. He was reluctant to adopt wage subsidies, and had to be prodded by the opposition for weeks.
Yeah, I tend to agree. It’s like we have forgotten that he very belatedly called for mass social distancing when things looked like they were going out of control and belatedly introduced the economic measures which have given a degree of stability.
Instead the Premiere’s have done the bulk of the leading.
I do wonder if this popularity will drop off once we get back to ‘normal’.
Morrison has totally not handled this pandemic well, unless ‘well’ is judged by the amount of spin or smoke and mirrors used to make it look like he’s doing something for the majority of people. Anything he’s done has involved a mountain of paperwork and usually pours cash into coffers of big business. I am surprised that Crikey is perpetuating the perception. The number of people not able to access JobKeeper (hello, people in the arts) or for that matter JobSeeker (hello, you duped working visa holders) runs in the millions. The income they’d normally contribute to the nation runs in the billions. Then let’s not ignore Morrison’s attack on China as a means, I suspect, of distracting from the ‘Ruby Princess’ fiasco and attempts to further erode democratic rights and freedoms which would make our system more like the authoritarian Chinese one. Hurrah for hypocrisy…
It will be interesting in September (or the end of the 6 months) to see how much of the grand gesture money actually reached workers and how much is still parked in the treasury alongside the money allocated for fire recovery.
Morrisons popularity jump is just a blimp, a desperate society thanking the lifesaver for dragging them back to the beach but they`ll soon forget him as the coalition greed for their big business benefactors takes back the living income from the jobseeker boost and double the number of unemployed are now in the system and forced onto the old $40 a day newstart , as the coalition showers the greedy rich with tax cuts and business subsidies the new multitude of discarded workers will suddenly realise what the poor bastards on the old newstart had to endure, the new unemployed have family and friends who will watch these unfortunate ex workers lose their homes and become homeless and forced into poverty and another million kids will be forced into poverty and the then 2000,000 on the dole will have the support of another million friends and family who will take their wrath out at the polls come 2022, 2019 was Scomo first and last miracle there will be no more.
#ScottyFromMarketing is still the same smug, smirking vacuous ars*hole. All that has happened is that he has opening relied on competent advice to make decisions in respect of the pandemic. But his patent stupidity is already emerging from his pack of greedy rent-seekers masquerading as the economic recovery commission. Dodgy Angus is again off the leash with his suite of incompetencies and corruption. The potato is back on the job turning Australia into a secret police state.
The economy is heading for the biggest. widest trough ever.
I wouldn’t be counting on #ScottyFromMarketing’s synthetic curated popularity lasting long.
Well, one other thing our PM doesn’t have to concern himself with much, is…..Parliament..