The
main findings are as follows:
Public
policy and the economy
•
A
majority of voters (53 percent) cast their ballots
based
on policy issues, down from 66 percent
in
2019.
•
The
most important issues in the election identified
by
voters included the cost of living (32 percent),
environmental
issues (17 percent), management of
the
economy (15 percent), and health (14 percent).
•
Voters
preferred Labor’s policies on the cost of
living,
education, health, and the environment.
•
Voters
preferred the Coalition’s policies on
management
of the economy, taxation, and national
security.
The Coalition’s advantage in economic
policy
areas was significantly reduced since 2019.
•
Evaluations
of the national economy were worse in
2022
than in any election since 1990. Two thirds of
voters
reported that the national economy became
worse
over the past year. [my
yellow highlighting]
Leaders
•
Anthony
Albanese was evaluated more favourably
than
any political party leader since Kevin Rudd in
2007,
scoring 5.3 on a zero to 10 popularity scale.
[my yellow highlighting]
•
With
Anthony Albanese as party leader, Labor
attracted
more votes based on leadership than in
the
2016 and 2019 elections.
•
Scott
Morrison became the least popular major
party
leader in the history of the AES, scoring 3.8
on
a zero to 10 popularity scale, down from 5.1 in the
2019
election.
[my
yellow highlighting]
•
Anthony
Albanese was evaluated more favourably
than
Scott Morrison in eight of nine leader
characteristics,
with the biggest differences
in
perceptions of honesty, trustworthiness,
and
compassion.
The
‘Teal’ independents
•
Political
partisanship for the major parties reached
record
lows in 2022. The proportion of voters that
always
vote the same way is also at a record low
(37
percent). This growing detachment from the
major
political parties provided the conditions that
supported
the Teals’ success.
Most
Teal voters were not ‘disaffected Liberals’, but
tactical
Labor and Greens voters. Less than one in
five
Teal voters previously voted for the Coalition.
[my
yellow highlighting]
•
On
average, Teal voters are ideologically close to
Labor
voters – placing themselves just left of centre
on
a zero to 10 left-right scale (Teal mean: 4.4; Labor
mean:
4.3).
Socio-demographic
influences on the vote
•
Men
were more likely to vote for the Coalition than
women
(men: 38 percent; women: 32 percent).
Women
were more likely than men to vote for Labor
and
the Greens. This represents a longer-term
reversal
of the gender gap in voter behaviour, since
the
1990s women have shifted to the left and men
to
the right in their party preferences.
•
Since
2019, the Coalition lost support from both
men
and women. [my
yellow highlighting]
•
There
are major generational differences in voter
behaviour.
The Coalition has very little support
among
Millennials and Generation Z. The
Coalition’s
share
of the vote fell in almost every age group, but
especially
among the youngest cohorts of voters.
[my
yellow highlighting]
•
The
self-identified working class remain more
likely
to vote Labor (38 percent) than the Coalition
(33
percent).
•
Since
2019 the Coalition has lost support among
university-educated
and higher income voters.
[my
yellow highlighting]
The
COVID-19 pandemic
•
Overall,
Australians evaluated the performance of
the
federal government’s handling the pandemic
more
negatively than their state government.
[my
yellow highlighting]
Around
half (51 percent) thought their state
government
handled the pandemic well, compared
to
30 percent who thought the Commonwealth
government
handled the pandemic well.
• There
are major differences across states – in
Tasmania
and Western Australia 75 percent
thought
the state government handled the
pandemic
well, compared to just 36 percent
in
Victoria.
•
Among
those who thought the federal government
handled
the pandemic badly, only 12 percent
voted
for the Coalition, while 42 percent voted
Labor
and almost one third voted for a minor party
or
independent
•
A
majority of Australians thought the pandemic
had
negative impacts on social cohesion or
inclusiveness
(64 percent) and individual
rights
and freedoms (54 percent). One third of
Australians
reported that the pandemic had
negatively
affected their personal economic
circumstances.
Only a small minority of
Australians
believed the pandemic had positive
impacts
for Australian society.
Preferred
party policies
The
major parties have long-term electoral
advantages
in different policy areas (see Figure 1.4).
The
AES asked voters for the same 11 issues, “whose
policies
– the Labor Party’s or the Liberal-National
Coalition’s
–would you say come closer to your own
views
on each of these issues?” The Coalition holds
an
advantage as the preferred party on management
of
the economy, national security, and taxation. Labor,
on
the other hand, is well ahead as the preferred
party
on global warming, the environment, health,
education,
and the cost of living. As nearly one-third
of
the electorate considered the cost of living to be
the
most important issue in the 2022 election, in
principle
this benefitted Labor. The management of
the
economy benefitted the Coalition.
Although
there are fluctuations from election to
election,
overall voters’ preferences for one party
over
the other on these policy areas have remained
constant
over time. Of note in 2022 compared to 2019
is
the larger proportion of voters who said there was
‘no
difference’ between the parties on salient issues
in
the campaign. In 2022 an average of 25 percent
of
voters said there was ‘no difference’ between
the
parties compared to 19 percent in 2019. Voting
in
the 2022 election was clearly less policy-driven
than
in recent elections. Another
notable shift is that
the
Coalition has lost their advantage over Labor on
immigration
and refugees, and their advantage on
management
of the economy and taxation is much
reduced
since 2019. [my
yellow highlighting]
Climate
change
The
2019-2020 bushfires and the 2021-2022 floods
affected
significant proportions of the population
and
brought home to voters in the most dramatic way
the
effects of climate change. This is reflected in
the
significant increase in the proportions of voters
mentioning
global warming as the most important
election
issue (see Figure 1.5). In 2019 and 2022,
10
percent mentioned global warming as the most
important
election issue compared to 4 percent in
2013
and 2016. Mentions of the environment show a
long-term
increase, albeit with a slight decline from
11
percent in 2019 to 7 percent in 2022.
While
not everyone sees the environment as their
top
election concern, there is a broad group who
are
concerned about climate change. Nearly half
of
all voters see global warming as ‘extremely
important’,
with only around one in four seeing it as
‘not
very important’ (see Figure 1.6). However, there
are
substantial party differences in these views.
[my
yellow highlighting]
Almost
six in 10 Labor voters see global warming as
‘extremely
important’ compared to less than one in
four
Coalition voters. As we would expect, the vast
majority
of Greens voters—80 percent—see global
warming
as ‘extremely important’. A large majority
of
all voters see global warming as being either
‘extremely
important’ or ‘quite important’.
The
economy
Following
the lockdowns related to the pandemic
and
the associated decline in economic activity,
the
Australian economy recovered in 2021-2022,
with
unemployment declining to historic lows and a
significant
increase in economic growth. However,
the
government was left with major debt because
of
the economic subsides put in place to shield
businesses
and individuals from the pandemic, and
inflation
has jumped to levels not seen in decades.
As
a result, voters took a very pessimistic view of the
performance
of the national economy in 2022, with
two-thirds
saying that it had become worse over the
previous
year (Figure 1.7), a figure only surpassed in
1990
during the recession of the early 1990s.
TRENDS
IN AUSTRALIAN POLITICAL OPINION: Results from the Australian Election
Study 1987– 2022
can
be read or downloaded at:
https://australianelectionstudy.org/wp-content/uploads/Trends-in-Australian-Political-Opinion-Results-from-the-Australian-Election-Study-1987-2022.pdf
THE
2022 AUSTRALIAN FEDERAL ELECTION: Results from the Australian
Election Study can
be read or downloaded at:
https://australianelectionstudy.org/wp-content/uploads/The-2022-Australian-Federal-Election-Results-from-the-Australian-Election-Study.pdf