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Latest poll suggests election too close to call

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Jeanette Fitzimons' Green Party is rising in the polls

Jeanette Fitzimons' Green Party is rising in the polls

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Thu, 23 Oct 2008 12:00a.m.

The latest 3 News political poll shows the Maori Party will choose the next Government, and the Greens enjoying their best result in more than five years.

The poll is not good news for National: it effectively means the National and Labour blocks are neck and neck, despite National being by far the more popular major party.

National is steady on 45.1 percent, and Labour actually drops to 37.4 percent. But the Greens are on 8.8 percent, and can be added to Labour's total.

New Zealand First has crept up to 3.5 percent, so Winston Peters cannot be ruled out making a return to Parliament. National leader John Key will be sweating - remember he has ruled working with Peters out.

The Maori Party is on 2.3 percent, but they are expected to win six, or perhaps even all seven Maori seats. ACT is on 1.7 percent, with just two MPs.

Peter Dunne's United Future is pretty unpopular, polling at 0.2 percent, as were the Progressives, on 0.1.

On this poll, Parliament would overhang to 123 seats. National would have 57 seats, ACT two, and United Future one – a total of 60 seats, and not enough to govern. In opposition Labour has 47 seats, the Greens 11 and the Progressives one – a total of 59, also not enough to govern.

Bring in the Maori Party, and they will choose who runs the country for the next three years.

As for preferred Prime Minister, it is all locked up between Key and Helen Clark at 33.6 percent each.

The Greens have pinched some of Labour's vote, and they are celebrating.

Party co-leader Jeanette Fitzsimons had the job of planting a pear tree in a community garden under the watchful eye and helpful hands of one of her supporters.

If the tree reflects new life in the party, Fitzsimons is trampling all over Labour's vote at close to nine percent, and she is not surprised.

The leap of faith in the Greens is Labour's loss. Helen Clark knows it, and is pleading with people not to desert Labour for her future coalition partner.

"My message is please vote Labour, give us the strength," says Clark.

Both National and Labour need the Maori Party to govern.

Clark's confident she can do that, while Key just does not believe the election is this close.

With the economy the main election issue, we asked voters: Who do you trust to best manage it over the next three years?

Clark and Labour: 45.4 percent. Key and National: 45.8 percent.

The nature of MMP means National's lead over Labour gives it a false sense of security, because Clark and Labour have so many friends.

This election is tight, and the Maori Party and the Greens are growing bigger and stronger by the day.

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Comments [10]

John, Lower Hutt
25 Oct 2008 11:38p.m.

Under the National 90s Government, I got sick of working on Christmas day for a stingy $10.00 an hour, while the ones at the top of the pile creamed the spoils.

Paul
25 Oct 2008 2:02p.m.

I (and I hope, some of my countrymen) am sick and tired of this creeping Communism. I realize that the country is addicted to social welfare, and that with the possible exception of ACT, none of our parties have enough guts or imagination to break free of it, but so help me, I will vote for the least amount possible! The idea that some un-elected upstart list MP like Cullen has the right to put his thieving hand in my pocket and give my money to someone else is bizarre. What have we come to when someone like Sue Bradford, who in a million years could never get voted into parliament, installs herself through the cronyism of MMP, and then starts running my life? ENOUGH! Give Kiwis liberty and personal responsibility instead of this anaemic nannyism, and maybe being a New Zealander might become something to be proud of once more.

Guy
24 Oct 2008 9:32p.m.

And remember at 2005's election, tv3's poll was the closest to the final result. The Herald and Fairfax were way out.

Guy Smiley
24 Oct 2008 9:31p.m.

Or Peter, different polling companies use varying methodologies, some better than others, and the margin of error at 50% is 3.1% - meaning there is a 95% chance the real result is within 3.1% of the stated result, a margin that increases the further from the middle you go...

Peter, Upper Hutt
24 Oct 2008 9:24p.m.

And surprise surprise, 2 more polls out today put National comfortably ahead. I wonder if these guys just pull random numbers out of a hat, either that or theres one heck of a lot of 'swing voters' out there.

karl
24 Oct 2008 6:38p.m.

Crap, the poll released on prime news is completely at odds with this one, nov 8th is the only poll to go by.

Thomas, Dunedin
23 Oct 2008 9:57p.m.

Nice to hear some level-headiness floating around, It will be interesting to see how this election goes

Alien
23 Oct 2008 9:10p.m.

The poll's have no meaning, only the election will give a real result. Polls are just the media's way to report something out of nothing. You just have to look at the polls, one poll has national on 45, another on 51. They all mean nothing.

Peter, Upper Hutt
23 Oct 2008 7:12p.m.

Theres only one poll that counts, every other one is meaningless. Bring on Nov 8th and so we can get these children back to running the country instead of throwing mud around.

Guy Smiley
23 Oct 2008 7:00p.m.

I can already hear the people who don't understand how MMP works complaining 'cause their side might lose, again... I'll pre-empt them though by pointing out there are several different schools of thought on the left, and one, basic outdated way of thinking on the right; people who vote for Maori/Greens/Jim know they're voting for Helen as PM, and no, it won't be a travesty of democracy - it means the bloc whom everyone knows works together will be in power.

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