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Several polling firms have conducted opinion polls during the term of the 54th New Zealand Parliament (2023–present) for the next New Zealand general election. The regular polls are the quarterly polls produced by Television New Zealand ( 1 News ) conducted by Verian (formerly known as Colmar Brunton and Kantar Public), along with monthly ...
Chris Hipkins is sworn in as the 41st Prime Minister of New Zealand. 22 Jan 2023: Chris Hipkins is unanimously elected Leader of the Labour Party. 19 Jan 2023: Jacinda Ardern announces her resignation as Prime Minister of New Zealand, taking effect 25 January 2023. 10–16 Jan 2023: Taxpayers' Union–Curia: 1,000 31.7: 37.2: 10.6: 10.8: 1.6: 2 ...
Left and right-hand axis markers indicate the actual poll results from the 2017 and 2020 elections respectively. Summary of poll results for parties that received less than 10% of the party vote in the 2017 election, and that are routinely included by polling companies. Lines give the mean estimated by a LOESS smoother (smoothing set to span ...
0–9. Opinion polling for the 1993 New Zealand general election; Opinion polling for the 1996 New Zealand general election; Opinion polling for the 1999 New Zealand general election
Opinion polls have been undertaken periodically since the 2014 election, primarily by MediaWorks New Zealand, Roy Morgan Research, and Television New Zealand. The graph on the left below shows the collated results of all polls for parties that polled above the 5% electoral threshold at the 2014 election; the graph on the right shows results for ...
On 19 November 2022, New Zealand First leader Winston Peters ruled out a coalition with Labour, claiming "No one gets to lie to me twice". [2] In April 2023, National leader Christopher Luxon commented that it would be "highly unlikely" that National would form a government with Te Pāti Māori or the Greens; however, a spokesperson later ...
The graph on the left below shows the collated results of all five polls for parties that polled above the 5% electoral threshold at the 2011 election; The graph on the right shows results for parties that polled between 1% and 4.9%, or won an electorate seat, at the 2011 election, as well as parties contesting the 2014 election which have ...
Polls are listed in the table below in chronological order. Refusals are generally excluded from the party vote percentages, while question wording and the treatment of "don't know" responses and those not intending to vote may vary between survey firms.