Polling predicts further uncertainty as state votes

Ethan James |

Polls suggest the state election at the weekend won’t resolve Tasmania’s political instability.
Polls suggest the state election at the weekend won’t resolve Tasmania’s political instability.

For the second time in 16 months, Tasmanians will head to the polls with all signs pointing to further political uncertainty. 

Saturday’s snap vote, triggered after minority Liberal premier Jeremy Rockliff lost a no-confidence motion in early June, is the island’s fourth in seven years. 

The 11-year Liberal government was plunged into minority in 2023 when two MPs quit the party and was returned in minority at the March 2024 poll. 

Election-eve polling by YouGov has the Liberals (31 per cent) and Labor (30 per cent) neck-and-neck, with neither reaching the 18-seat mark required for majority.

It represents a dip in support for Labor from YouGov polling in early July. 

Backing for independents (20 per cent) has risen while the Greens (16 per cent) have remained stable. 

In a hung parliament, Labor leader Dean Winter was backed by 55 per cent of respondents over Mr Rockliff (45 per cent) as preferred premier.

There have been no big-spending promises in a campaign held under the shadow of ballooning budget debt, forecast to more than double to $13 billion in 2028.

Mr Rockliff’s final pitch to voters was hinged on his party’s experience and Tasmania’s 3.8 per cent unemployment rate, the lowest in Australia.

“We were elected to do a job in March 2024 … and we’ve got the leadership to get on with the job,” he told reporters. 

Tasmanian Premier Jeremy Rockliff and Labor's Dean Winter at a debate
Election-eve polling has Dean Winter ahead of Jeremy Rockliff as preferred premier. (Linda Higginson/AAP PHOTOS)

Mr Winter, whose party holds 10 seats compared to the Liberals’ 14, said it was time for a fresh start.

He lashed Mr Rockliff’s financial management and the botched delivery of two new Spirit of Tasmania ships, delayed because a berth isn’t ready. 

“They’ve mismanaged major projects … (and) our finances are the worst in the nation,’ Mr Winter said.

Mr Rockliff’s signature campaign pledge to create a state-owned insurer on Friday copped a scathing assessment from Treasury which said it lacked detail. 

Spirit of Tasmania IV leaving Scotland
The failure to have a berth ready for new Spirit of Tasmania ships has been an election issue. (HANDOUT/TT-LINE)

Both leaders have ruled out doing a deal with the Greens to govern, but have said they’re prepared to work with sensible independents. 

The Greens, who hold five seats, have vowed to “push hard” in opposition to a new $945 million stadium in Hobart that is supported by the Liberals and Labor. 

The 2024 poll elected three independents. Two are against the stadium which is a condition of Tasmania’s deal for an AFL team.

AAP