Curia poll on Auckland Mayoralty
Monday, February 22nd, 2010 at 12:00 pmOver at Curiablog, I have blogged the results of a poll done last week of 1,200 Aucklanders on the Auckland Mayoralty.
It is very rare to have a dead tie between two candidates, but that is what we got – of the 85% of respondents who had a preference between John Banks and Len Brown, they got 50.0% each.
Banks, who is the client who commissioned the poll, has a small 4.4% lead when we ask Aucklanders unprompted who their preference for Mayor is. He gets 42.5% to 38.1% for Brown. Bob Harvey is at 7.2% and Stephen Tindall at 4.8%.
But in the second question, when asked if it is a choice between John Banks and Len Brown, they are dead even. This is a change from the previous poll in September when Brown was almost 10% ahead of Banks.
It looks like it will be a very interesting contest!
Tags: Auckland Council, Curia, curiablog, John Banks, Len Brown, PollsOne News Poll
Sunday, August 2nd, 2009 at 6:17 pmOne News have had their first poll in four months. I’ve blogged the details at Curiablog.
Guyon Espiner commented that if the Government leads by this much during the worst recession since the 1930s, the fear for Labour must be what might happen next year when presumably the country has come out of recession.
Tags: curiablog, Guyon Espiner, PollsMarch Public Polls
Monday, April 6th, 2009 at 4:00 pm
The March 2009 public polls newsleter by Curia has just been published. As one can see not a lot of change. The newsletter is e-mail only, and you can subscribe to receive it at this webpage.
Also of interest to some people may be a recent poll of small and medium busineses by Curia for BDO Spicers and Ideas Shop. Curiablog has a summary of some results and links to the main reports. I found it interesting that recruiting and retaining staff was still cited as a major challenge for many SMEs (despite the recession) and also the number of firms that had flexible working practices such as being able to go from full-time to part-time, or work partly from home.
Tags: Curia, curiablog, PollsExplaining the Polls
Friday, March 20th, 2009 at 9:02 amOver at Curiablog I have blogged on the apparent differences between polls on the Section 59 law and how in fact the two polls can be reconciled to each other.
For example while the UMR poll did find only 28% opposed to the new law, they also found 58% agreed that “There are certain circumstances when it is alright for parents to use physical punishment with children” .
In fact only 20% of UMR respondents disagreed with that statement.
I’ve also covered in some detail, how different polls can be focusing on different elements of a law, and differently worded questions can produce different results. This does not mean either one is biased – it means they are focused on different things.
Tags: Curia, curiablog, Polls, Section 59, UMRCuriablog updates
Wednesday, March 18th, 2009 at 12:00 pmUp until now I have only blogged details of NZ polls at Curiablog.
I plan to also do at least a couple of blog posts a week highlighting interesting overseas polls, or commentaries based on polls. Also to cover stories about polling itself.
Just done a short post quoting Scott Rasmussen on Obama’s poll numbers.
Tags: curiablog, PollsAll four polls agree
Friday, November 7th, 2008 at 7:10 amTwo more polls out, and over on curiablog. All show a National-led Government on their poll, but most show a small change could give the Maori Party the decision.
On a size and time weighted average of all polls National/ACT/United Future have 64 seats and need 62 to govern.
If you take account of the last four polls only, the change is Labour drops one to 43and ACT gains one to four.
Whether or not there is a clear result, will depend on turnout primarily. If people want a change of Government you have to go vote for it.
Tags: curiablog, Election 2008, PollsTV Polls
Thursday, November 6th, 2008 at 6:32 pmCuriablog has details of the two TV polls tonight. I epxect we will get tomorrow a Herald, Fairfax and Morgan poll also. The curiablog average has been updated for tonight’s polls but I will do a final update tomorrow morning.
Both polls show that National/ACT/United Future can form a Government, but that it is possible the Maori Party can hold the balance of power. The Greens are up strongly and in TV3 Labour dropped away a lot.
Chris Trotter on Alt TV this week said that on current polling a Labour/Green/Maori Party Government would be the most left-wing Government New Zealand has had for at least 70 years.
And he is correct. With the Greens at 10% they would not be a minor coalition partner but would pull the Government greatly towards the left and away from economic growth (which they don’t even like much). Of a Cabinet of 20, the Greens could expect five or six places, or in other words every current Green MP would become a Minister – including Keith Locke, Sue Kedgley, and Sue Bradford.
So it a clear choice for voters as we head into the election. As we face unprecedented economic challenges, it is a choice of a National-led Government that makes up 95% of the Government, or what Chris Trotter calls the most left-wing Government in 70 years.
Tags: coalition options, curiablog, Election 2008, PollsPolls Update
Saturday, October 11th, 2008 at 9:27 amCuriablog has details of the two polls out yesterday, both showing the Maori Party would hold the balance of power.
The size and time weighted average still has a National-led Government possible without the Maori Party, but this will change as the older polls with a larger gap get less weighting.
Tags: curiablog, PollsCaching and WordPress
Saturday, September 27th, 2008 at 9:56 amMost people will have seen the sidebar graphic with the Curiablog poll average. I update it everytime there is a new poll by replacing the graphic file at curiablog with a new graphic.
By keeping the file name the same, it means other sites (such as Kiwiblog and Policy Net) can have the graphic automatically updated.
But there is a problem. WordPress seems to cache the old graphic and it takes one to two days for the new graphic to appear.
Anyone know of a way to stop this by clearing the cache? Note that curiablog is run on wordpress.org – it is not my own installation.
Tags: curiablogNew Zealand First polling
Friday, September 19th, 2008 at 12:09 pmFor those interested, I have done a post on Curiablog with a graph of how all six polling companies have placed NZ First support. One company seems to be consistently different to the other five.
Tags: curiablog, Polls, Winston FirstCoalition Options
Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 at 4:00 pmI’ve added a new feature onto the party polls at curiablog. Under Coalition options I’ve listed the easiest (as in least number of parties in order of difficulty) scenarios for a National-led Government and Labour-led Government using the seat projection for a poll.
For example the latest TV3 poll had:
- National 60
- Labour 46
- Green 7
- NZ First 0
- Maori 6
- United Future 1
- ACT 3
- Progressive 1
- Total 124
- National 60 + ACT 3 = 63/124 – majority possible
- Labour 46 + Progressive 1 + Greens 7 + Maori 6 + United Future 1 = 61/124 = no majority possible
Poll Updates
Saturday, August 16th, 2008 at 6:20 amTauranga Poll Results
Sunday, August 10th, 2008 at 7:12 pmFor those who missed the poll on One News, I have the results on curiablog.
Obviously the great news is that Simon Bridges is 20% ahead of Winston Peters. Peters is facing a crushing from someone born around the time Peters was first elected to Parliament.
What I also found also of interest is the party vote results with NZ First at only 6%. Last election they got over 13% so this is a loss of over half their support.
Tags: curiablog, Polls, Simon Bridges, Tauranga, Winston FirstA five poll weekend
Monday, July 21st, 2008 at 7:03 amCuriablog has the details of the five polls out over the weekend. Four national polls and one in Ikaroa-Rawhiti.
The time and size weighted rolling average now has National at 51.5% and Labour 33.1% – a 18.4% gap. If one takes just the latest four polls into account it is 50.8% to 33.9% – a 16.9% gap. The average gap in June was 23% so a definite closing.
Tags: curiablog, PollsPoll Results
Saturday, July 19th, 2008 at 7:17 amCuriablog has the details of the latest two polls, and will cover the two TV polls expected tomorrow. Also a Marae-Digipoll out tomorrow on Ikaroa-Rawhiti.
The graphic showing the rolling average hasn’t yet shown as updated, even though a new one has been uploaded. The WordPress site seems to cache material for a while and then suddenly the new one appears. So it should update soon.
Tags: curiablog, PollsA dedicated polling blog
Wednesday, July 9th, 2008 at 7:13 amAs I mentioned a few weeks ago, I have established a dedicated blog on polls and polling – curiablog.
Curiablog will be a specialist blog on polls and polling, with a mainly (but not exclusively) New Zealand focus.
I hope it will provide the following information:
- A record of all public polls published within New Zealand, and links to the original data or at least media reports based on that data. This is not just party political polls, but also issue polls.
- A size and time weighted average of the public political party polls
- Over time, a guide to useful information on polls and polling including FAQs on issues such as exit polls, why polls disagree etc etc. I will generally link the best overseas content where appropriate.
- Links to significant overseas polls.
- Links to and commentary on blog posts on polling from some of the international specialist blog sites.
It is not intended to be a partisan debating forum. Comments are welcome of course, but it intended to be somewhat more sedate than Kiwiblog.
One feature of the blog, which people may find useful, is a sidebar graphic showing the latest size and time weighted average of the public polls.
There is also an excel spreadsheet on the blog which people can download and they can see the individual polls, the weightings, the electorate seat assumptions, and the projected/likely Electorate and List MPs in the future Parliament.
Note that this is all based on the publicly available and published polls. It should not be regarded as a prediction by me on individual seats or candidates. Generally no seat is assumed to change hands unless a poll has been published in the media showing a change.
Other bloggers are welcome to display the graphic on their own sites. It will be updated daily and will automatically update on your site when it is updated here, except at month end. To add it to your own sidebar just copy the text below:
<a href=”http://curiablog.wordpress.com/2008-public-poll-average-calculations/”><img class=”alignnone size-full wp-image-15″ src=”http://curiablog.wordpress.com/files/2008/07/curiappa.jpg” alt=”" width=”161″ height=”355″ /></a>
WordPress doesn’t allow me to place updated graphics in the same location for the whole year, as it files by month. This means at the end of the month the graphic location will change (from “…/2008/07/…” to “…/2008/08/…” etc. So once a month just need to change your text, or copy the new location from here.
I hope people find it useful, It has only modest content for now, but overtime I hope it will be a useful permanent repository of public polling information in New Zealand.
Tags: Blogosphere, curiablog, Polls





