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AFR reader poll

October

The Curtis LNG plant in Queensland.

Gas, nukes don’t change the importance of energy targets: poll

Most readers of The Australian Financial Review believe the Albanese government cannot afford to fall short of its legislated 2030 emissions target.

  • Euan Black
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

More AFR readers support Dutton’s Middle East stance than the PM’s

Many Financial Review readers support the opposition leader’s stance, while others see it as a wedge in his attempts to gain political advantage.

  • Max Mason

September

The ACCC legal action against Coles and Woolworths might not spark consumers to shift.

ACCC supermarket case won’t hurt view of big business: AFR readers

Allegations Coles and Woolworths misled consumers with fake discounts have not significantly undermined confidence in big business generally, according to a new poll.

  • Tom McIlroy
Only 28 per cent of AFR readers said they make their next vehicle purchase an EV.

‘More for a second-hand toothbrush’: Why EVs are on the nose

The most commonly held concerns about buying an electric vehicle related to upfront cost, charging facilities, and deterioration.

  • Gus McCubbing

July

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has rejected Opposition Leader Peter Dutton’s pledge to reinstate it if elected, saying the body failed to curtail the excesses of the CFMEU when it existed.

Construction watchdog should be reinstated, AFR readers say

The Albanese government should reinstate a federal construction watchdog and hold a royal commission into the CFMEU, according to an AFR reader poll.

  • Gus McCubbing
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Senator Fatima Payman quit the Labor party because of its position on the war in Gaza.

Payman wrong to cross the floor: AFR readers

A majority of readers surveyed by The Australian Financial Review said they did not support the Senator’s decision to ignore long-standing Labor Party convention.

  • Tom McIlroy

June

Peter Dutton

AFR readers back Dutton’s assessment of climate targets

Almost 70 per cent of readers believe Australia is unlikely to meet its “aggressive” emissions reductions targets.

  • Maxim Shanahan

May

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

Readers back production tax credits, wary of immigration cuts

Most readers of The Australian Financial Review support the Albanese government’s production tax credits, but less than a third back his immigration cuts designed to tackle the housing crisis.

  • Updated
  • Gus McCubbing
Treasurer Jim Chalmers will have to balance competing priorities when he delivers the Federal Budget on Tuesday.

Readers want government to cut debt, rein in spending

Almost 60 per cent readers want Treasurer Jim Chalmers’ federal budget priority to either reduce debt or reign in government spending in this year’s budget - but another 24 per cent want cost-of-living relief to be the focus.

  • Edmund Tadros

April

Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme Bill Shorten.

AFR readers sceptical of Shorten’s NDIS promise

Almost 75 per cent of AFR readers doubt the Albanese government can reform the National Disability Insurance Scheme within five years.

  • Tom Rabe

March

Close to 80 per cent of AFR readers believe federal parliamentary terms should be extended to four years.

Resounding majority of AFR readers back four-year federal terms

Almost 80 per cent of The Australian Financial Review’s readers have backed calls to extend federal parliamentary terms to four years.

  • Tom Rabe
AFR readers say companies should be proactive in reducing their gender pay gaps.

‘A bloody disgrace’: AFR readers demand companies reduce pay gaps

Nearly 70 per cent of readers also said that men taking on more domestic duties would enable women to take on higher paying roles and help reduce the gap.

  • Hannah Wootton

February

On the clock: Industrial Relations Minister Tony Burke

Disconnect laws will harm flexibility, productivity: AFR readers

A majority of readers polled believe workers have a right to switch off, but many believe it should be up to them and their employers to decide.

  • Samantha Hutchinson
Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in  Parliament House on Tuesday.

After tax cuts ‘serious examination’ of system is needed: AFR readers

Just over a third of readers say Labor’s stage three tax cut changes was a “broken promise that could not be justified” and 78 per cent want broader reform.

  • Cindy Yin

January

Gina Cass-Gottlieb, Chairperson of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.

PM must call for ACCC supermarket price gouging probe: AFR readers

Almost 70 per cent of respondents to The Australian Financial Review’s reader poll believe the Albanese government should call on the consumer watchdog to investigate supermarket price gouging.

  • Tom Rabe
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December 2023

Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong has been voted the best performing cabinet member by readers of The Australian Financial Review.

Wong rated best minister for second year: AFR readers

The Foreign Affairs Minister beat a strong showing from Jim Chalmers as Linda Burney was named the worst performer.

  • Tom Rabe
Treasurer Jim Chalmers addresses the investment roundtable at Parliament House in Canberra.

Super should go green but not for lower returns, say AFR readers

Financial Review readers want to maintain performance testing, and for super funds to invest in the energy transition, but not if it hurts their own returns.

  • Maxim Shanahan

November 2023

Readers back moves to factor work from office compliance into performance reviews.

‘Dreadful and lonely’: WFH regret as back-to-office debate sharpens

But the majority disagreed with suggestions that people who choose to work from home should be paid less, and 67 per cent supported broader moves to flexible work.

  • Hannah Wootton
More than one in three AFR readers believe Treasurer Jim Chalmers should be doing more to tame inflation.

Chalmers shares blame for inflation, poll finds

Treasurer Jim Chalmers should have done more to boost productivity and fight the cost of living, 35 per cent of Financial Review readers polled say

  • Euan Black

October 2023

Petrol prices have been higher than $2 a litre for weeks.

AFR readers temper spending as rates bite

Households are tapping savings accounts as surging oil prices and angst about higher mortgage costs take hold.

  • Max Mason