‘Aussies still love dumped ex-PM Rudd’
AUSTRALIA: A year after the Labor Party removed Kevin Rudd as
Australia’s prime minister, his popularity is so high he would be able
to reverse the party’s failing fortunes if reinstated, a poll showed
Monday. Rudd was dumped as leader in a surprise Labor Party coup led by
his then deputy Julia Gillard in June 2010 and the party’s standing in
opinion polls has plunged ever since.
But a Nielsen poll published in The Sydney Morning Herald reveals
that the party’s support would jump to an election-winning position if
Rudd was prime minister again.
“The poll is fresh evidence that Labor made a mistake of historic
proportions in unseating Rudd for Gillard,” political editor Peter
Hartcher wrote in a front-page commentary.
As Gillard the nation’s first female prime minister battles
plummeting support blamed on a policy failure on asylum-seekers and a
backflip on the introduction of a pollution tax, Rudd is seen as a
potential saviour for Labor.
With Rudd reinstalled in the top job, the party would reclaim the
lead and overtake the conservative coalition led by Tony Abbott 52
percent to 48 percent, the poll found. Under Gillard, Labor attracts
only 42 percent.
“The poll does not tell us why but we can reasonably suppose the main
reason is legitimacy,” Hartcher wrote.
“In the eyes of the people, Gillard never had it. Rudd never lost
it.”
The poll taken over the weekend confirms that the Mandarin-speaking
Rudd is overwhelmingly the preferred Labor leader 44 percent compared to
Gillard’s 19 percent.
Sydney, Monday, AFP |