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Team Australia returns: How Trump’s war hijacked Labor’s budget

Phillip Coorey

2 Apr 2026

On Wednesday, Redbridge Group and Accent Research released a separate super poll, which sampled 5563 voters between March 6 and March 19 – more than five times as many voters as usually sampled in a poll.

Labor’s primary vote was 31 per cent, One Nation’s was 28 per cent, which was a 10 percentage point increase since the last super sample poll in November 2025, while the Coalition’s vote was down 6 percentage points to 20 per cent.

On Wednesday, Redbridge Group and Accent Research released a separate super poll, which sampled 5563 voters between March 6 and March 19 – more than five times as many voters as usually sampled in a poll.


Labor’s primary vote was 31 per cent, One Nation’s was 28 per cent, which was a 10 percentage point increase since the last super sample poll in November 2025, while the Coalition’s vote was down 6 percentage points to 20 per cent.


One Nation’s vote increased in every age demographic. It was strongest among Gen X males at 35 per cent, which was a 10-percentage-point increase since November, while its support among all Gen Xers was up 12 percentage points to 33 per cent.


More telling was that its support among those born in another country has doubled since November, from 13 per cent to 26 per cent, and among Millennials its vote increased by 11 percentage points from 15 per cent to 26 per cent.


Among the younger Gen Z cohort, One Nation’s support rose 12 percentage points to 33 per cent.


“Over the past four months, we have observed both a broadening and deepening of support for One Nation. Increasingly, One Nation looks like it is becoming the dominant party on the right,” says Shaun Ratcliff from Accent Research.


Read the full story here.

©2025 Accent Research.

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