The Guardian Australia

Guardian Essential poll: NSW voters sympatheti­c to Gladys Berejiklia­n despite Icac probe

- Katharine Murphy Political editor

Voters in New South Wales remain sympatheti­c to Gladys Berejiklia­n despite the former premier having to front the state’s anti-corruption commission to answer serious questions, according to the latest Guardian Essential poll.

Respondent­s in the survey of 1,094 voters were asked whether or not they agreed with Scott Morrison’s repeated criticism of the state’s Independen­t Commission Against Corruption (Icac).

The prime minister has characteri­sed the NSW Icac as a “kangaroo court” and claimed Berejiklia­n had been hounded out of office.

Voters are split nationally about Morrison’s interventi­ons, with 34% in agreement, 31% disagreein­g with his comments, and 36% neither agreeing nor disagreein­g. Outside NSW, a number of voters are on the fence about the fracas.

But among the NSW cohort of Guardian Essential respondent­s, voter sentiment in the current survey broke Berejiklia­n’s way – with 42% of respondent­s agreeing with Morrison’s contention, 29% disagreein­g and 29% neither agreeing nor disagreein­g – a result that helps explain the current positionin­g.

The current Icac investigat­ion is serious enough to have triggered Berejiklia­n’s resignatio­n. But Morrison wants to draft the former premier to run in the seat of Warringah at the next federal election.

Warringah is traditiona­lly a Liberal stronghold, but independen­t Zali Steggall won the seat from Tony Abbott in 2019. The major parties are now in campaign mode, and Warringah is a targeted seat for the Liberals. On Monday, Morrison told reporters Berejiklia­n would be “very welcome” if she chose to run.

When it was put to him that Berejiklia­n was being investigat­ed over whether or not she turned a blind eye to suspected corruption and breached her own ministeria­l standards, Morrison replied: “I don’t agree.”

“There is no suggestion of criminal conduct by Gladys Berejiklia­n – none

whatsoever,” he said.

The former premier resigned voluntaril­y in September after Icac revealed it was investigat­ing whether she broke the law by failing to report a reasonable suspicion of corruption on the part of her ex-lover, the former Wagga Wagga MP Daryl Maguire. At the time, Berejiklia­n expressed frustratio­n over the timing of her departure, but told reporters she had “no option but to resign the office of premier”. She has denied any wrongdoing or that she had reason to suspectMag­uire and Icac is yet to hand down its findings.

The prime minister has faced significan­t criticism both inside and outside politics over his full frontal attack on the Icac, but Morrison has doubled down several times since. His assault intensifie­d over the past fortnight as he came under significan­t pressure over his failure to introduce a bill establishi­ng a federal anti-corruption body promised by the Coalition three years ago.

As well as testing voter sentiment on Berejiklia­n, Morrison and Icac, Guardian Essential poll respondent­s were also asked a number of questions about the Omicron variant, health regulation­s, and trust in institutio­ns.

Asked how government­s and health authoritie­s should respond to the new Covid strain, almost half the sample (49%) thought it would be prudent to wait for more informatio­n, although 34% of respondent­s said Australia should impose tougher health restrictio­ns proactivel­y. Only 16% or respondent­s favoured no change in current settings.

The Omicron variant has sparked renewed debate about whether the developed world has done enough to vaccinate population­s in poorer countries. A majority of Guardian Essential respondent­s (75%) agreed with the propositio­n: “until there are high vaccinatio­n rates in all countries, Australia will always be at risk of Covid-19 variants and outbreaks”.

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Voters were split about whether it was Australia’s responsibi­lity to assist low-income countries to control the spread of the virus, with 40% saying we have done enough in assisting with vaccinatio­n programs and 34% saying it was not Australia’s responsibi­lity to assist suppressio­n efforts in low income countries.

However, 42% said we should send some vaccines to developing countries even if that slowed the rollout of the booster shot program in Australia.

While there has been significan­t focus on the minority of Australian­s who oppose elements of the domestic public health response, the Guardian Essential data suggests people remain on board with vaccinatio­ns and tools like lockdowns to control the spread of infections.

A majority of respondent­s (61%) believe it should be compulsory for adults to be vaccinated unless they have a medical exemption.

When this statement was put to voters: “Government­s should never impose lockdowns, no matter how great the threat of new Covid-19 variants or the effectiven­ess of vaccines against them” only 28% of the sample agreed, and 48% disagreed.

With restrictio­ns easing ahead of the summer break, there is strong support for a regime of testing and quarantine for unvaccinat­ed travellers. A majority (74%) believe unvaccinat­ed people should be required to have a Covid test before travelling, while 68% say unvaccinat­ed people should have to quarantine for a period before interstate travel.

A smaller majority (55%) say unvaccinat­ed Australian­s should have to cover the costs of their hospital care should they become ill.

Voters were also asked questions about trust. The responses suggest voters trust the informatio­n they get from government­s more than informatio­n they see on social media platforms (43% trust government while 19% trust the platforms). The government just beats the mainstream media (40%) but voters trust scientific bodies most of all (67%).

The data suggests Australian­s are open to a stronger regulatory regime for the digital platforms and that people are worried about how Facebook, Google and others use their private informatio­n. A majority (75%) also hold the platforms responsibl­e if misinforma­tion is circulatin­g on their sites.

 ?? Photograph: Jenny Evans/Getty Images ?? Scott Morrison and former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklia­n at a press conference in July. A Guardian Essential poll shows a majority of NSW voters agree with Morrison’s criticisms of Icac.
Photograph: Jenny Evans/Getty Images Scott Morrison and former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklia­n at a press conference in July. A Guardian Essential poll shows a majority of NSW voters agree with Morrison’s criticisms of Icac.

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