18 August 2025

Albo's approval rating up, but voters unsure about recognising Palestine

| By Chris Johnson
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Hon Anthony Albanese MP, Prime Minister of Australia

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s personal approval rating has hit positive territory in Newspoll for the first time in two years. Photo: Thomas Lucraft.

Anthony Albanese is cementing his popularity with Australian voters, with the latest Newspoll showing more people are satisfied with his performance than those who are dissatisfied.

It is the first Newspoll in two years to give the Prime Minister such a tick of approval, but since his thumping federal election win in May, his standing has remained high.

The Newspoll was published on Monday (18 August) following a survey of 1283 voters, which was conducted online over four days between 11 and August.

It places the Labor Party with a strong lead over the Coalition at 56 per cent to 44 per cent on a two-party-preferred basis.

The previous Newspoll, taken in July, had Labor on 57 per cent and the Coalition at 43 per cent.

This most recent survey has Labor’s primary vote unchanged since the July poll at 36 per cent, while the Coalition’s support rose one percentage point to 30 per cent.

The Greens remain steady on 12 per cent, One Nation is up one point to 9 per cent, while independents and other minor parties suffered a 2-point dip to 13 per cent.

It is in Mr Albanese’s approval rating, however, that would give the PM the most cause for celebration.

READ ALSO Inviting PwC back into the government fold is a moment of national shame

His net approval rating has jumped from zero to +3, with 49 per cent of voters indicating they were satisfied with his performance, against 46 per cent who said they were dissatisfied.

September 2023 was the last time Mr Albanese’s net approval rating in a Newspoll was in positive territory.

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley’s net approval rating dropped two percentage points since the July poll, from -7 to -9.

But 21 per cent of the survey’s respondents noted that it was still too early to judge the new Coalition leader’s performance.

Respondents were emphatically clear on who they thought would be the better prime minister, however, with 51 per cent saying Mr Albanese and 31 per cent saying Ms Ley.

The uncommitted percentage on that question was up two points since the last Newspoll, with 18 per cent undecided or choosing not to indicate who they thought would be the better PM.

Both leaders had dropped a point on that question since last month’s survey.

The Prime Minister’s recently announced resolve to recognise Palestinian statehood is more evenly viewed by Australian voters, as indicated by a separate poll also published on Monday.

The Resolve survey, conducted for Nine News, shows voter support for the formal recognition of Palestine is split.

All up, 36 per cent don’t believe recognition will have any tangible impact on the Middle East conflict; 25 per cent believe it will affect the situation; and 40 per cent are unsure about it.

Thirty-two per cent agreed Australia should wait until Hamas is replaced in Gaza and/or Palestine considers recognising Israel’s right to exist, before recognition and statehood are made formal.

On the same question, 24 per cent said recognition should happen regardless of who was in power.

Resolve’s pollster Jim Reed told Nine his survey’s feedback was that recognition was largely symbolic, “which is not to devalue the power of symbols”.

“In this case, people don’t think Australia’s actions will make much, if any, difference on the ground in Gaza.”

Resolve polled 1800 voters between 11 and 16 August.

READ ALSO Coalition would revoke Palestinian recognition, says Ley

The Prime Minister has announced that Australia will join France, Canada and Britain in recognising Palestine at the next session of the United Nations General Assembly, to be held in New York in September.

“Australia will recognise the State of Palestine. Australia will recognise the right of the Palestinian people to a state of their own, predicated on the commitments Australia has received from the Palestinian Authority,” Mr Albanese said.

“A two-state solution is humanity’s best hope to break the cycle of violence in the Middle East and to bring an end to the conflict, suffering and starvation in Gaza.”

The Coalition opposed the decision, with Ms Ley insisting that recognition of Palestine without a proper peace plan in place for the Middle East is the wrong course of action.

The Federal Opposition has resolved that a future Coalition government would revoke recognition of Palestine.

“The Coalition wants Israeli hostages to be released, Gazans to be fed and for the war to end,” Ms Ley said.

“The Albanese Government’s decision to recognise a Palestinian state outside of a proper peace and two-state process will not deliver that outcome.

“The decision does not make the world a safer place, expedite the end of the conflict, deliver a two-state solution, see the free flow of aid, support the release of hostages, nor put an end to the terrorist group Hamas.”

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Glenn Goldensack2:44 pm 20 Aug 25

Abbas is only there to fulfil the role that Israel has for him: to subdue his people while Israel slowly boils as you would a frog, slowly.
Palestinians aren’t allowed to have a democracy because they (shame, shame, shamefully) would appose the colonisation.
And then for Penfold to go on and criticise his servant Abbas, goodness me. Marvellous theatrics. Bravo.

Any poll where approximately a quarter of participants advocate for Australia to recognise a Palestinian state, even if the terrorist group Hamas is in control, is skewed and doesn’t reflect Australian values.

This poll is pretty meaningless.

Swamp Harrier10:29 am 19 Aug 25

Please define Australian values, Colin Wood.

To show you have a point, distinguish them from the values of people from other countries, especially democracies with intact rule of law.

Simon Kovacs1:41 pm 20 Aug 25

I’ll spell it for you, swampy: any values not shared by “Colin Woodman” he feels are not Australian, and by Australian, he means Israel first.

HiddenDragon8:55 pm 18 Aug 25

The 20% gap between Labor’s primary vote and its two-party-preferred vote, which is made up largely of support from people who want government to spend even more and regulate even more than is Labor’s natural inclination, goes a long way towards explaining why this week’s productivity conclave will quickly be forgotten as Australian continues its stumble towards a latter day version of 1970s stagflation.

Not being MAGA accolytes maybe the moderate middle here just gets even more turned off the right when they see the repeated snark without solutions and histrionic and exaggerated claims.

I’ve got it now. Palestine, Palestine, Palestine. To Albanese, that sounds better than tax, tax, tax

Confirms my view thst Australians are a bunch of uninformed, complacent idiots. The WORST govt and PM ever. I just do not recognise this country I grew up in and served as an air forve reserve officer. No doubt the result of our leftist infested schools and universities. I disown the place.

The problem is Bob that the Liberal opposition is so weak, federally and in the ACT. Therefore these numbers don’t just reflect satisfaction with Labor.

No one forces you to stay here Bob. Go to a patriotism driven fantasyland like the US if you don’t like it here anymore.

When the rabble gain popularity it’s because the other rabble loose popularity, Im wondering all these ALBO supporters are.

Trevor Willis1:14 pm 18 Aug 25

I find it very hard to believe that anyone could have any confidence in either Albonese or Wong as they are both useless and an embarrassment to our country

Somebody put it quite eloquently the other day – on the voice referendum, Albanese started with 60% national support but managed to turn that into 40% support. Yet he thinks he’s going to get Palestinians to change their minds when 85% of them do not support Abbas, who is 20 years into a four year term.

Simply brilliant Albo.

Yes, Albo is responsible for putting the referendum to the public. He is not responsible for the actions of either side of the debate, particularly groups like Advance. It was never his argument to make to vote yes, it was however his responsibility to honour the process started by Rudd and put it to referendum. But what does this have to do with anything? Seems the other side of this conflict is pretty set in their own ways, just like the Palestinians. Who is more likely to compromise, the extremists that are winning or the ones who are losing?

Does he really care what happens? He is more keen to change how he is seen and remembered than accomplishing material change.

That Guy – perhaps you were thinking of a different voice referendum. Albanese not only championed the yes vote, his concession speech started with “My fellow Australians, at the outset I want to say that while tonight’s result is not one that I had hoped for”.

It shows just how appalling his judgement is on these matters.

Isn’t it interesting though in the context of your comments about “extremists”. The voice referendum was held on 14 October, just 7 days after October 7. Perhaps Albo is still smarting.

The man is allowed to have an opinion on the matter but it is up to the people to decide and they did. Like I said, he was following on the process of reconciliation.
For your info a couple days before october 7 I was at a festival no different than the one that was attacked. When I saw those videos I cried like you wouldn’t believe. I want the hostages freed, I want terrorists held responsible. But unlike you Penfold, I just don’t want an entire population wiped out in the process. If you commit a crime, your children shouldn’t be punished. How uncivilised.

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