The fanfare of the budget is over, and the impact of how people perceive both government and opposition parties is in. No real change.
I suppose really it is what we should have expected. Firstly, the budget was not a giveaway and made small adjustments for most. Also none of it has as yet to really impact on any of those that may gain somewhat from what was provided. Secondly, it was very clear that all of Fine Gael, the Independent Alliance, and Fianna Fail had a strong influence over its content. So no real surprise that there are no obvious winners.
The impact is that most parties remain at the same level of support seen last month, with small changes all within the margin of error. Both Fine Gael and Fianna Fail actually drop support by 1% point, which means that the gap between them remains the same. Fine Gael secure 29% of the first preference vote, while Fianna Fail secure 25%, leaving a 4% gap not much larger than that seen at the last election.
For Fine Gael this is of course more positive than their supply and confidence partners. Given that until the change in leadership Fianna Fail had driven support above the Government leaders. However it also shows just how difficult it is possibly going to be to move any further, with an apparent ceiling of support for Fine Gael currently sitting at around 30% of the electorate. It’s also clear that Fianna Fail are not going away any time soon, and a 4% gap is certainly possible to overturn within an election campaign.
The Independent Alliance coverage during the budget sees the party regain lost ground, rising 2% since last month. While this is also within the margin of error for the party it represents a 50% increase in support and returns them to the levels they secured at the last election, so will no doubt be a very welcome shift. The coverage for this group may also explain the rise in support for Independent candidates generally, with those outside the Alliance also gaining support by 2%.
Sinn Fein doesn’t do so well out of the poll. While the drop in support for the party is just 2%, which is within the margin of error, it should be noted that the trend in support over two polls cannot be ignored. A drop of 4% support since July will be of concern, particularly as the 14% support this leaves them at is the same as the party achieved at the last General Election, and the lowest level we have recorded since January.
Sinn Fein were a clear target for both Fine Gael and Fianna Fail before and during the budget, and it appears to be having some effect. Whether Gerry Adams taste for €30 bottles of wine however, has anything to do the parties performance in this poll can only be speculation, but this did of course get heavily covered in the media during the days that the poll was taken.
Of the other parties the Green Party gains 2% support and much like the Independent Alliance this is important for them, as it brings them back up to the highs they have been achieving for much of the year. Labour are up 1%, Solidarity PBP retain a stable 4% support, and the Social Democrats drop 2%.
All in all the results of the poll don’t provide a significant change in narrative on how the electorate feels about the parties, except perhaps the consistent downward trend for Sinn Fein. The question must be what will it take to see a more lasting change and trend in support for one of the main parties? As without such an event, do any of the parties really want another election any time soon?
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