house seats: Nine's exclusive IPSOS poll for May shows the Coalition has improved slightly, increasing 1 point to 48 percent on a two-party preferred basis, according to Nine News Australia. However, the current figures show the Coalition down two-and-a-half percent on the last election figures which - if applied as a uniform national swing - would see 10 lower house seats turn red. To improve your experience update it here News National Shorten closing in as preferred prime minister, according to latest polling By Benjamin AnsellAAP11 43pm May 5, is on track to take out the federal election and Bill Shorten has improved significantly in the race for preferred prime minister, according to the latest IPSOS figures. According to the latest polling data, Labor is on track to take out the federal election AAP The biggest move was in the preferred prime minister stakes, which sees the opposition leader climb five percent to 40 percent, just five percent adrift of Mr Morrison, who is on 45 percent. The primary vote for the Greens rose from 13 to 14 percent according to IPSOS while Pauline Hanson's One Nation remains unchanged from the April survey retaining a primary vote of 5 percent. The Coalition's primary vote fell from 37 to 36 percent over the past month while Labor had a primary vote of 33 per cent, down from 34 per cent one month ago and down from 35 per cent at the last election.
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