Skip to content
Political

Poll: Libs must dump nuclear to win Brisbane

Liberals Against Nuclear 2 mins read
  • Media:

New polling shows Liberal candidate for Brisbane, Trevor Evans, is set to lose the federal seat of Brisbane at the upcoming election, with the Coalition's nuclear energy policy identified as a key factor driving voters away.

 

A uComms poll of 1,184 Brisbane voters commissioned by Liberals Against Nuclear found Evans losing the seat, with the nuclear policy significantly damaging his chances.

 

"This polling confirms what we've been warning about – Trevor Evans will lose Brisbane unless the Liberal Party dumps its nuclear policy," said Andrew Gregson, spokesperson for Liberals Against Nuclear.

52.4% of Brisbane voters said the Liberal-National Party's proposal to build seven government-owned nuclear reactors made them less likely to vote for Trevor Evans and the Coalition.

 

Critically, the poll found that even among LNP voters, one in four (27%) said the nuclear policy made them less likely to support the party. Worse still, among undecided voters – those the Liberals must win over – 42% said the nuclear policy pushed them away from the LNP while only 27% said it made them more likely to vote LNP.

 

The poll shows Evans currently securing just 32.1% of the primary vote, with the Greens' Stephen Bates at 24.2% and Labor's Madonna Jarrett at 23.2%. When preferences are distributed, Evans loses to either the Greens 52% to 48% or to Labor by an even wider margin of 56% to 44%.

 

“To form Government, the Liberals must win Brisbane and seats like it across the country. To do that, candidates like Trevor Evans must attract undecided voters. The nuclear policy is pushing them away. The only way to fix this is to immediately drop the nuclear policy," Gregson said.

 

"Every day that the party persists with this $600 billion nuclear plan is another day that Trevor Evans' chances of winning Brisbane diminish. If the Liberal leadership is serious about forming government, they need to act now to win seats like Brisbane by dropping this toxic policy.”

 

The polling was conducted by uComms on March 20, 2025, using a self-completed and open-ended automated SMS and voice polling methodology, with results weighted for population distribution.

 

Media Contact: Andrew Gregson 0435 218 403 www.liberalsagainstnuclear.au

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Political
  • 01/04/2025
  • 11:56
Dementia Australia

Federal election: Dementia Australia calls for urgent action

With Australians heading to the polls in a matter of weeks, Dementia Australia is issuing a stark warning: Australians impacted by dementia cannot wait. With dementia set to soon become the nation's leading cause of death, Dementia Australia is urgently calling on all parties, independents and candidates to commit to immediate action. Dementia Australia CEO Professor Tanya Buchanan said there are an estimated 433,300 Australians living with dementia and 29,000 people living with younger onset dementia. Two thirds of Australians with dementia live in our community and around 1.7 million people are involved in their care. Dementia is a progressive…

  • Political
  • 01/04/2025
  • 11:27
Health Services Union

New Flinders healthcare centre a transformative investment

TheAlbanese Labor Government's new $300 million Flinders HealthCARE Centre will be a transformative investment for South Adelaide's healthcare workforce and patients alike,the Health Services Union declared today. The state-of-art facility will be jointly funded by the Federal Government and Flinders University and represents a profound commitment to addressing critical workforce shortages across the allied health professions that form the backbone of our healthcare system. "This is a game changer,” said HSU SA Secretary Billy Elrick. “This new healthcare hub will create a pipeline of the critically important health professionals who are in desperate shortage across our health system. By expanding…

  • Finance Investment, Political
  • 28/03/2025
  • 15:41
Super Members Council

Super promises: pledges to keep super strong for 17 million Australians

As the nation heads to a Federal Election on 3 May, the Super Members Council has pressed all candidates and parties to pledge to keep super strong for 17 million Australians. This includes ruling out support for any policy changes that would harm the financial interests of millions of everyday Australians – and damage the living standards of retirees after a lifetime of hard work. SMC has written to candidates and parties today seeking their formal pledges on 12 key policy priorities to safeguard Australia's super system – and make it even stronger, simpler and fairer. The Council has sought…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.