Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 455

Reader Survey on the Federal election 2022

Please note this survey is now closed, the results are here.

 

The plans and policies for the future of Australia, as presented on the campaign trail, look like more of the past. The major parties offer minor differences in a campaign dominated by handouts, personality attacks and gotcha moments.

At a critical time in history, with a disastrous conflict in Europe, disruption to global supply channels and inflation at the highest since the introduction of the GST, there are no policies that address permanent structural budget deficits and we are told to 'prepare for war' with our major trading partner. 

What are the issues that really matter in Election 2022?

Please take our quick six question survey. What bothers you, who will win, how will you vote?

All answers are confidential and we will publish the results and comments (subject to a health and sanity check) next week.

 

Or access the online version here.

 

49 Comments
Joe
May 01, 2022

Yeah, well said from the first time voter. I have been voting for over fifty years and I’m sorry to say political parties with a long term policy for the betterment of the country are a thing of the distant past. I wish all young voters the best for the coming decades. My generation of politics hasn’t delivered the goods for many years.

Tony
May 01, 2022

Get rid of career politicians, limit all politicians to two terms only, then time to move on. Politics should be for people that want to serve their constituents and country, not for those that only want to get the "snout in the trough".

Greg W
April 29, 2022


FWIW an interesting, if some may say self-serving, perspective on 'the party system' from 'the good old days' -

from the letter Australia's first PM Edmund Barton (by then on the High Court) wrote to Alfred Deakin in 1909 after the latter had formed a new government (his third stint as PM) with the so-called ‘Fusion’ of non-Labor groups -

“…the whole continent is to be congratulated on having at last a chance to govern itself on the principle of party cleavage, for in faith of the observance of that principle and not of sectional dissidence the Constitution was framed.”

Edmund Barton [from Sutherland House, Sylvania] to Alfred Deakin, 3 June 1909
Papers of Alfred Deakin
National Library of Australia MS 1540/15/1096

C ( the other one)
April 29, 2022

I would like to see;
Fixed 4 year terms ( sick of the unofficial election campaign, where millions of our dollars are spent advertising the federal govt)
A ban on lobbyists ( time to represent constituents, not vested interests).
A ban on donations (see above )(capped and funded by us taxpayers instead, based on the number of primary votes, (why should Clive Palmer be able to buy his way into parliament?)
A federal ICAC with independent funding
A change to proportional representation ( so people’s votes count, wherever you live)
An increase in independents ( and a more wide- ranging and considered decision- making process and debate.)
The end of the 2 party system and a move to govt ministries made up of the most capable and suited people from all different ‘sides’.
A move to a less adversarial style of political debate and discourse
Constitutional recognition of our First Nations people
A move to a republic ( maybe we should have a referendum every 4 years at the same time we vote and put a few questions on there, instead of deferring progress)
Someone not afraid to make the sweeping policy decisions needed to get us on a better path
Someone with a vision for what we could be and able to articulate that and bring people along on the journey.
I’d like to see a move to evidence- based decisions,
A belief ( and investment) in science, and scientific research,( and secure, long- term funding)
The end to mass casualisation and the gig economy ( how many jobs should one person need to survive)
A rise in real wages
I’ll stop now, the list of things to be done is long and probably none will ever happen, we will be stuck reacting to events instead of being proactive. Just imagine if we had decided to be the renewable energy world power we could have been….

Steve
May 01, 2022

Be careful with referendums. California has more than just about anybody and they have a problem that many pass but the funding is never clear. I didn't realise it but at least in California something passed by a referendum apparently is the highest ranking form of law and can't be easily overturned by the legislature, so the spending gets locked in. So year after year they get more actions added to the list of things the government needs to do (and all cost "something") yet no-one wants to pay for the added cost.

Steve
April 28, 2022

A weak and entertainment focused media is a big part of the problem. And a dumbed down audience who wouldn't watch anything of substance anyway. So there is a vacuum of policies as too few care and the risk/reward pushes this. Look at the rubbish ads from Clive Palmer ("keep interest rates below 3% for 5 years"). Just absolute crap and no rebuttal. People will vote for this with no idea how it would be achieved. The vacuum is not what parties promise to do, its the lack of how they will deliver that irks.

Trevor G
April 28, 2022

The policies of the Greens don’t seem to get much scrutiny and they could end up with the balance of power.

Edward H
April 27, 2022

Re the three levels of Govt, the obvious one to go is the States, but what people do not realise is the that Local govt is the most incompetent and unresponsive to complaint of all three.

Conrad
April 27, 2022

When will a debate commence on the need and cost of 3 layers of Government and 3 layers of public servants? A modern society with access to the data and technology that is now available surely needs to question if the duplication of resources and assets resulting from 3 layers of Government is still necessary .

Former Treasury policy maker
April 28, 2022

That debate has been going on for ages, I can assure you. But just look at what happened when Mike Baird tried some very sensible reforms to local government in NSW to reduce costs and duplication. If that failed, despite the fact that local governments only exist by decisions and Acts of the States, then there's no way more significant reforms can get up. Too many people think that the system provides checks and balances.

Also, everyone needs to understand that the Commonwealth exists because the States agreed to devolve some powers to a national government. That's what the constitution discusses. Get rid of the States and at present the Australian government also ceases to exist.

So, as they say in the classics, it's complicated. Do we really want to go there?

K.M.
April 27, 2022

Liberal nor Labour are perfect, but should be elected with a majority. We will become a third world country if the Greems and/or Independents with their single issue, ridiculous proposals, and that includes climate change, get any say in parliament. Please use common sense

JanH
April 29, 2022

K.M. What tosh! European countries are used to hung parliaments and they are more advanced than Oz. The way things are going, we are descending into third-world status; the banana republic Keating forecast.

Bill
April 27, 2022

Why is 'climate change' an issue? There is nothing we can do about it.

Neil Cox
April 27, 2022

You're dead right Bill. But that is still no excuse for the human race to feel its ok to just carry on messing everything up.

Trevor G
April 27, 2022

Good question. The real issue is why is the government willing to squander Australia’s comparative advantage of cheap energy sourced from fossil fuels.

Doug
April 30, 2022

Good point... promoting renewable energy systems like wind and solar makes us fall into reliance of the economics of the suppliers of the systems(China) without really addressing the realities of long term vagaries of our planet's weather and proper measurement of the real long term trends of climate anyway, to justify it.

g r
April 30, 2022

Can we afford to ignore the issue of the potential financial benefits of becoming global leaders and suppliers of sustainable energy?

Alan B
May 01, 2022

If the Greens think they can stop climate change, what are their policies on the movement of the magnetic pole, tectonic plates/continental drift and the orbit of the planet?

Ken
April 27, 2022

It's time we had a fixed four year term (as NSW)

Survey comment
April 27, 2022

This has been one of the most disappointing election campaigns in memory. So much ultra cautious compromise and so little essential vision and charismatic leadership.

Survey comment
April 27, 2022

We must have the type of person in our parliament that really cares about Australia not their own or their associates interests

Survey comment
April 27, 2022

There is a commonly held perception that the Money Pit is endless. Each and every cause is calling for more funding, but there cannot be any increase in taxes to cover the spending. There has to be better controls in place to ensure the monies get to the needy, not to the greedy!

Survey comment
April 27, 2022

The scare campaign about independents is madness. The more independents in parliament the better. The ones who are in there behave very well and think the issues through properly not like the party members who just go along with everything the party comes up with. The independents listen to their constituents. They can be discussed with for a compromise.

Survey comment
April 27, 2022

I think independents will have a huge impact as a result of major party dissatisfaction. This is not preferable as would be a majority government but I don't think that either major party deserves my vote

Richard
April 27, 2022

Definitely disagree with that comment. We must have policy direction for the country {which we still don't have}.

Marcia Moseley
April 28, 2022

Agree.
MM

Survey comment
April 27, 2022

The government term should be extended to 5 years and the date should be fixed to avoid the nonsensical or perceived advantage gained by the PM of the day to pick the date to hold the election.

Survey comment
April 27, 2022

It has been a long time, if ever, that the Australian voting public have been so poorly represented at a party-leader and policy level on both sides of the political divide.

Anthony Asher
April 27, 2022

The absence of a carbon tax is the major tragedy.

Dudley
April 27, 2022

Plenty of royalties / excise / taxes on transport fuel, electricity, carbon derived dividends.

Survey comment
April 27, 2022

Any full, mid and/or long-term economic plan, policies and your actions for the country's future from any party in the election campaign? I couldn't see it except the nuclear warship with huge spending!
Also the effective and efficiency of the works are low from the government and its departments, therefore waste a lot of our taxpayers' money!

Jon kirkwood
April 27, 2022

Very difficult to see much talent in Labor but the Libs have a leader who is deeply into avoidance mode around many important issues. His party should dump him and Labor needs a new leader.

Steve
April 28, 2022

The Libs need to find a way to drop the Nats from the coalition. These right wingers make it difficult to find anything like the middle ground. I find the Libs disappointing in pulling so called fringe elements into line. Scomo talks about the silent majority, he should know as his party seems very silent when the Matt Carnavans of the world get going. Never seen a tail wag a dog so completely. Labor seem to be beholden to the Greens as well, pulling them further left. Plenty of room in the centre if someone can find a way there....

Ian Thomson
April 29, 2022

Absolutely agree. The Libs need to turn to the centre cut away the dead wood of its right wing if it wants any future. The Libs vote among young people is so dismal because of that right wing.

JanH
April 29, 2022

People don't seem to realise that the Libs could not hold government without the Nats. In effect, we have had a hung parliament for decades. Conservatives fearmonger re Labor/Greens alliance. Meanwhile, the whole country is held to ransom by the backward, ignorant Nats. And they certainly don't speak for many in rural areas. Global warming is the biggest thing hitting farmers- your food and fibre producers. Do you really want to eat poisoned food from overseas?

Kim Pallot
April 30, 2022

so correct

Anton
April 27, 2022

great concept and I look forward to reading the responses. Hopefully overall more optimistic about the future of our country than I am.

Murray McLean
April 27, 2022

Ask not what can your country do for you. Ask what can I do for my country!
So let's start by making all politicians apply for the job, with a specific and detailed job description.
This may help to eliminate and reverse the presence of a majority of career politicians who have never had a 'real' job, let alone having run and managed a profitable business.

CC
April 27, 2022

This is the fundamental problem with democratic elections where leaders must be electable despite having no experience in managing even a small business. Our leaders only need how to "buy" votes with promises. In China, (putting all politics aside please), they believe leaders must know how to manage a country. Xi Jinping’s father was a senior official who worked for Chairman Mao. Yet Xi Jinping started his work in a village, managed a town, a city, a province before starting his career in the central government. It took him over 40 years to become the president.

Ramon Vasquez
April 27, 2022

An EXCELLENT idea ! ! !

Cathy
April 27, 2022

Both major parties are lack lustre but Labor bothers me with reckless spending

Aro
April 27, 2022

Evidence of this reckless spending would be very useful

Graham Hand
April 27, 2022

Should we start on one side of politics with $20+ billion Jobkeeper paid to large companies whose revenues actually rose in the pandemic with no desire to claim it back, and $100 billion on submarines that will not be delivered for 20 years while Australia has no armed drones.

Gen X
April 27, 2022

And do you think the coming Stage 3 tax cuts which favour high income earners, with those earning more than $200,000 receiving a tax cut of $9075 per year, are justified when we are trying to slow the economy and face a trillion of debt?

Trevor G
April 27, 2022

Yes it’s the coalition that takes the prize for reckless spending during the great covid panic.

Survey comment
April 27, 2022

Roll on 20 days time when this sideshow is over !

Survey comment
April 27, 2022

As a member of the younger generation who will be voting in my first election, I am sick of parties who lack a definitive plan for the future of our country. I want a day where parties focus on policies for decades to come, not just to win this election. Political short-sightedness is everywhere in the current government re. climate change, and we seem to have lost the will to do what is right for the country re. taxation, housing and again climate change.

Jim
April 27, 2022

Well said! Wise words indeed from someone new to to the realm of elections. More younger folk with your outlook and we will hopefully have a truly worthy nation in future years.

Alan B
May 01, 2022

Parties don't have a vision for the future because in a democracy they can only plan on being in office for three years. In one-party communist states with no genuine elections or opposition they can have 5 year or longer plans. The other problem is when an elected party has to compromise its plans with the independents and Greens holding a balance of power and a different agenda.
Very rarely do we have a visionary leader who inspires us to achieve the greatness we are capable of. Kennedy and getting to the moon was one.

 

Leave a Comment:

RELATED ARTICLES

2022 election survey results: disillusion and disappointment

Betting markets as election predictors

How our preferential voting drives the election result

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

Vale Graham Hand

It’s with heavy hearts that we announce Firstlinks’ co-founder and former Managing Editor, Graham Hand, has died aged 66. Graham was a legendary figure in the finance industry and here are three tributes to him.

Australian stocks will crush housing over the next decade, one year on

Last year, I wrote an article suggesting returns from ASX stocks would trample those from housing over the next decade. One year later, this is an update on how that forecast is going and what's changed since.

Avoiding wealth transfer pitfalls

Australia is in the early throes of an intergenerational wealth transfer worth an estimated $3.5 trillion. Here's a case study highlighting some of the challenges with transferring wealth between generations.

Taxpayers betrayed by Future Fund debacle

The Future Fund's original purpose was to meet the unfunded liabilities of Commonwealth defined benefit schemes. These liabilities have ballooned to an estimated $290 billion and taxpayers continue to be treated like fools.

Australia’s shameful super gap

ASFA provides a key guide for how much you will need to live on in retirement. Unfortunately it has many deficiencies, and the averages don't tell the full story of the growing gender superannuation gap.

Looking beyond banks for dividend income

The Big Four banks have had an extraordinary run and it’s left income investors with a conundrum: to stick with them even though they now offer relatively low dividend yields and limited growth prospects or to look elsewhere.

Latest Updates

Investment strategies

9 lessons from 2024

Key lessons include expensive stocks can always get more expensive, Bitcoin is our tulip mania, follow the smart money, the young are coming with pitchforks on housing, and the importance of staying invested.

Investment strategies

Time to announce the X-factor for 2024

What is the X-factor - the largely unexpected influence that wasn’t thought about when the year began but came from left field to have powerful effects on investment returns - for 2024? It's time to select the winner.

Shares

Australian shares struggle as 2020s reach halfway point

It’s halfway through the 2020s decade and time to get a scorecheck on the Australian stock market. The picture isn't pretty as Aussie shares are having a below-average decade so far, though history shows that all is not lost.

Shares

Is FOMO overruling investment basics?

Four years ago, we introduced our 'bubbles' chart to show how the market had become concentrated in one type of stock and one view of the future. This looks at what, if anything, has changed, and what it means for investors.

Shares

Is Medibank Private a bargain?

Regulatory tensions have weighed on Medibank's share price though it's unlikely that the government will step in and prop up private hospitals. This creates an opportunity to invest in Australia’s largest health insurer.

Shares

Negative correlations, positive allocations

A nascent theme today is that the inverse correlation between bonds and stocks has returned as inflation and economic growth moderate. This broadens the potential for risk-adjusted returns in multi-asset portfolios.

Retirement

The secret to a good retirement

An Australian anthropologist studying Japanese seniors has come to a counter-intuitive conclusion to what makes for a great retirement: she suggests the seeds may be found in how we approach our working years.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2024 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.