New Zealand Election Too Close to Call Three Months From Vote

New Zealand’s general election remains too close to call three months out from the vote, with the ruling Labour Party and the main opposition National Party almost neck-and-neck in the latest opinion poll.

(Bloomberg) — New Zealand’s general election remains too close to call three months out from the vote, with the ruling Labour Party and the main opposition National Party almost neck-and-neck in the latest opinion poll.

Support for Labour fell 2 percentage points to 33% in a 1News/Verian poll published Monday in Wellington, while National also dropped 2 points to 35%. Labour’s partner the Green Party rose 3 points to 10%, while National’s ally the ACT Party gained 1 point to 12% support.

If the results were replicated at the election on Oct. 14, National and ACT would be able to command 61 seats and therefore a slim majority in the 120-seat parliament. Labour and the Greens would be unable to form a government even with the support of the smaller Maori Party.

Prime Minister Chris Hipkins initially boosted Labour’s chances of winning a third term when he took over from Jacinda Ardern in January, but the party’s support has now declined for a third straight poll as the government grapples with soaring prices and a weakening economy.  

Hipkins remains the nation’s most-preferred prime minister but the gap with National leader Christopher Luxon has narrowed. Support for Hipkins fell 1 point to 24% while support for Luxon gained 2 points to 20%.

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