New Zealand’s ruling party plunges in polls, PM Luxon rules out resigning

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March 6 (Reuters) - Support for New Zealand’s ruling National party has fallen to its lowest level in more than four years and Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is no ​longer voters’ preferred leader, polling showed on Friday.

The monthly Taxpayers’ Union-Curia ‌poll showed support for the conservative Nationals dropped 2.9 points to 28.4%, the worst showing for the party since late 2021.

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Luxon, 55, and his coalition government, which has been in ​power since the 2023 election, have lost popularity over the past year ​due to a weakening economy and higher unemployment. The decline exposes ⁠the centre-right bloc to strong competition from the Labour party which has seen ​its polling numbers improve in recent months.

While the poll results fuelled speculation of ​Luxon’s resignation, he told local media he would “absolutely not” stand aside ahead of a general election on November 7.

“We’ve got a lot of work to do and I’ve got skills that are ​actually very useful at this time when we’re trying to navigate some challenging ​global environments,” he told Newstalk ZB.

“Our biggest challenge in this country is our economy, and I ‌understand ⁠our economy well.”

The Nationals’ coalition partners New Zealand First and ACT polled at 9.7% and 7.5% respectively.

LABOUR GAINS GROUND

Support for Labour rose 0.3 points to 34.4%, while the Greens recorded 10.5% and Te Pati Maori at 3.2%.

That would translate to ​61 seats at the ​election, enough for ⁠the three parties to form government as a centre-left bloc, the poll said.

New Zealand has used a mixed-member proportional electoral ​system since 1996, making coalitions the norm.

The poll, which surveyed ​1,000 people, ⁠also found approval for Luxon fell 1 point to 21%.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins gained 4.7 points to 22.7%, overtaking Luxon as preferred prime minister.

Luxon, the former CEO of ⁠Air ​New Zealand, has faced criticism for some of ​his policies, including the closure of a separate health authority for indigenous people and a lack of ​funding increases for frontline employees.

Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing by Saad Sayeed

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