Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07CANBERRA1645
2007-11-16 06:48:00
CONFIDENTIAL//NOFORN
Embassy Canberra
Cable title:  

RUDD EIGHT DAYS FROM A LIKELY ELECTION VICTORY

Tags:  PGOV AS 
pdf how-to read a cable
P 160648Z NOV 07
FM AMEMBASSY CANBERRA
TO SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 8563
INFO AMCONSUL MELBOURNE PRIORITY 
AMCONSUL PERTH PRIORITY 
AMCONSUL SYDNEY PRIORITY 
CDR USPACOM HONOLULU HI PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L CANBERRA 001645 

SIPDIS


NOFORN
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/15/2017
TAGS: PGOV AS
SUBJECT: RUDD EIGHT DAYS FROM A LIKELY ELECTION VICTORY

REF: A) CANBERRA 1632 B) CANBERRA 1642

Classified By: Deputy Political Counselor John W. Crowley, for reasons
1.4 (b) and (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L CANBERRA 001645

SIPDIS


NOFORN
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/15/2017
TAGS: PGOV AS
SUBJECT: RUDD EIGHT DAYS FROM A LIKELY ELECTION VICTORY

REF: A) CANBERRA 1632 B) CANBERRA 1642

Classified By: Deputy Political Counselor John W. Crowley, for reasons
1.4 (b) and (d).


1. (C/NF) SUMMARY: With only eight days left before the
November 24 federal election, and with a new A.C. Nielsen
poll that gives Australian Labor Party (ALP) leader Kevin
Rudd an eight-point lead over Prime Minister John Howard's
Coalition, the chances that Howard can close the gap look
increasingly remote. The Coalition had hoped that the
six-week election campaign would erase the steady 8-10 point
lead the ALP has maintained in the polls over the past year
but it has not happened. The Coalition and Labor campaign
launches during November 12 and November 14 neither helped
the Coalition nor hurt Labor. Importantly, the ALP looks set
to capture at least 20 new seats, four more than the 16 seats
it needs to form the next government. The Coalition is
continuing its strategy of running strong local campaigns to
counter the Rudd juggernaut, but signs are that it is having
mixed results at best. A majority of Australians seen to
have stopped listening to Howard and decided to go with Rudd.
Howard, so long the Coalition's major strength, is now seen
as a major liability who has been in office too long. Rumors
are circulating that Howard is saving a major announcement
for next week. If he delivers a blockbuster, and the polls
close the gap to six points, there may be a glimmer of hope
the Liberal/National Coalition can just hang on, but the odds
don't favor it. END SUMMARY

EYES TURN TO QUEENSLAND


2. (C/NF)) With both parties' official campaign launches
occurring in Brisbane this week (refs A and B),Howard and
Rudd targeted the key battleground state of Queensland.
Along with South Australia, Queensland has been the ALP's
worst performing state during the Howard era. The ALP only
holds six of 29 seats in that state. However, with Rudd a
native Queenslander and the voters in the mood for a change,
ALP strategists are aiming to win at least six extra seats
(which gets them almost halfway to the 16 they need for a
parliamentary majority). What makes the battle in Queensland
interesting is that only three Coalition seats - Bonner,

Moreton, and Blair - fall under the generally accepted
marginal seat threshold of six percent. The ALP will almost
certainly win these seats but Labor strategists also believe
there are seven other Coalition seats which are more
vulnerable than they appear. The ALP should win at least
half. Seats being targeted are Bowman, Longman, Petrie, and
Ryan in greater Brisbane, and Flynn, Herbert, and Leichardt
further up the Queensland coast.

THE POLLS STILL FAVOR RUDD


3. (SBU) As has been the case virtually all year, the polls
show the ALP with an 8-10 point lead on the two-party
preferred vote. A Newspoll conducted November 9-11 showed
the ALP increasing its lead on the two party preferred from
53-47 to 55-45. A Nielsen Poll conducted November 12-14 has
the ALP's lead on the two-party preferred vote decreasing
from 55-45 to 54-46, however, the Nielson pollster said that
while the Coalition had made up ground since the campaign
started, it was "not yet enough to significantly reduce
Labor's lead." A Newspoll due next Monday or Tuesday should
signal if there is any last-minute momemtum.

A 20 SEAT GAIN?


4. (C/NF) The ALP needs a net gain of 16 seats to win a
parliamentary majority and become the government. The ALP
Qparliamentary majority and become the government. The ALP
now has 14 seats all but won and has a 50-50 chance in 14
other seats. At this stage, an ALP net gain of around 20
seats appears the most likely scenario. Before the ALP
launch in Brisbane, a Labor MP confided to poloff that a net
gain of around 20 seats was what the ALP was expecting as
well. While this would give the ALP a small parliamentary
majority, it would be a landslide election victory.

COMMENT: COALITION CAMPAIGN FIZZLES


5. (C/NF) Unless Kevin Rudd makes a major blunder (something
he has avoided so far),an ALP government will likely be
elected on November 24. The Coalition's massive negative
advertising campaign against the unions appears to have had
little effect. Some in the Coalition still maintain that the
ALP's vote is "soft" and that there will be a late swing back
to the Coalition but if it were to have happened, some signs
should have emerged in the polls by now. The Coalition is
struggling to sell a message as to why it should remain in

office after over 11 years in power. This has been
exacerbated by an advertising campaign that has been negative
and has not sold its campaign promises, many of which have
considerable merit. The Coalition's education tax rebate and
housing affordability measures, announced at its launch (ref
A) are areas of clear policy difference between the Coalition
and ALP but there has been no "follow through" by the
Coalition. Howard, meanwhile, has lost the support of young
people on issues such as workplace relations reforms
("WorkChoices"),Iraq and climate change. WorkChoices and
interest rate increases are seen as a betrayal of trust by
the lower-middle class "Howard Battler" families who had
supported him in the past. His offer to step down midway
through a new term if re-elected, intended to address
perceptions of stale leadership, backfired badly. The main
factor that appears to have sealed Howard's fate, however, is
voter sentiment that "it's time" for a change. We have heard
rumors from several sources that Howard is saving a
blockbuster announcement for the last week. If next week's
Newspoll has the Coalition closing the gap to at least 53-47,
there may be a glimmer of hope as some Coalition strategists
believe it can scrape over the line with 48 per cent of the
two-party preferred vote. At this point however, bettors in
Australia have made the ALP strong favorites to cross the
line ahead of the Coalition on November 24 and there is no
reason to believe they have picked the wrong horse.

MCCALLUM