Sydney 24 July 2010: Australia's ruling Labor party
led the election race with a comfortable margin at the end of the first week of
campaigning, polls showed Saturday, buoyed by a surging female vote.
Women preferred Prime Minister Julia Gillard's Labor
party to the conservative Liberal/National coalition 58 percent to 42 percent,
compared with a 50-50 split among male voters, a Nielsen poll showed. The
rallying female vote, which increased by two percentage points over the first
week of the election campaign, helped Labor secure an eight-point lead over the
conservatives, 54 percent to 46 percent.
"There is a real gender gap in this election,"
poll director John Stirton told Fairfax newspapers. Australia's first female
leader, Gillard outstripped conservative challenger Tony Abbott as preferred
prime minister 55 percent to 34 percent, with an approval rating of 56 percent
to Abbott's 43 percent.
Her lead over Abbott as preferred leader was a
whopping 28 points among women, compared with 14 points among men. Of the 1,400
people polled 73 percent said they thought Labor would win, with only 16
percent backing Abbott's coalition.
Gillard was pragmatic about the findings, saying her
job "over the next four weeks... is to be out there making our case."
"And I'll be making my case to the Australian
people -- to men and women -- around the country," she said, campaigning
in the country's north.
Catholic Abbott's staunchly conservative views on
issues such as abortion have earned him a bad reputation with some female
voters, and he was eager to declare that his life was "full of strong
women" on Saturday.
The poll shows Labor trailing the coalition 46
percent to 54 percent in the key battleground states of Western Australia and
Queensland -- heartland of the resources industry -- following a damaging tax
row with miners.
Labor's two-month standoff with the powerful mining
lobby led the party to dump former prime minister Kevin Rudd in favour of
Gillard, his deputy, in a bid to reverse a slump in its popularity.
The Nielsen poll found 69 percent of voters
disapproved of the way Rudd was deposed, and 25 percent said they were less
likely to vote Labor as a result. (AFP)