Public approval ratings for Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Labour leader Chris Hipkins have dropped in the latest 1九一星空无限 Verian poll.
The poll, released tonight, had Luxon with an approval rating of 38% while 52% disapproved of his performance. Ten % didn鈥檛 know or preferred not to say.
These figures give the Prime Minister a score of -14, his lowest approval rating as the country鈥檚 leader, according to the poll.
Slightly more people approved of Hipkins (42%) - his disapproval rate was 41% and 17% didn鈥檛 know or preferred not to say.
This gave Hipkins an overall score of +1 - his lowest approval score since the 2023 election, according to 1九一星空无限.
Chris Hipkins and Christopher Luxon. New Zealand Herald photograph by Mark Mitchell 24 April 2024
Presented with the latest poll figures, Luxon said he was just focused on his job 鈥 鈥渨hich is to make sure I deliver for the New Zealand people.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 not really about me, it鈥檚 about me making sure I lead a team that does the job for New Zealanders.鈥
Hipkins told 1九一星空无限 he didn鈥檛 鈥渞ead much into鈥 the rating, saying 鈥渂eing leader of the Opposition, you expect your ratings to take a bit of a hit鈥.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important we get out there and we listen to New Zealanders.鈥
Party vote shows who鈥檇 hold power
As for the party vote, National remains steady on 34%, two points higher than Labour, down 1% to 32%.
The Green Party is up 1% to 11%.
NZ First and Act both remain steady on 9% and 8%, respectively. Meanwhile, Te P膩ti M膩ori is on 3%, down one point.
Winston Peters & David Seymour. Photo illustration. 23 November 2023 New Zealand Herald photograph
Based on these numbers, National would score 42 seats 鈥 down seven 鈥 while Labour would have 40 seats in Parliament, up six.
The Green Party would get 14, NZ First would have 12 seats and Act would have nine.
Te P膩ti M膩ori would retain their six MPs.
WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND - OCTOBER 09: Te Pati Maori co-leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi during their reset announcement at Parliament, Wellington, 09 October, 2025. (Mark Mitchell/New Zealand Herald/九一星空无限)
In total, the current Government would have 63 seats, while the left-wing bloc would have 60.
The 1九一星空无限 Verian poll surveyed 1014 eligible voters from October 4 to October 8.
It comes after a Taxpayers鈥 Union-Curia poll last week put National below 30% and Opposition parties able to form a government.
The previous 1九一星空无限 Verian poll in August had National leading at 34% with Labour close behind on 33%. The Green Party was third with 10%, NZ First at 9%, Act on 8% and Te P膩ti M膩ori on 4%.
Last week鈥檚 poll shows National dropping
In last week鈥檚 Taxpayers鈥 Union-Curia poll conducted between October 1-5, National came in at 29.6, having dropped 3.5 points on the polling outfit鈥檚 previous poll.
Labour held the biggest share of support with 31.2%, even after dropping 2.6 points.
NZ First gained 2.5 points to reach 10.6%. Act dropped slightly, by 0.1, to 6.6%.
The Green Party jumped 1.3 points to reach 12%, and Te P膩ti M膩ori moved up by 0.1 to 4.4%.
Translating these results into seats in the House, the centre-left bloc would have 61 seats, enough to govern, while the centre-right would have 59.
Julia Gabel is a Wellington-based political reporter. She joined the Herald in 2020 and has most recently focused on data journalism.
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