Most Australians want Barnaby Joyce to resign: poll

The latest Newspoll reveals Australians believe Barnaby Joyce should resign as Nationals leader and from parliament over his affair with a former staffer.

Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce

Deputy PM Barnaby Joyce is taking his first day of personal leave after a tumultuous week. (AAP) Source: AAP

A majority of Australians believe embattled Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce should resign following his affair with a staffer, the latest Newspoll shows.

Up to 65 per cent of voters across the country believe the deputy prime minister should resign with a third of those also believing Mr Joyce should quit federal parliament.

Newspoll quizzed 1632 voters across Australia including those in regional areas and cities for the findings released on Sunday.

Of the voters who want Mr Joyce gone, 29 per cent believe the New England MP should step down as the Nationals leader but remain on the backbench while 21 per cent believe he should step down and not recontest the next election.

Mr Joyce is on personal leave but has spoken with Fairfax Media, blaming his hectic travel schedule last year as a major reason for the breakdown of his marriage. 

He also tried to quell concerns the coalition pact has been put at risk over his comments hitting out against Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull about his affair.

"Like most people in a strong business relationship, there are times you need to discuss your views because that's how you resolve things," he said.

"I don’t believe either of us are the sort of people who whisper behind closed doors - if you have an issue, you confront it head on and that's what we did."

Mr Joyce also doubled down on questions over the possible misuse of taxpayer funds in the saga.

“I am and continue to be confident that there has been no misuse of travel or entitlements, nor that any has been or will be found," he said.

"I base that confidence on the fact that hundreds of inquiries have been made and nothing has been found."

A quarter of regional voters wanted to see Mr Joyce resign from parliament immediately because of the love-child scandal, with just 20 per cent of city voters wanting to see him go.

Meanwhile Malcolm Turnbull's personal approval ratings fell, dropping five points to 40 per cent, leaving only a seven point margin between the Liberal leader and Labor leader Bill Shorten as preferred prime minister.

The coalition's primary vote also fell two points to 36 per cent, one point behind Labor's which remained unchanged.

The two-party-preferred vote has returned the coalition to the position it held in December trailing Labor 53 per cent to 47.


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Published 19 February 2018 10:10am
Updated 19 February 2018 10:20am


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