Poll Shows Falling Support for New Zealand National Party and Prime Minister Luxon

WELLINGTON, April 20 (Reuters) – A newly ⁠released ⁠poll showed support ⁠has fallen further for New Zealand’s ruling ​National Party and Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, as he ‌continues to face questions ‌over whether he can retain his party’s ⁠backing ⁠to stay in the top job.

Luxon has been facing ​questions in recent days about whether he has the support of his party to remain as prime ​minister. The New Zealand Herald reported on Friday that ⁠members ⁠of his National Party ⁠will ​move against him this week, although it is unlikely ​to be a ⁠formal challenge or confidence vote initially.

Luxon told Radio New Zealand on Monday that he had the full support of National’s members of parliament and would ⁠remain as prime minister.

In a 1News Verian poll released late ⁠on Sunday, support for the National Party fell 4 percentage points to 30% and indicated that if the election were held today, the current coalition government would not win sufficient seats to retain power.

Support for Luxon as preferred prime minister also fell 4 points, to 16%. ⁠Support for Chris Hipkins, leader of the Labour Party and a former prime minister, was down 1 point to 19%.

The next general election is ​scheduled for November 7.

(Reporting by Lucy Craymer; ​Editing by Ethan Smith)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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