RNZ-Reid Research Poll Delivers Hung Parliament Scenario
The latest RNZ-Reid Research poll, conducted between March 12 and 20, 2026, has captured a pivotal moment in New Zealand politics. With Labour surging to 35.6% support and National slipping to 30.8%, the country appears deeply divided. If these figures translated directly to an election under the Mixed Member Proportional (MMP) system, both the centre-right coalition bloc (National, ACT, New Zealand First) and the centre-left opposition bloc (Labour, Greens, Te Pāti Māori) would secure exactly 60 seats each in a 120-seat Parliament. This rare deadlock would force unprecedented negotiations or potentially trigger a re-run election.
Polled from a nationally representative sample of 1000 eligible voters via online interviews, the survey employed quota sampling and post-weighting for age, gender, and geography to mirror the electorate. The margin of error stands at ±3.1% at the 95% confidence interval, standard for such polls.
Party Vote Breakdown and Seat Projections
| Party | Vote Share | Change from Jan 2026 | Projected Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Labour | 35.6% | +0.6 | 44 |
| National | 30.8% | -1.1 | 38 |
| New Zealand First | 10.6% | +0.8 | 13 |
| Greens | 10.1% | +0.5 | 12 |
| ACT | 7.0% | -0.6 | 9 |
| Te Pāti Māori | 3.2% | +0.2 | 4 |
| Undecided/Non-voters | 7.1% | - | - |
New Zealand First's rise marks its highest support since July 2017, bolstering the coalition but not enough to break the impasse. Undecided voters at 7.1% could prove decisive in a real election scenario.
Luxon's Approval Hits Record Low Amid Hipkins' Narrow Edge
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon's net favourability plunged to -20.6, with 50.4% rating his performance poorly against 29.8% positively—the worst in Reid Research's series dating back to 2021. Labour leader Chris Hipkins holds a slim +0.3 net (35.9% well, 35.6% poorly), his lowest as leader but still superior to Luxon. In preferred Prime Minister rankings, Hipkins leads at 20.7%, Luxon at 17.3%, and Winston Peters at 13.1%.
This marks Luxon's sharpest decline, surpassing previous lows from leaders like Judith Collins (-37.9 in 2020). Potential successors like Chris Bishop (0.6%) and Erica Stanford (1.4%) garner negligible support, underscoring National's leadership vacuum.
Country Direction Sentiment Turns Negative
Fifty percent of respondents believe New Zealand is heading in the 'wrong direction', up 3.4 points from January, while 32.3% say 'right track' (down 4 points), yielding a net -17.7. Even among coalition supporters, optimism wanes: National voters net +63.1, ACT +24.1, but NZ First -24.6.
This pessimism correlates with broader economic woes, as voters hold the government accountable for persistent challenges.
Historical Trends: From National Victory to Labour Resurgence
Since National's narrow 2023 election win (38.1% party vote), polls showed coalition stability until late 2025. Recent RNZ-Reid polls illustrate the shift: January 2026 Labour 35%, National 31.9% (lead 3.1pp); now 4.8pp wider. Wikipedia's aggregator confirms Labour's lead in 7 of the last 10 polls, averaging ~4pp ahead.
- Mar 12-20 RNZ-Reid: Lab 35.6 Nat 30.8
- Mar 2-12 Talbot Mills: Lab 35 Nat 32
- Mar 1-3 Curia: Lab 34.4 Nat 28.4
The trend signals voter fatigue with the coalition after two years.
Economic Pressures Fuel Voter Discontent
New Zealand's economy contracted sharply in Q4 2025, entering recovery tentatively amid heightened uncertainty from global events like the Iran conflict impacting oil prices. Inflation lingers above target, unemployment edges up, and household costs soar—power bills, groceries, housing. NIrz Economic Conditions Index at 18 signals subdued activity.
Voters blame National for failing 'get the country back on track' promises, with 50% citing wrong direction tied to cost-of-living crisis.Bloomberg on NZ economy slowdown
Unpopular Policies Under Scrutiny
Key flashpoints include proposed petrol tax cuts amid fuel shortages, winter power price hikes, pay equity repeals sparking protests, and fast-track consenting laws. Coalition internal tensions, especially NZ First's divergence, erode unity. X (formerly Twitter) buzz highlights Luxon's 'disappearance' and policy U-turn calls.
Party Leaders' Responses
Luxon dismissed polls, stating he's 'focused on fuel challenges not polls,' emphasizing government achievements despite headwinds. Hipkins highlighted voter concerns on economy and leadership. Peters leverages NZ First's surge as kingmaker potential.
Implications for November 2026 Election
A hung parliament risks instability eight months out. National needs NZ First/ACT loyalty, but Peters' rise empowers demands. Labour-Greens-TPM must woo swing voters (7.1% undecided). Aggregators like NZ Election Tracker forecast tight race.
Broader Voter Perspectives and Demographics
While full breakdowns unavailable, trends show urban/rural divides, with coalition stronger regionally but Labour gaining metros. Young voters lean left, seniors right. Economy tops concerns (72% priority per similar polls).
Photo by Sulthan Auliya on Unsplash
Expert Analysis and Polling Context
Analysts note Luxon's corporate-style governance alienates amid recession. Reid Research's track record (ex-NewsHub) lends credibility. House effects minimal per studies. Wikipedia polling aggregator
Outlook: Recovery Possible or Inevitable Change?
Luxon has time to pivot—tax relief, growth stimulus—but global risks loom. Labour must capitalize without overconfidence. NZ First's kingmaker status intensifies. Watch April polls for direction.Reid Research polls archive
Explore university jobs in NZ amid political shifts: NZ Academic Positions.
