The latest voting intentions poll shows more Tasmanians are unsure how they will vote in the next state election.
EMRS polled 1,000 people a fortnight ago.
The poll found 30 per cent could not say how they would vote if the state election was held the next day, up 10 points from the last poll in February.
Support for the Liberal Party fell six points to 40 per cent, while support for the Greens fell six points to a new low of nine per cent.
Nineteen per cent of those polled said they would vote for the Labor Party.
• Read for yourself, EMRS, here
• Dr Kevin Bonham: Greens hit new low, here The poll again shows the Liberals with a very high vote, but shows Labor with (marginally) its least worst result since November 2010 and the Greens with their worst result in this term of office. The very bad news for the Greens is that the 14% is likely to be an overestimate because the EMRS headline rate historically overestimates their vote. The undecided rate on the EMRS baseline measure (30%) is astonishingly high and I will check to see if it is a record. However the undecided rate comparable to the way other pollsters measure indecision is 19%.
• Lara Giddings: The EMRS Poll The Premier, Lara Giddings, today acknowleged the release of the latest EMRS poll.
• Nick McKim, Greens Leader: EMRS Poll Response “Our decisions are not driven by polls, but by strong core values that put people and the environment first,” Mr McKim said. “We don’t place a great deal of emphasis on the result of this or any other political opinion poll.”
THE FORESTS PEACE DEAL
• Rob Blakers, Mercury: Forests deal quiets chainsaws

