Data shows shift in views towards Australia's relationship with the United States and China
About 47 per cent of Vote Compass respondents believe Australia should be less close to the US, about a third believe the relationship should stay the same and just over 17 per cent want it to be closer.
In March, a poll by the Lowy Institute found Australians' trust in the US to act responsibly had dropped since Donald Trump's return to the White House, down 20 points compared to last year, to 36 per cent.
Despite this, the poll found 80 per cent said the alliance with the United States was very or fairly important for Australia's security.
Read more about the federal election:
Want even more? Here's where you can find all our 2025
United States Studies Centre director of research Jared Mondschein said while polling indicated most Australians don't like Mr Trump, many support the alliance continuing.
"I think that Australians really do see that the alliance is more than just the president, more than just one person, and it actually has implications for a broader array of issues," he said.
Dr Mondschein said polling showed Australians felt more comfortable with the relationship with the US than China, despite "unprecedented uncertainty" in the US.
Jared Mondschein said Australia has never been more consequential or influential in Washington, including in this Trump administration.
(
ABC News: Billy Cooper
)
When it comes to Australia's relationship with China, Vote Compass data shows respondents are split.
About 32 per cent of respondents said Australia should deepen its ties with China, while about 34 per cent disagreed and about 30 per cent said they are neutral.
James Laurenceson, who is the director of the Australia-China Relations Institute (ACRI) at the University of Technology Sydney, said the data suggested Australians understood the complexity of the relationship with China.
Last year, a poll conducted by the institute found 61 per cent of Australians believed in building a strong relationship with China.
The ACRI found 64 per cent of respondents expressed concerns about Australia's relationship with China — a 10-point drop from 2021.
"They recognise the benefits, including jobs for Australians. I think that nuance is well appreciated by the Australian public," Professor Laurenceson said.
James Laurenceson believes there is a lack of deep understanding about the Australia-China relationship.
(
ABC News: Billy Cooper
)
However, Professor Laurenceson said he believed generally there was a lack of "deep understanding".
"And simply, when you don't understand something particularly well, it's easy to be fearful," he said.
"On the other hand, when it comes to America, our news is full of American sources, we actually feel quite comfortable with that system, even if we don't always like the decision coming out of the White House.
"We understand it, but that's not true when it comes to China."
In 2023, Anthony Albanese met with Xi Jinping in Beijing, which was the first visit to mainland China by a leader in seven years.
(
AAP: Lukas Coch
)
The ACRI poll found 61 per cent said Australia can enjoy a good relationship with both China and the US at the same time, while 38 per cent believed Australia's relationship with China weakens our alliance with the US.
Dr Mondschein said Australia and the US were working more closely in the Indo-Pacific region and the views towards China have become more aligned between the US and its allies and partners.
He said the US and its allies were also increasingly aligned on the importance of working together to face the challenge of China.
Data shows support for extra defence spending
Last week, the Coalition pledged to
It would increase overall defence spending to 2.5 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) over the next five years, which is more ambitious than Labor's eight-year plan to lift defence spending to 2.3 per cent of GDP by 2033.
Last week, Peter Dutton announced the Coalition would spend an additional $21 billion on the military if elected on May 3.
(
ABC News: Ian Cutmore
)
Vote Compass data shows 52.9 per cent of respondents believe Australia should spend much or somewhat more on its military.
This is up 11 percentage points from 2022 when 41.9 per cent said the government should spend more on defence.
Dr Mondschein said given China's nuclear capacity and navy fleet had grown it was understandable Australia had changed its perception of what was required in the region.
However, a survey of 1,500 Australians in February and April for the War Studies Research Group at UNSW Canberra
found one third of respondents thought more money should be spent on defence, and the majority felt current spending was appropriate.
Stay updated:
Catch the latest interviews and in-depth coverage on
UNSW Canberra's Richard Dunley said while the survey showed there was good support for the Australian Defence Force generally and reasonable support for its growth, that dropped when respondents were asked whether more money should be spent.
"I think that you're definitely seeing both political parties here being kind of ahead of public opinion, or sort of pushing back against that kind of sentiment," he said.
Vote Compass data shows 78 per cent of respondents intending to vote for the Coalition believe more should be spent on the military compared to 47 per cent of support among those voting for Labor.
Dr Dunley said the UNSW survey showed support for an increase in defence spending was lowest among those aged 18 to 29, which may be on account of other pressures, including the cost of living.
"I think there's clearly been an effort to try and refocus on national security," he said.
"I just don't think that, from what we've seen in terms of these numbers, that is necessarily going to cut through with the electorate this time around."
Vote Compass is an educational tool designed to promote electoral literacy and civic engagement. While not a conventional public opinion poll, Vote Compass responses can be analysed using statistical methods similar to those used in polling to try to adjust for sampling bias.
Responses have been weighted by gender, age, education, language, religion, place of residence and past vote to account for the selection effects of the sample, enabling us to make statistical inferences about the Australian population.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
9 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
‘Focus on being a DJ': Trump mocks Goldman Sachs chief after note
Solomon previously moonlighted as a disc jockey under the moniker DJ D-Sol. In 2022 he played at Lollapalooza, the four-day music festival in Chicago, alongside acts including Metallica, Dua Lipa and Green Day. However, he gave up his DJing hobby in 2023 after he attracted criticism following a downturn in profits at Goldman. Goldman Sachs declined to comment on the Trump post. In a separate post on Tuesday, Trump threatened to sue the chairman of the US Federal Reserve hours after official data showed inflation steady at 2.7 per cent. The US president said he was considering allowing a 'major lawsuit' against Jerome Powell over his handling of the renovation of some of the central bank's buildings. He blamed the Fed chairman for 'the horrible, and grossly incompetent, job he has done in managing the construction of the Fed buildings'. He wrote on Truth Social: 'Three Billion Dollars for a job that should have been a $50 Million Dollar fix up. Not good!' Tensions escalated between the two men in July when Trump visited the 'very expensive' renovation work at the US central bank. In footage broadcast live, Mr Powell openly disagreed with the US president after he declared new figures had 'just come out' suggesting the cost of renovating some buildings at the Fed had climbed from $US2.7 billion to $US3.1 billion ($4.1 billion to $4.8 billion). His attempt to blind side the Fed chairman backfired when Powell issued a stern rebuttal, as he quickly identified that the White House had included works previously done to another building several years earlier. Trump on Thursday also attacked the Fed chairman for being 'too late' to cut interest rates, which he said had done 'incalculable' damage to the American economy. The latest update in the row came as official figures showed US inflation rose at a slower pace than expected last month. The US consumer prices index was 2.7 per cent in June, according to figures by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) – better than analyst expectations of 2.8 per cent. Trump recently became embroiled in a row with the BLS, sacking its top statistician earlier this month after official data showed a sharp slowdown in the US jobs market. The president claimed that Erika McEntarfer had 'rigged' jobs data 'in order to make a great Republican success look less stellar'. Trump on Tuesday nominated EJ Antoni, an economist from the Heritage Foundation, a Right-wing think tank, to take over the post. Just hours after his appointment, Antoni said he would suspend monthly publication of the jobs data and move to quarterly statistics claiming that there were concerns over the accuracy of the data. He told Fox Business: 'How on earth are businesses supposed to plan – or how is the Fed supposed to conduct monetary policy – when they don't know how many jobs are being added or lost in our economy? It's a serious problem that needs to be fixed immediately.

The Age
9 minutes ago
- The Age
‘Focus on being a DJ': Trump mocks Goldman Sachs chief after note
Solomon previously moonlighted as a disc jockey under the moniker DJ D-Sol. In 2022 he played at Lollapalooza, the four-day music festival in Chicago, alongside acts including Metallica, Dua Lipa and Green Day. However, he gave up his DJing hobby in 2023 after he attracted criticism following a downturn in profits at Goldman. Goldman Sachs declined to comment on the Trump post. In a separate post on Tuesday, Trump threatened to sue the chairman of the US Federal Reserve hours after official data showed inflation steady at 2.7 per cent. The US president said he was considering allowing a 'major lawsuit' against Jerome Powell over his handling of the renovation of some of the central bank's buildings. He blamed the Fed chairman for 'the horrible, and grossly incompetent, job he has done in managing the construction of the Fed buildings'. He wrote on Truth Social: 'Three Billion Dollars for a job that should have been a $50 Million Dollar fix up. Not good!' Tensions escalated between the two men in July when Trump visited the 'very expensive' renovation work at the US central bank. In footage broadcast live, Mr Powell openly disagreed with the US president after he declared new figures had 'just come out' suggesting the cost of renovating some buildings at the Fed had climbed from $US2.7 billion to $US3.1 billion ($4.1 billion to $4.8 billion). His attempt to blind side the Fed chairman backfired when Powell issued a stern rebuttal, as he quickly identified that the White House had included works previously done to another building several years earlier. Trump on Thursday also attacked the Fed chairman for being 'too late' to cut interest rates, which he said had done 'incalculable' damage to the American economy. The latest update in the row came as official figures showed US inflation rose at a slower pace than expected last month. The US consumer prices index was 2.7 per cent in June, according to figures by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) – better than analyst expectations of 2.8 per cent. Trump recently became embroiled in a row with the BLS, sacking its top statistician earlier this month after official data showed a sharp slowdown in the US jobs market. The president claimed that Erika McEntarfer had 'rigged' jobs data 'in order to make a great Republican success look less stellar'. Trump on Tuesday nominated EJ Antoni, an economist from the Heritage Foundation, a Right-wing think tank, to take over the post. Just hours after his appointment, Antoni said he would suspend monthly publication of the jobs data and move to quarterly statistics claiming that there were concerns over the accuracy of the data. He told Fox Business: 'How on earth are businesses supposed to plan – or how is the Fed supposed to conduct monetary policy – when they don't know how many jobs are being added or lost in our economy? It's a serious problem that needs to be fixed immediately.

9 News
9 minutes ago
- 9 News
Trump tells Goldman Sachs CEO to hire a new economist after bank's tariff findings
Your web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here Days after Goldman Sachs' top economists published research claiming price increases stemming from higher tariffs are poised to soon be borne mostly by consumers, US President Donald Trump is urging the bank's CEO, David Solomon, to get a new economist. "Tariffs have not caused Inflation, or any other problems for America, other than massive amounts of CASH pouring into our Treasury's coffers," Trump wrote in a Truth Social post on Tuesday. "David Solomon and Goldman Sachs refuse to give credit where credit is due." Donald Trump is urging the the Goldman Sachs CEO to get a new economist. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) "I think that David should go out and get himself a new Economist or, maybe, he ought to just focus on being a DJ, and not bother running a major Financial Institution," Trump added. Solomon previously performed regularly at high-profile events. However, facing pressure from the bank's board, he gave up his DJing side gig two years ago. A report Goldman Sachs economists published over the weekend estimated Americans "absorbed 22 per cent of tariff costs through June," but that this share will rise to 67 per cent by October if tariffs "follow the same pattern as the earliest ones". Trump did not specifically reference that report in his post, however. Goldman Sachs declined to comment on the president's remarks. Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon is interviewed on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York. (AP) The bank's chief economist, Jan Hatzius, is one of the most followed economists both in Washington, where he's met with former President Joe Biden and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, and on Wall Street. Hatzius, an author of the report predicting the share of tariff costs consumers will cover, was an outlier in most circles of economists in 2023 for correctly predicting the US economy wouldn't enter a recession. On tariffs, Hatzius' team's forecasts share similarities with that of other leading financial institutions that are warning that consumers will experience tariff-related sticker shock. However, that hasn't been the case so far despite a slew of higher tariffs Trump has enacted over the past few months. New inflation data published Tuesday showed consumer prices rose 0.2 per cent in July, keeping the annual inflation rate at 2.7 per cent, according to the latest Consumer Price Index. World US POLITICS USA Donald Trump CONTACT US