Premier denies using polls for COVID calls
The Queensland premier has angrily denied using secretive polls of Queenslanders to decide what coronavirus restrictions to impose on the state.
Annastacia Palaszczuk is refusing to release the polling, which she says was commissioned to make sure government ad campaigns on COVID-19 hit the mark.
Documents obtained under right-to-information show the government spent almost $530,000 seeking Queenslanders' views on issues including the value of border closures, the economic fallout of lockdowns versus health risks, and what things should trigger eased restrictions.
The market research firm hired to do the polling even asked what advice Queenslanders had for leaders on how to best manage the virus, and if the government should test easing restrictions on a "region-by-region, or sector-by-sector vs all-of-Queensland basis".
Ipsos Public Affairs provided 17 "waves of research" to the government over about a year and it's contract has just been extended.
Ms Palaszczuk, who has always insisted her decisions are based solely on health advice, faced a barrage of questions over the polling on Tuesday.
She denied using it to ensure she was making decisions that were popular with voters, citing the backlash she copped from some quarters when she took the lead on short, sharp lockdowns.
"Everyone was yelling at me to open the borders," she told reporters.
"So don't talk to me about popularity. Everybody was attacking me when I stood my ground here, and backed the chief health officer's advice to me, when ... it was seen as not being popular out there in the public and it kept Queenslanders safe."
The premier said she had seen some of the research, but not all of it, but also refused to detail which aspects she had reviewed.
"I'm not going to go in and out of that today for goodness sake."
Ms Palaszczuk said the COVID-19 Key Insights Project was commissioned to "help with the advertising campaigns that the COVID taskforce put in place" and her actions were guided by the advice of Chief Health Officer Jeannette Young.
"I'll tell you who helps guide my decision making. This wonderful woman standing to the left of me, who has helped keep Queenslanders safe."