A Norstat study shows that support for the Reform Party has declined. On a four-week average, support for the Reform Party is 12.2 percent. Over the past week, support fell to 10.1 percent.
Support for the Reform Party fell by 1.8 percentage points over the past week. Since mid-June, support has fallen by five percentage points. In Norstat polls, support for the Reform Party has never been this low before.
Isamaa is supported by 28.3 percent, the Estonian Conservative People's Party (EKRE) is supported by 18.2 percent, and the Centre Party is supported by 17.3 percent of eligible voters.
The latest results reflect the polling period from June 16 to July 21. A total of 4001 eligible voters were surveyed.
Support for the three most popular parties did not change over the past week. Isamaa is 10.1 percentage points ahead of EKRE. The Centre Party is 0.9 percentage points behind EKRE.
Support for the Reform Party is 12.2 percent, SDE support is 12.2 percent, the support for the Right-wingers is 5.7 percent, and Eesti 200 support is 3.2 percent.
Coalition parties are supported by a total of 15.4 percent of respondents. Opposition parties in the Riigikogu are supported by 76 percent of respondents. Support for coalition parties has never been this low in Norstat polls.
Once a month, Norstat asks respondents for their opinion on the government’s work. 22 percent of respondents believe that the government is doing its job well. 71 percent of respondents believe that the government is doing its job poorly.
18 percent of respondents approve of Prime Minister Kristi Michal’s work. 62 percent of respondents disapprove of Michal’s work.
At least 4000 people participated in the Norstat study. The margin of error is highest among Isamaa supporters (+/-1.72 percent). For Eesti 200, the margin of error is +/-0.67 percent.
The survey was conducted by phone and online. Respondents to the phone survey formed the majority. The results are weighted according to the proportional distribution of eligible voters.