The People Want Janković
Almost two-thirds of the respondents (63.4%) believe that the National Assembly made a bad move by failing to appoint Janković prime minister on 11 January, while 28% said it was the right choice and 8.6% were undecided.
According to party affiliations, the move was largely opposed by supporters of the PS and SocDems, while it was mainly supported by the supporters of the SDS, New Slovenia (NSi) and the Virant List, according to the poll.
While more than half of the respondents said that Janković would be a better prime minister than Janša, a bit less than a third of them supported Janša. More than 10% remained undecided, and 6.5% would rather see somebody else at the helm of the country.
While Janković was strongly backed by the supporters of the PS and the SocDems and Janša by supporters of the SDS and the NSi, the opinions of the supporters of the People's Party (SLS) and the Virant List were divided.
A quarter of the supporters of the SLS backed Janković and 30% backed Janša, while the rest remained undecided or said that somebody else should be nominated.
While a third of the supporters of the Virant List expressed support for Janković, 40% backed Janša, and the rest either remained undecided or would back another.
Almost half of the supporters of the Pensioners' Party (DeSUS) would rather see their party join a coalition led by the left-leaning PS, while 33.2% would join a coalition led by Janša.
On the other hand, 41.3% of the supporters of the Virant List would like to see the party enter a Janša-led coalition, while a third supported a left-leaning coalition.
Prior to DeSUS's decision to enter coalition talks with the right-leaning coalition, there was serious talk of another early election, which was opposed by two thirds of the respondents. Another 27.4% would welcome a fresh election, while the reset remained undecided.
The respondents of the poll carried out by Delo's in-house pollster Delo Stik on a representative sample of 609 adults on 17 and 18 January were moreover quizzed about their views on the family law referendum.
Almost half (46.9%) of the 62.1% respondents who said they would turn out at the polls said they would back the law, while 33.7% said they would not. The rest (19.3%) were undecided.