A Galaxy poll has found 59 per cent of Queenslanders are satisfied with Annastacia Palaszczuk's performance in the role of Premier.

As Queensland's new Labor Government today marks 100 days in office, the poll published in the Sunday Mail newspaper showed 41 per cent of the 1,550 voters polled were satisfied with State Opposition Leader Lawrence Springborg.

But when asked to rate Mr Springborg's performance, the poll found 28.8 per cent of respondents rated the Opposition Leader as good or very good, while just over a third rated his performance as satisfactory.

The Galaxy poll also found if an election was held today Labor would win, indicating the ALP led the Liberal National Party (LNP) 52 to 48 per cent on a two party-preferred basis.

Asked to rate Ms Palaszczuk's performance as Premier, 51 per cent of respondents said she had lived up to expectations, 16 per cent said she had performed better than expected while 27 per cent said she had not been as good as they expected.

Speaking on Sunday morning, Mr Springborg dismissed the results of the poll.

He said the Premier had failed to act on her promises in her first 100 days in office.

"Almost three years to the next state election and polls are going to go up, and polls are going to go down in that particular time as always happens," he said.

"But what is very clear is Queenslanders do want a plan for jobs and a plan for opportunity from this Government and that's something that they're not getting."

Speaking in Rockhampton ahead of a Community Cabinet meeting on Sunday, Ms Palaszczuk announced the State Government had struck a deal with the NRL to stage a rugby league match in the central Queensland city in August.

On the poll results, she said her Government had been running "a steady ship".

"My Government is committed to building confidence," she said.

"I want to see more investment in this state and if that means talking to business communities in other states and getting them to come here and invest, we will do everything we possibly can.

"But we want to restore confidence, so that means looking at infrastructure projects into the future and our budget is coming down in July and Queensland will see the direction I want to take this government."

She said the Federal Government had failed to give Queensland its fair share of infrastructure funding and called on Prime Minister Tony Abbott to provide the state with a one-off deal to fund infrastructure.