Latest Polling Thread - Started April 20, 2012
Ok! Good news for 100 voters iOS and Android on my research polling:
but sad for Prairies
Canada
NDP 36%
CON 27%
LIB 19%
GRN 12%
BQ 6%
BC
NDP 40% (4 votes)
CON 30% (3 votes)
GRN 20% (2 votes)
LIB 10% (1 votes)
Alberta
NDP 36% (5 votes)
LIB 29% (4 votes)
CON 29% (4 votes)
GRN 7% (1 votes)
Prairies
CON 43% (3 votes)
GRN 29% (2 votes)
NDP 14% (1 votes)
LIB 14% (1 votes)
Ontario
NDP 32% (11 votes)
CON 32% (11 votes)
LIB 27% (9 votes)
GRN 9% (3 votes)
Quebec
NDP 46% (10 votes)
BQ 27% (6 votes)
CON 14% (3 votes)
GRN 9% (2 votes)
LIB 5% (1 votes)
Atlantic
NDP 33% (3 votes)
CON 33% (3 votes)
LIB 22% (2 votes)
GRN 11% (1 votes)
North
NDP 50% (2 votes)
GRN 25% (1 votes)
LIB 25% (1 votes)
CON 0% (none)
Good to see NDP getting more and more growing and Anyone wanna see my next researches again? for 500 answers in summer ? =D
Please try to avoid confusion between opt-in surveys and polls done using some kind of polling standard. For all the information you have you are just advertising someone's entertainment survey but there is no science value to it whatsoever. To start a whole new thread to promote it when there is another out there causes only further confusion and division of the discussion.
I'd argue that you are starting a polling thread with something that is not a poll by any acceptable standard and doing it while there is an existing thread.
Sorry but I think this thread and post is less than unhelpful.
You say your research polling-- do you have a personal interest in the promotion of this so-called poll? That makes it worse if it is the case.
Edited: Since the other thread is nearly done with over 110 responses then I retract suggestion that this get closed-- but I do hope that we can see some effort to distinguish between opt-in surveys and actual polling by reputable firms because this detailed result could distract through a thread as some might not realize what it is. As well when opening a new thread it is helpful to put a post in the previous saying you are opening a new one in order to move the conversation rather than divide it. -- or wait till a mod closes the full one.
Really I wish we had multi-page threads to avoid this.
bump
I still can't believe the Conservative and NDP numbers are as they are in the Prairies. The Conservatives got their start in the Prairies, and when you look at how the vote is distributed regionally and the clout that each region has, only a Conservative decline in Western Canada coupled with an NDP surge could explain why the 2 parites are tied nationally.
Hi Ippurigakko,
I totally agree with Sean in Ottawa. You may be trying to give us the results of your polls, but unfortunately they don`t mean anything because it`s not scientific at all. Hope you don`t take this personal.
Cheers,
Basically if the number of people polled for the whole country is under a thousand and those people weren't selected randomly, the poll isn't worth much.
I'm fine with it being in a thread marked as a an unscientific survey but not in the main polling thread-- it becomes a distraction from real stuff.
Otherwise we will get interpretations and discussions over something about as accurate as a Ouija board.
Unscientific surveys seem like a waste of time. Do we have a thread for every webpoll?
New Quebec federal poll by CROP (their first since the leadership convention):
NDP: 51%
BQ: 18%
LIB: 15%
CON: 12%
Best choice for PM:
Mulcair: 41%
Harper: 10%
Rae: 9%
"This is more than a honeymoon.... He is almost alone on the ice in Quebec."
http://www.cyberpresse.ca/actualites/quebec-canada/politique-canadienne/...
That is almost impossible to believe.
The BQ below 20%! Wow. With those numbers it becomes a guessing game as to which seats would not go NDP.
I think with those numbers the NDP would win every seat in Quebec except for Beauce and Mount Royal. Even Mount Royal could be winnable if Cotler quits and the NDP nominates someone who can hoover up the Liberal vote.
I really, really want to see some national numbers....
Justin Trudeau may want to think about how his dad was a CCFer before turning to the red team because there was no orange team federally.
Not a mention in Huff Post, of course. It doesn't fit the NDP is done in Quebec narrative, or that the Libs are a government in waiting. What a waste of time that Blog is now.
This poll is really great news for the NDP, after the perpetual disappointment that is Alberta politics and the Bruce Hyer crossing. I like that Nanos has gone almost two months without a poll
Howard, and I guess anyone else who wants to offer, do you really think that Nanos is holding off on releasing a poll because the numbers don't fit a narrative or is he simply not pollng as often. I would sure like to know what you and others might think.
As for National numbers, given these Quebec numbers, it would sure be something to see how it fits into a national narrative.
During majority government periods I think polling slows.
If you poll too much you burn your sample anyway.
Then again, unlike in the federal election, they don't have "incumbent advantage" anymore, except in the four seats the presently hold--which may skew the numbers downward...
Sean, fair enough. Not a mention of the poll on CBC. Jerks.
Agreed, Stockholm.
We could be looking at a 1980-type near sweep of the province with Mulcair as NDP leader.
I don't think 75 out of 78 seats in 2015 is out of the question.
A 1980-type NDP sweep of the province of Manitoba? I could go for that!
FINALLY!!!!
Nanos
CON 34.7% (-1.0)
NDP 32.4% (+7.4)
LIB 23.3% (-6.2)
GRN 4.2% (+0.8)
BQ 3.9% (-1.0)
Link to Nanos:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/ottawa-notebook/harpers-bra...
Relieved more than anything to see Nanos more or less onside with the rest.
And also out this morning:
Forum Research poll puts NDP ahead of the Conservatives
NDP 36%
CON 33%
LIB 22%
And add Nanos on provinces
Atlantic
NDP 35% (+14.7)
CON 32.9% (-12.7)
LIB 30.5% (-2.8)
GRN 1% (-0.6)
Quebec
NDP 37.4% (+5.2)
LIB 23.2% (-3.6)
CON 19.7% (+3.9)
BQ 16.4% (-4.2)
GRN 2.7% (+1.7)
Ontario
CON 36.9% (+1)
NDP 29.3% (+7.4)
LIB 27.7% (-10.1)
GRN 5.3% (+1.4)
Prairies
CON 46.7% (-1.6)
NDP 30.4% (+6)
LIB 15.6% (-5)
GRN 3% (-1)
Alberta
No info (did he forgot add it or put it on Prairies?)
BC
CON 39% (-2.1)
NDP 31.9% (+8.8)
LIB 19.6% (-8.6)
GRN 7.5% (+1.3)
Interesting w/Nanos: that NDP figure seems awfully low for Mulcair-era Quebec (but BQ at 4th!?!)
I can excuse the relatively low NDP figure for Quebec - for whatever reason, Nanos often seems a few weeks behind the trend - but BQ in 4th place has to be down to a small sample size.
FYI, Nanos includes Alberta in Prairies, so if the NDP is at 30% across the three Prairie provinces, imagine how high it must be in MB and SK!