Latest polling thread Aug 21 2015

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Aristotleded24

[url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/stephen-harper-seen-as-better-than... trust Harper over Notley:[/url]

Quote:
Most Albertans believe Stephen Harper is a better defender of Alberta's interests than Premier Rachel Notley, according to a new poll, amid increasing pessimism about the province's economy.

Fifty per cent of Albertans give the nod to the federal Conservative leader on that question, compared to 33 per cent who favour Notley, the leader of Alberta's New Democrats, according to a poll conducted by Mainstreet Research.

Residents are split about the job Notley is doing as premier, with 42 per cent saying they disapprove and 45 per cent saying they approve — down from 62 per cent approval in May.

"Recent economic factors, primarily a continued slide in oil prices, are likely a factor in the increased disapproval," said Quito Maggi, president of Mainstreet Research.

Brachina

 So the price of Oil is Notley's fault, but not Harper's?

NorthReport

The Liberal media complex is now operatingin full force.

Bruce Anderson of Abacus, National NewsWatch, etc., has never meet a Liberal he doesn't like.  Laughing

NorthReport

Now the Duffy trial is on hold can we expect to see the Cons rebound?

NorthReport

Comments you will never ever hear from Liberal media complex guy Bruce Anderson.

Norman Spector ‏@nspector4  10h10 hours ago

Norman Spector retweeted Robert Fife

To his credit, he's said this before, citing the precedent of @MichaelleJeanF as his model

Norman Spector added,

Robert Fife @RobertFifeNDP Leader @ThomasMulcair tells CTV Saskatoon he'll give up French citizenship if he is elected PM. #cdnpoli #elect42 3 retweets0 favoritesReplyRetweet 3Favorite More

 

Stockholm

FWIW, the latest Nanos has the NDP up 2 points from last week and it is now NDP 31%, Libs 30%, CPC 29%...

http://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/nanos-on-the-numbers/major-parties-still-...

JKR

NorthReport wrote:

Now the Duffy trial is on hold can we expect to see the Cons rebound?

Not if the new headlines are, "Canada's economy enters recession."

http://www.bbc.com/news/business-34116189

adma

Stockholm wrote:

FWIW, the latest Nanos has the NDP up 2 points from last week and it is now NDP 31%, Libs 30%, CPC 29%...

http://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/nanos-on-the-numbers/major-parties-still-...

Given their four-week methodology, I wonder what that says about trending.

Misfit Misfit's picture

Some of you are talking about outliers, trending, etc. I think Sean from Ottawa posted a few weeks back that these polls are not scientific, nor necessarily accurate. Some pollsters take raw data, then extrapolate and add their own numbers to the data pool to get a desired result. I don't want to say that this is exactly what he posted, but if polls are not scientific, and there is a pattern of herding where most polls seem to be showing pretty much the same results, is it possible that they have been deliberately manipulated to be like that? Then perhaps the outlier polls are the accurate ones and the others are crap designed to convince the public that the Liberals are doing better than they really are and are a sound choice to vote for rather than the NDP. Just sayin'. Also, the NDP could be blowing the other parties away in Ontario but no pollster will want that shown because that would give the NDP a majority. Must make the other two Bay Street parties look good. How's that for a conspiracy theory!

NorthReport

Michelle Gagnon: NDP wave in Quebec still surging

The Orange Wave that swept the province in 2011 was no fluke

Jack Layton holds up a old-style Montreal Canadiens jersey given to him by then candidate Tom Mulcair in Montreal in April 2011.

Jack Layton holds up a old-style Montreal Canadiens jersey given to him by then candidate Tom Mulcair in Montreal in April 2011. (Jacques Boissinot/Canadian Press)

 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/canada-election-2015-tom-mulcair-ndp-que...

josh

Poll of Montreal island shows close race between Liberals and NDP.

http://montrealgazette.com/news/national/ndp-in-virtual-tie-with-liberal...

Ciabatta2

That makes sense. I think the Liberals will have a resurgence in the cities, particularly with their economic plan

nicky

The Liberals are only up amongst English Montrealers according to this poll - from 30 to 49%. Among Francophone they are only up from 17 to 21% but the NDP has gained from 36 to 42% since 2011.

 

Stockholm

Keep in mind that the Mainstreet poll is not comparing how people ACTUALLY voted in 2011 with how they say they would vote in 2015. It asks people to remember how they voted in 2011...and recalled voted is often unreliable.

In 2011 across Montreal island the NDP took 38% and the LPC 27% with the BQ and CPC back in the teens. This poll says that among decided voters the NDP is at 39% and the LPC at 37% with the BQ and CPC way back barely in double digits.

I think it's pretty obvious that the NDP has gained votes from the BQ among francophones while the LPC has picked up support from the CPC and NDP among anglophones. No surprise.

In 2011 the NDP took 10 seats in Montreal and the LPC took 7 and the BQ 1. Based on this trend I think the NDP would pick up ahuntsic from the BQ and likely lose a couple of heavily Anglo/allow seats like Pierrefods-Dollard and Honore-Mercier

alan smithee alan smithee's picture

I don't know how well the Liberals will do in Québec but it looks pretty clear that Trudeau will keep his seat in Papineau. The party in general will probably keep their seat count in the province as well.

The big losers will be the Cons and the Bloc.

nicky

Mainstreet also gives the Liberals a lead over the NDP of 49 to 16 in English Montreal.(or 62 to 23 without the undecideds.)

This seems much wider than in other polls. Last week Ekos reported that the Liberals led the NDP among English speakers in Quebec as a whole by 47 to 33. Crop had figures of 48 to 29 a couple weeks ago.

Stockholm

The Liberals currently have seven seats in all of Quebec. If they come out of the island of Montreal with a net gain of two, where else in the entire province do they gain any seats at all. For the Liberals to end up with juts a dead cat bounce in Quebec from 7 seats to say 10 would be a massive disappointment for them

alan smithee alan smithee's picture

Stockholm wrote:
The Liberals currently have seven seats in all of Quebec. If they come out of the island of Montreal with a net gain of two, where else in the entire province do they gain any seats at all. For the Liberals to end up with juts a dead cat bounce in Quebec from 7 seats to say 10 would be a massive disappointment for them

I didn't claim the Liberals were going to clean up. I said they will almost certainly keep the seats they currently have,especially Trudeau's.

knownothing knownothing's picture

From what I have seen so far Mainstreet is the most anti-ndp of the pollsters. I still think Papineau is up for grabs.

alan smithee alan smithee's picture

I respectfully disagree . I think Trudeau losing his seat is a fantasy,much like my fantasy of Harper losing his.

I'd literally be shocked. And the Montréal numbers back up what I think.

 

NorthReport

Preferred PM:

Harper 29,

Mulcair 28,

Trudeau 22.

Harper slides for fourth week in succession - NDP still scores highest on Index - Nanos Weekly Tracking (ending August 28, 2015)

Stockholm

alan smithee wrote:

I respectfully disagree . I think Trudeau losing his seat is a fantasy,much like my fantasy of Harper losing his.

I'd literally be shocked. And the Montréal numbers back up what I think.

 

I think defeating Trudeau in Papineau is a longshot, but it is not a "fantasy" in the way that defeating Harper in Calgary-Heritage would be. Papineau is 55% francophone, 5% anglophone and 40% "allophone". According to this poll of Montreal, the Liberals are sweeping among people who did the survey in English and the NDP is sweeping among people who did the survey in French...there are more French speakers than English speakers in Papineau.  

Ciabatta2

alan smithee wrote:

I respectfully disagree . I think Trudeau losing his seat is a fantasy,much like my fantasy of Harper losing his.

I'd literally be shocked. And the Montréal numbers back up what I think.

Agreed.  It was mildly plausible when the polling narrative was Liberal obliteration, but the Liberals have momentum and its the Libs and the Cons squeezing the NDP.

swallow swallow's picture

Stockholm wrote:
The Liberals currently have seven seats in all of Quebec. If they come out of the island of Montreal with a net gain of two, where else in the entire province do they gain any seats at all. For the Liberals to end up with juts a dead cat bounce in Quebec from 7 seats to say 10 would be a massive disappointment for them

Hard to see many off-island seats. Brossard-St Lambert, perhaps, but that's a Montreal suburb. Brome-Missisquoi is the best bet outside Montreal, based on strong English community identification with the Liberal party, with a long shot at Compton-Stanstead (popular local candidate) but that's a very long shot indeed. I can't think where else, the old pockets in places like the Monteregie and Gaspe being pretty much dried up.  308 gives the Liberals the edge in AForces et Democratie seat bsed on vote splits but their model can't really handle the riding level well, espeically given strong localist voting patterns. 

Stockholm

The anglo factor in Brome-Mississquoi is quite over-rated. Historically there were a lot of anglos in parts of the eastern townships and a lot of Montreals WASPs have cottages there, but according to Statscan the residents of that riding are 82% francophone and only about 15% anglophone and that seat elected the BQ in 1993, 2006 and 2008. In 2011 the NDP took 43% and the Liberals and BQ took 21% each...so I just dont see much hope for the liberals there when they are losing the francophone vote by such a wide margin... and the BQ vote could be suppressed a lot moree this time to the NDP benefit

josh

NDP internal poll has Duceppe way down in Laurier-St. Marie.

http://ipolitics.ca/2015/09/02/gilles-duceppe-far-behind-ndps-laverdiere...

Gustave

josh wrote:

NDP internal poll has Duceppe way down in Laurier-St. Marie.

http://ipolitics.ca/2015/09/02/gilles-duceppe-far-behind-ndps-laverdiere...

Great news. Hélène deserves to keep her riding. The link does not work. Do you remember what the poll result was?

josh

Gustave wrote:

josh wrote:

NDP internal poll has Duceppe way down in Laurier-St. Marie.

http://ipolitics.ca/2015/09/02/gilles-duceppe-far-behind-ndps-laverdiere...

Great news. Hélène deserves to keep her riding. The link does not work. Do you remember what the poll result was?

57-20.

Unionist

Gustave wrote:

josh wrote:

NDP internal poll has Duceppe way down in Laurier-St. Marie.

http://ipolitics.ca/2015/09/02/gilles-duceppe-far-behind-ndps-laverdiere...

Great news. Hélène deserves to keep her riding. The link does not work. Do you remember what the poll result was?

Laverdière is particularly bad news. She was the one dumping on Harper for not breaking diplomatic relations fast enough with Syria, and other such heroic gestures, when she was replacing Dewar (another piece of work) in foreign affairs.

And [url=http://www.ndp.ca/news/ndp-condemns-crackdown-foreign-ngos-egypt]this shameless defence of CIA fronts[/url] is still on the NDP web site.

We've talked amply over the years about her and Dewar. I used to have much more respect for her than I do now.

Luckily, Gilles Duceppe's incomprehensible reluctance, for years, to support Canadian withdrawal from Afghanistan doesn't make him much better, at least on foreign affairs.

quizzical

it's a defense of a CIA front? how do you know this?

 

i gotta admit i sometimes think there's CIA operatives here pushing their line (residuals from up bringing)...but then i go really are they really all over the place?

sherpa-finn

Unionist overstates the "CIA-front" line.

But it is true that those agencies (and others) have been sponsored by a US Gov't agency that is mandated to "promote democratic values" in other countries. As such, this work has frequently been described as "doing overtly what the CIA used to do covertly".

But I am not aware of any actual CIA-links between these agencies and their back funder.

Do people assume that every Canadian agency that gets funding from the Canadian Gov't is an agent of CSIS? Just saying ...

bekayne
quizzical

sherpa-finn wrote:
Unionist overstates the "CIA-front" line.

But it is true that those agencies (and others) have been sponsored by a US Gov't agency that is mandated to "promote democratic values" in other countries. As such, this work has frequently been described as "doing overtly what the CIA used to do covertly".

But I am not aware of any actual CIA-links between these agencies and their back funder.

Do people assume that every Canadian agency that gets funding from the Canadian Gov't is an agent of CSIS? Just saying ...

my great uncle and aunt were CIA spies according to my mom. they worked for a well known international educational agency. she says some cousins still do. i don't think CSIS is in the same league as the CIA. but then i don't know if the CIA is as everywhere as i've been raised to believe.

Unionist

quizzical wrote:

it's a defense of a CIA front? how do you know this?

The NDP attacked Egypt for throwing out the IRI and the NDI.

The first thing to grasp is that Egypt is a sovereign country. If they want to throw out some U.S.-government-funded groups - or anyone else - that's not Canada's business, is it?

The IRI is the "International Republican Institute". Here's what the Centre for Media and Democracy says about it:

Quote:
The International Republican Insitute (IRI) is one of the components of the National Endowment for Democracy by which it seeks to influence political outcomes and civic society in lesser developed countries around the world[1]. Its efforts are to channel politics and civic society to promote a neoliberal economic and political model; NED/IRI also engage in activities previously performed by the CIA.[2] IRI is mainly funded by U.S. State Department, U.S. Agency for International Development and the National Endowment for Democracy.[3] IRI is loosely affiliated to the Republican party – which doesn’t provide any of its funding.[4]

The NDI is the "National Democratic Institute" - also a component of the National Endowment for Democracy.

And here is what Hélène Laverdière had to say about them:

Quote:
“Canada must raise this issue immediately with Egyptian authorities,” said Laverdière. “NDI and IRI are both excellent examples of organizations that work to support democracy-building in countries in transition.”

I do want to see the NDP retain that seat... but it's a damn shame Laverdière is still running there. She lectured Harper for not being tough enough on Syria and not being supportive enough of these U.S.-funded front groups in Egypt. I choose to believe that this is not really NDP policy. But I'll wait and see.

 

quizzical

 i've no probs with them throwing out whomever they want. i would say i don't know how foreign relations decisions are decided.

'democracy building' is today's term for spys i guess.

Gustave

Unionist,I'm not a big fan of neither organisation nor was I favor of the dismentlement of the CIDA. But Canada is funding the NDI. You may propose that we stop doing it, but I can assure you Hélène knows very well what's at stake here. Of course, I'll admit both organisations lack basic transparency but it's often the case with external affairs in general. You also know very well that such statement express the party position, not the person's one. The wording "CIA fronts" has some conspiracy theory feeling. The link you provide, does not support this theory. 

NorthReport

Precisely, my dear Watson, precisely!  Frown

 

What do the Liberals’ stand for?

Depends on the day

In 2006, after catering to the Liberals’ troglodyte wing for years and doing all he could to delay equal marriage, Martin had the epiphany that gays could only be saved if the notwithstanding clause was removed from the Charter of Rights.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson

In 2006, after catering to the Liberals’ troglodyte wing for years and doing all he could to delay equal marriage, Martin had the epiphany that gays could only be saved if the notwithstanding clause was removed from the Charter of Rights.

  • Every now and then, a ubiquitous nature documentary shows a great school of fish make a turn. With pin-point precision, thousands of them change direction completely and then zoom off in unison as if nothing could be more natural.

It makes you wonder, what’s the collective noun — school of fish, parade of lions, etc. — for Liberals? I nominate a crusade. And try as you might to be angry, it’s a marvel to watch one set off, as we have seen recently.

Andrew Coyne: Spend all that money, Mr. Trudeau? Why and on what?

Let’s get the politics out of the way first. Is Justin Trudeau’s plan to double federal spending on infrastructure and run deficits of $10-billion annually for the next three years, as a Winnipeg Sun headline had it, “POLITICAL SUICIDE”? Not likely.

If deficits were the political hemlock they’re made out to be, Kathleen Wynne, whose political philosophy Trudeau seems to have closely copied, would not be in power. For that matter, neither would Stephen Harper. Both made a policy choice to run large deficits, and both were subsequently re-elected. A taboo is only a taboo until it isn’t.

But that doesn’t mean it’s a good idea. No, it won’t “wreck” the economy, as the Conservatives would have you believe — any more than it will it “kick start” the economy, to use verb the Liberals might prefer. Government policies, as a rule, simply don’t have that kind of transformative effect, for good or ill — certainly not in the mild doses the Liberals have in mind, i.e., deficits of one-half of one per cent of gross domestic product.

Continue reading…

Always, a crusade starts with the same syrupy faux-gravitas. The kind of seriousness with which you imagine a character in George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four declaring that, no, the war is against Eurasia and always has been. So it is hearing Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau on deficits, morphing from being “the party of balanced budgets” to seeing Conservative Leader Stephen Harper as a heartless beast for still supporting them.

Toronto Star columnist Tom Walkom lauded him, calling it brave to challenge the deficit hysteria. But he soft-peddled the larger point: namely, that Liberals, Paul Martin chief among them but also Trudeau since, fostered and then propagated the hysterics, budget after budget, election after election. Including, incredibly, during this election, meaning core values can chameleon into their opposite in mere days.

This is more callous than brave, made all the more so by instantly demonizing those with whom Liberals agreed only days before; as an example, the absurdity that the NDP is now on “the far right,” as Martin claimed. Nor was it a clumsy slip of the tongue, either. It mirrors how Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne ran from the left in Ontario’s last election. Naturally, after winning a progressive mandate, her big surprise was the shock privatization of the power system.

Related

Incidentally, it’s a privatization reckless enough that it made former Ontario premier Mike Harris, destroyer of all that’s good and holy, say no. And which Liberals, with typical solemnity, once warned against. Anyway.

Onto crusades at work, a hit list of are-you-a-real-Canadian litmus tests that Liberals can’t resist applying. In 2008, for example, fresh out of office after 13 do-nothing years watching emissions soar, Stéphane Dion, with no hint of irony, made climate change the great crusade.

In 2006, after catering to the Liberals’ troglodyte wing for years and doing all he could to delay equal marriage, Martin had the epiphany that gays could only be saved if the notwithstanding clause was removed from the Charter of Rights. He then summoned his inner Churchill and implored Harper to join that vital fight.

During the 1980s and ’90s, John Turner and Jean Chrétien fought Tory free trade agreements. Canada’s very sovereignty was so imperilled in one election, the Liberals ran campaign ads showing the border being erased. In government, they merrily embraced the very kind deals they so articulately denounced and then proceeded to expand their worst qualities.

And who can forget Pierre Trudeau deriding the Tories in the ’70s for wanting wage and price controls to fight inflation? An idea so batty, after mercilessly mocking it on the hustings, he immediately enacted it after being re-elected. How poetic the son’s own corker of a reversal now seems.

The point is not, as Liberals would like it to be, that everyone else is too timid to fess up and agree that deficits are salvations. Rather, it’s that if that’s the case, then why are we only learning about it now? Not, say, after any of the Harper budgets that were rubbished over their deficits, which, it’s logical to presume, Liberals opposed only because they contained too few zeroes.

Another old faithful, the Charter, probably pushes shame up against even Liberal limits, after welcoming Bill Blair, Toronto’s police chief during the G20 policing disgrace, as a star candidate

 

 

http://news.nationalpost.com/full-comment/jamey-heath-what-do-the-libera...

swallow swallow's picture

The US-funded organziations in Egypt are not CIA fronts, though they are problematic ain all sorts of ways. But the NDP statement against expellingthem from Egypt is entirely consiustent with the NDP support for Egyptian democratic movements. I could never vote for a party that felt the Egyptian military dictatorship should have full rights to attack Egyptian-based NGOs. There's no "national sovereignty" to do that any mroe than Canada has a "sovereign" right to oppress First Nations peoples with impunity from criticism by other countries. 

quizzical

i did not know Egypt was under military dictatorship.

now i know i agree swallow.

jerrym

The people want Harper out according to this Ipsos poll. It could result in strategic voting and a stampede to one side or the other (or more likely different stampedes in different regions), whether one likes it or not, to get rid of Harper. Thats why proportional representation is so important - it allows one's vote to count for your favourite party rather than a second choice dating partner. 

Quote:

While the ultimate goal of Canadian political parties is to form a majority government in the House of Commons, none of the three parties which could form government are even close to majority territory.

So what’s the next best option, according to Canadian voters? An Ipsos poll conducted on behalf of Global News found that the majority of Canadian voters prefer an NDP or Liberal government regardless of which one is taking the lead.

“What this shows, it’s more about change than it is about the specific agenda of either opposition party,” Darrell Bricker, CEO of Ipsos said in an interview Wednesday. “As a result they don’t care if the NDP is in the lead, or the Liberals are in the lead as long as it’s not [Conservative leader Stephen] Harper in the lead.”

According to the Ipsos poll, the most popular form of minority government is an NDP government bolstered by the support of the Liberals. Fifty-five per cent of all voters support that option, with 87 per cent of NDP voters, and 68 per cent of Liberals in favour. ...

IPSOS-FACTUM-ON-ELECTION-ISSUES_13EA_02

 

 

http://globalnews.ca/news/2199316/more-about-change-new-ipsos-poll-shows...

 

 

 

 

knownothing knownothing's picture

Ciabatta2 wrote:

alan smithee wrote:

I respectfully disagree . I think Trudeau losing his seat is a fantasy,much like my fantasy of Harper losing his.

I'd literally be shocked. And the Montréal numbers back up what I think.

Agreed.  It was mildly plausible when the polling narrative was Liberal obliteration, but the Liberals have momentum and its the Libs and the Cons squeezing the NDP.

I am not so easily swayed by the "polling narrative". Especially when it is being driven by 1 poll by a company that has consistently shown the lowest NDP results. 

 

mark_alfred

The recent rise of the Liberals has mostly been in Ontario at the Conservative's expense.  So the NDP are most likely to win, since they still dominate Quebec and BC.

josh

Abacus looks at the undecided voters:

Past Federal Voting Behaviour

In 2011, 42% say they did not vote while 58% said they voted.  Among those who voted, 46% supported the Conservative Party, 25% voted NDP, while 21% voted Liberal.  Two percent said they voted Green.

A quick look at the demographic and regional make up of this group finds they are:

– More likely to be female (59%) than male (41%)
– Younger than the general population.  52% are under the age of 45.
– More likely to reside in Ontario, less likely to live in Quebec.
– Less educated.  41% have high school or less compared 29% among those who identified a party they support.

http://abacusdata.ca/research-note-who-are-the-undecided-voters/#sthash.LuRFLap6.dpuf

alan smithee alan smithee's picture

mark_alfred wrote:

The recent rise of the Liberals has mostly been in Ontario at the Conservative's expense. 

This is a scenario I don't mind at all. As long as it's at the expense of the Conservatives.

 

Misfit Misfit's picture

This scenario can also cause a vote split which can benefit the NDP in some ridings.

josh

Ekos:

EKOS Deciding & Leaning | NDP 30.2% | CPC 29.5% | LPC 27.7% | GPC 6.4% | Aug 26-Sep 2 n=3,243 IVR 

Aristotleded24

[url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/canada-election-2015-grenier-polltracker... front-runner status at risk:[/url]

Quote:
The softening NDP numbers seem to be largely driven by recent shifts in British Columbia and Ontario.

With polls in the field to Aug. 24, the NDP had 39 per cent support in B.C. in the Poll Tracker, but has since dropped to 32 per cent. The 12-point lead it had over the Conservatives in the province has dropped to two.

In the last five polls published in the province, the NDP has scored only between 31 and 33 per cent. In the five polls prior to those, the NDP was scoring between 38 and 41 per cent support. Numbers from EKOS, Abacus, Nanos Research, and Ipsos Reid have all shown drops for the NDP in B.C.

This is problematic for the New Democrats, as the province is, along with Quebec, a key to forming government.

The polls in Ontario are also souring for the New Democrats, with four consecutive surveys putting the party under the 30 per cent mark. As of Aug. 24, the poll average was giving the NDP 34 per cent in Ontario. The party's score is now 28 per cent.

quizzical

oh ya the slime are everywhere shouting bad NDP. and people are identifying with their abusers.

Pondering

quizzical wrote:

oh ya the slime are everywhere shouting bad NDP. and people are identifying with their abusers.

That is pretty disrespectful of people who disagree with you politically. I don't see a whole lot of people shouting "bad NDP" either. All the major parties get accolates and condemnation from the press on various issues.

quizzical

yup it is what it is....i'm so sick of the hyprocrits and liars trying to con people into their bs. and no, coverage is NOT fkn equal.

interesting you brought up the press and tried to con me into believing it was equal though.

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