Federal Grits Drop in Quebec – Tories Still Short of Majority

72 comments Latest by westerner (suspended)

The latest SES Research poll completed this Thursday evening (April 5th) shows the Conservatives are still short of forming a majority government. Nationally, the Conservatives registered the support of 36% of decided voters followed by the Liberals at 33%, the NDP at 16%, the BQ at 10% and the Green Party at 6%.

However, the federal budget, Quebec provincial election results and the new advertising scandal arrest has put downward pressure on Liberal support in Quebec. The Liberals have dropped nine points in Quebec in the past 60 days. Research conducted by SES has shown that in the past there is a direct relationship between federal Liberal support in Quebec and any new revelations regarding the sponsorship scandal. It is too early to tell whether the Liberal drop is short term or not.

To see the detailed results, check out the stat sheet in the support materials box on the right.

So - if you’re Stephen Harper - do you call an election or not call an election?

What do you think?

Cheers, NJN

Remember to rate the views of others - to allow us to recognize the opinion leaders in our national conversation.

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Nik Your poll results surprise me, and I am in disagreement with one of your co... more

e guye (Nova Scotia) 08 Apr 11:15

" the Tories still short of majority" What a happy thought to start off Easter ... more

Bernie (Ontario) 08 Apr 07:47

Those shoes will belong to someone else long before Dion ever gets comfortable i... more

Platty (Alberta) 08 Apr 10:37

Re the lack of 'marketing - education' by opposition parties - If you are correc... more

e guye (Nova Scotia) 08 Apr 15:56

Fuzzy, I quote from your post: 'This would give Dion an opportunity to call a... more

e guye (Nova Scotia) 08 Apr 16:32

Ken the effects of adscam, resurrected with Mr Lafleur's problems, may have sho... more

e guye (Nova Scotia) 08 Apr 18:29

Comments

Bernie

" the Tories still short of majority"
What a happy thought to start off Easter Sunday morning. A Conservative majority is the last thing we want. As long as they are in a minority they can't do too much damage.
However I think that Harper is too impatient to hold back. He can smell victory and so I think he will go ahead and call and election as soon as he can find a mechanism to blame it on someone else. I'm sure he'll come up with something.
If he waits too long and Dion gets comfortable in his new shoes, you will see the Liberal's fortune rise, especially in Quebec.

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08 Apr 07:47

32 replies so far. Join this conversation.

Platty

Those shoes will belong to someone else long before Dion ever gets comfortable in them. I am not sure where the thought process is with a comment like "they can't do too much damage", unless you are thinking that the Conservatives would rule as the Liberals did when they had a majority,but don't worry, if Prime Minister Stephen Harper is given a majority government, he will get things done in a positive fashion for this country. Actually, there have been more positive moves with this Prime Minister, in the brief time he has had a minority government, than there have been in the prior scandal filled13 years.

[updated Sun Apr 08 10:37:46 EDT 2007]

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08 Apr 10:37

nps

I am personally happy with minority rule and hope it stays that way be it CPC or GRIT, it matters not.

[updated Sun Apr 08 10:53:59 EDT 2007]

Reply to Comment

08 Apr 10:53

Bernie

nps, I agree. In minority governments there is less tendency for dictatorial governance, there is greater chance of stopping a PM from making a disasterous decision and minority sectors of society would less likely get dumped on.

[updated Mon Apr 09 08:14:34 EDT 2007]

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09 Apr 08:14

Bob Nelson

Bob Nelson promissed to get rid of Sephen Harper. Visit www.judicare.ca

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08 Apr 10:55

e guye

Nik Your poll results surprise me, and I am in disagreement with one of your conclusions. The latest decima poll showed a 9 point spread between Tories and Liberals, with Tories of course ahead, I believe your poll shows the Tories with a 3 point lead. Quite a difference, particularly as the Decima polls appear to consistently give the Liberals any 'benefit of the doubt'.

Re Quebec - your poll states the Liberals have dropped 9 points in Quebec within the past 60 days - you make the reserving comment of a direct connection between loss of Liberal standing in Quebec with 'any new revelations regarding the sponsership scandal'.
But the 'new' revelations just came out within about the past week, so think your premise is weak.

I personally believe the Liberal party has not yet bottomed out in Quebec.

[updated Sun Apr 08 11:15:56 EDT 2007]

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08 Apr 11:15

paulalex

maybe the 'new revelations' only came out about a week ago in English Canada, but here in Quebec the papers have been overflowing with stories about the corruption of Lafleur and his extradition from Belize for well over six weeks

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18 Apr 22:57

e guye

paulalex (Québec)

Quite right. That didn't even occur to me.

I've often thought I'd like to have access online to the leading French language newspaper in Quebec (translated into English) - so that could get a clearer idea of Quebeckers, their thoughts and reactions to events that affect us all.

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19 Apr 21:19

paulalex

e guye; That is highly unlikely to ever happen. First of all, Quebecers are too divided amongst themselves to have one leading paper, but you could probably get away with only reading four if you read French, and then most of the papers also have a lot of internal debate to such adegree that the concept of editorial comment is practically unknown here. Anyway, there are a total of 22 French dailies and one English daily here. There are also numerous non-stop political talk-shows. Such differences of opinion are very healthy in a democracy.

However, I often find that the same stories are presented in radically differnt ways in the different languages. When I read what is written in English about Quebec I often feel as though I have fallen through the looking glass. It seems that in most Anglo Canadian media, only one point of view is tolerated.

If you know anything about translation you will also know that any one sentence can be plausibly translated in a dozen radically different ways. And then you would get another dozen comments and rebuttals for each translation.

Unfortunately, unless if by some miracle the majority of both language groups manage to learn to read, write, and think critically in both languages, we are doomed to remain forever in two solitudes.

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19 Apr 22:57

e guye

paulalex (Québec)

You say 'When I read what is written in English about Quebec I often feel as though I have fallen through the looking glass. It seems that in most Anglo Canadian media, only one point of view is tolerated'.

That is exactly what I mean. It is too bad that in this advanced technological age the true voice of Quebec cannot be heard in English Canada.

I think many Quebeckers share opinions, beliefs of those in my corner of Canada - but as things stand we'll never know - the English Canada media prefers to comment in a very superficial way on such divisive topics as hajibs worn by schoolchildren rather than delve into the very real social issues that lie behind these stories.

The only journalist I am aware of who reaches out from Quebec to the rest of Canada is Chantal Hebert - I'm looking forward to reading 'French Kiss'.

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20 Apr 00:31

paulalex

I think we will gradually see a little more of Quebecers writing in English for anglophone audiences. I would also like to see more anglo-canadians writing in French for Quebec audiences. For too long many Quebecers with some competence in English have worked to promote the Liberal Party view to Canadians in general and they have certainly fooled most Canadians most of the time. But now as more people gradually become more competent in the other language we are less and less having to rely on these intermediaries. It is refreshing to hear another view of Canada spoken in French by Harper and another view of Quebec spoken in English by Duceppe. Of course good writing is something that is a lot more difficult.

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20 Apr 09:09

anvil

I was hoping that this board would be less partisan then the one found in the Globe & Mail where posters are allowed to belittle each other!
Let's stick to the numbers.
Amazing to find that the CPC are not in any better position then post 2006 election i.e. 36.3% versus 36% today. Of interest the Liberals are up by almost 3 percentile points 33% versus 30.2%. Although Mr. Lafleur's trial may bring back some bad publicity for the Quebec liberals, thhey mustered only 12 MP's in the last election and I do not believe they can get any lower then that number in a future election. I would tend to say that the liberals have in fact bottomed out and any numbers abobe 12 would be good news for Dion. Since the NDP is irrelevant in Quebec, Harper's chances would be squarley on the ADQ's ridings. If that were the case, the B.Q. would take a beating and Harper could earn a slim majority. As far as polling precision, I prefer Nick's polling over any other poll results based on past accuracy results.
But one questin remains, with this result, would these numbers extrapolated into seat would lead to yet another CPC government?
Thanks and happy Easter everyone.

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08 Apr 12:20

e guye

Hi Anvil, I too rate Nik's polls as top of the list - my comment was that the results surprised me, and they do. However I reiterate that a 'new' sponsership scandal, such as the Mr Lafleur matter, could not have greatly affected Liberal losses in polling numbers in Quebec over the last 60 days - the news is too recent.

If my comment was construed as belittling to someone, I apologize, there was certainly no intent.

I guess we'll both have to wait and see if the Liberals have bottomed out in Quebec.

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08 Apr 12:35

e guye

Bernie, I completely agree.

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08 Apr 16:13

e guye

Platty, Alberta - Sorry I think in error expressed agreement with Bernie, while I meant to agree with your thoughts.

The differences between Mr Harper's Conservative government and the many past years of Liberal governance are so extreme that I feel strongly Canadians will give Mr Harper a majority government whenever an election is called.

I don't agree that Mr Harper wants or will artificially contrive to bring about an election.

I do think that Mr Harper has strong views on matters and he will expect some support from the opposition parties in the upcoming months - support largely withheld from him in his short time in office.

Now it will be a game of watching to see how much 'bending' the opposition parties, who most assuredly do not want an election, will do.

Reply to Comment

08 Apr 16:27

Bernie

e guye
See my reply to platty.

Reply to Comment

09 Apr 08:55

Bernie

When I say Conservatives I am talking about Stephen Harper and that bunch of Rad-Cons that surround him. Conservatism is a legitimate political philosophy. We had 43 years of Conservative rule here in Ontario and it was pretty good. Of course later we had a disaster with Mike Harris. Diefenbaker was a good PM. Malroney was a disater.
Why do Conservatives always talk about the last 13 years. Why not go back 8 more years when we had the worst governance in almost 100 years.
It.s not the party that's at fault, it's the group who are calling the shots at any particular time.
I've been following Harper a long time. I've read what he has written (especially when head of the National Citizens Coalition), heard his speeches. He has very little in common with what the average Canadian citizen believes and aspires to. What we see for the last 2 or 3 years is a facade just to get elected and for him, hopefully, to get a majority. If that happen watch out.
What is scary is that group that's behind him. Right now he can restrain him. He can say to them. " Look, stay with me. I got you this far, now in a minority and if you just bear with me I'll get you a majority." In that scenario they will not pressure him tooo much. But if he gets a majority those Rad-Cons will have no constraint. They will have free rein to try and impose their
ideas on all of us.
Before he became leader there was little in Harper's background that was positive. for Canadians.
I hope Dion doesn't give in to his backroom advisors. I don't know how long Dion will last or how successful he will be but I see nothing in his background that gives me the slightest worry. If he fails I just hope that the Liberals won't replace him with Ignatieff Rae would be a good alternative.

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09 Apr 08:49

blossom

Bernie,
For a fellow who says that he doesn't read between the lines, you are sure giving a
good accurate picture of the reality of our political system right now. I wan't to see
S.Dion stay in place, and although Bob Rae is thinking of a riding in Ontario, he
certainly is not showing luster on the brighter side. The Liberals are trying to restructure
the party, and are having a rough time; too many ministers already leaving the party,
(running scared of losing?) Politics is rougher than rough, right now, and too bad that
they seem to be losing morale. This would be the opportune moment to fight back!
bloss

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11 Apr 19:54

fuzzy

Bernie,
Can't agree with you on Liberal fortunes rising in Quebec, at least in the short term. With Jean Lafleur in custody, pending a probable trial, the resulting bad publicity for the Liberals can only help the Conservatives and the BLOC. Support for the NDP is also rising and could possibly translate into a seat or two with strong candidates and vote splitting.
Dion's best hope is to try to avoid an election until after the Lafleur case is settled and hope there is no further disclosure on links to the Quebec Liberals. Dion also needs to show he can lead the Liberal Party. Close ties with Chretien can only hurt Dion and the Liberal popularity in Quebec.
The best case case for Dion in an election this year, would be a minority government. That would give Dion an opportunity to call a Royal Commission investigation in the Ad Agency political contributions and somehow remove the matter from the public eye until after another election next year, that could bring in a majority government. Four years later, who remembers or cares?

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08 Apr 11:29

e guye

Fuzzy, I quote from your post:

'This would give Dion an opportunity to call a Royal Commission investigation in the Ad Agency political contributions and somehow remove the matter from the public eye until after another election year, that could bring in a minority government. FOUR YEARS LATER, WHO REMEMBERS OR CARES?'

One of the more cynical posts I have seen on blogs, but I suppose in some respects honest. You wouldn't be a Liberal by any chance, would you?

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08 Apr 16:32

Polar_bear_endangered_thumb Ken Chapman

We do not need Royal Comission - we just spent millions on Gomery and he said no politician in Quebec had done anything wrong. People forget that. Party officials and volunteers had committed acts of fraud as well as ad agency execs - they are now either in or on their way to jail.

Dion may still wear Adscam in some parts of Quebec but that was the old crowd and the system caught them and worked to prosecute them too. The Adscam impact is already accommodated in these poll numbers I think. A short dip maybe but not sustainable.

Dion is sustaining the Jan 2006 vote levels - jsut as Harper is - nothing here to risk an election over - nor to encourage one.

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08 Apr 17:44

e guye

Ken the effects of adscam, resurrected with Mr Lafleur's problems, may have short-lived consequence in Quebec, although I doubt it - this will not be so in the ROC.

I have never seen the reasoning behind blaming Quebec, or Quebec politicians, or Quebec party members for adscam - the rot was in the federal Liberal party, not the province of Quebec, I think we can agree.

However I feel it's naive in the extreme to suggest that the rot was confined to party officials and volunteers - the money flowed from the top.

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08 Apr 18:29

Polar_bear_endangered_thumb Ken Chapman

Hiu e guye - The money flowed from the Monteal volunteer operatives in the LPC only. Not from the political top... but the senior staff in the PMO under Chretien seems to have been wilfully blind and the senior staff admin at the DM level in certain departments suffered the same character flaws. That is Gomery's findings

The rot was not in Quebec per se - you are right...but the private businessmen who took the money were in Quebec and not in the party...so something about their ethics and complacency has to be considered but as to them only - not the business ethics in Quebec generally.

That is an inappropriate a streatch as it would be to say federal politicians were complacent or complient, save perhaps the Chretien PMO who have to wear this. Dion has to account and has by kicking out cetain people from the Party for life.

Gomery made all that very clear. Not naive - established facts as per Gomery.

Reply to Comment

09 Apr 01:07

e guye

Ken Chapman

Doesn't your first paragraph basically agree with what I am saying, that the money flowed from the top? How did the Montreal volunteers of the Liberal party get the money - was it just raining down? Mr Gomery's findings suggest to anyone not very naive indeed that there was very likely direction from top of level politicians, not just volunteers.

You say Mr Dion has to 'wear' this - he's not finding the clothing too tight if he was willing to reinstate a Liberal party member who I believe was proven guilty in the Adscam mess.

I believe it is the federal Liberal party itself that is responsible for Adscam - some people in some of its parts - not all people in all of its parts. It has left a basic distrust of the Liberal party in Canadians across the country, not just in Quebec.

It makes me angry that the businessmen you speak of are to date in large part carrying the can for this whole affair. One assumes they were Liberal party members - with friends in high places. Some found guilty of breaking the law -
recently one man found not guilty - I would assume the jury realized the unfairness of the 'system' that surrounded him.

Reply to Comment

09 Apr 12:40

Polar_bear_endangered_thumb Ken Chapman

e guye - I believe I said the Chretien PMO tried to defend themselves through wilful blindness and they were involved because they enabled the money to flow outside the usual processes that would have not allowed the scam to happen so easily...and would have caught it earlier I bet.

I blame the Chretien PMO for sure. I think the money flowed with the top (the PMO) knowing it and not ensuring it was done properly. Remember the admin was said to have "broken every rule in the book" by the Auditor General. There was a failure in the bureaurcracy too...deference to the PMO was not a proper response under these circumstances. There was a duty to Canada some of them failed to perform and that is the essence of the job.

Gomery was Judicial Inquiry that found facts and was pretty explicit about identifying them. I don't think he found direction from the top but the middle and bottom sure interpreted it that way or took advantage of a PMO that enabled a sidestepping of the rules. Pure breach of duty all around to my mind.

Will Dion wear this. Sure! He is wearing it. The issue is do we see him an any different form the Chretien days? Chretien was his political mentor so a degree of skepticism is warranted. He did not reinstate the party member - he mused but cooler heards prevailed as I recall.

As for the recent acquital - my sense is this guy provided good value for the money he was paid as a sub-contractor to a crook. that does not mke him a crook.

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09 Apr 13:04

e guye

Ken Chapman - 'they enabled the money to flow' - doesn't that say it all?

I go back to my original statements - it is my belief that the federal Liberal party is rotting at the core. Adscam, Mr Dingwall's entitlements, Mr Chrethien and his golf balls, Mr Martin and his black leather 'teamster's' jacket - even the sham tactics used to implement the Kyoto accord at great expense to Canadian taxpayers - just some examples.

And Canadians have become so accustomed to this type of governance that they have difficulty believing that any other government will not follow in exactly the same shoddy footsteps.

But I believe, every once in a while, an honest man comes along - the fact that this honest man happens to be politically astute, willing to act on principles, willing to argue his points - as well as articulate, analytical and very intelligent is just so much hard luck for the Liberals.

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09 Apr 19:09

Bernie

e guye. I disagree. The effects of adscam was not a big deal in the rest of Canada. It was most significant in Quebec. No one ever claimed it was the province of Quebec. Explain to me "the rot was in the federal Liberal party."
First put it in perspective. I think the opposition claimed that there was 250 million 'stolen'.The actual number was maybe 30 or 40 million. The rest was spent in a misguided but legitimate objective. There was not one Federal Liberal politician guilty of wrongdoing with the possible exception of Gagliano. All those who were found guilty were Quebec business men, not elected politicians. All that could be said about the politicians was that they were not good managers..
The PM does not despense money, neither does the Finance Minister. That was done through the Treasury Board and other bureaucrats.. Nor can those at the top account for the actions of tens of thousands of employeees. Also remember the government handles hundred of billions of dollars. Where else do we have such a small per cent of the total go to waste. Certainly not in large corporations. Even the real tight money companies like banks have more money misplaced and stolen. Of course we never see but a small percent of what they lose. They do a better job of covering it up. They don't want their reputation soiled.
I don't want to see any money misspent. but I'm a realist. Humans are not perfect and the institutions they form are even less so. I maybe disappointed when my money is wasted but I am not shocked.
I am not making an apology for the Liberals. I did not vote for them. I would never vote for Paul Martin. I am just trying to be realistic. The oppositions make mountains out of mole hills. They would be the same when they are in power. I am not swayed by their propaganda. They all do it. I don't think the NDP or Greens would be any different. It's the nature of human beings and their institutions that those thing occur.
They are insignificant in the overall scheme of things, in the big picture.
Quenec will soon forget and in the rest of Canada it's already forgottten for it was not that big a deal

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09 Apr 10:17

e guye

Bernie,

I live in a rather remote part of the country, and Adscam was a big deal for me. I think many Liberals would like to believe the effects were felt only in Quebec.

I take issue with your statement that the Conservatives now in power would do the same thing. There is a deep-rooted cynicism felt by many across Canada;
an acceptance of the idea that all politicians are by definition corrupt. Adscam had a great deal to do with this gut feeling of distrust of politicians of all stripes.

I think the Conservatives as led by Stephen Harper are a different breed - honestly trying to govern in a principled manner. They've taken some knocks for refusing to take the easy, politically safe way out of difficult situations - personally I see that as a plus.

I believe the courtesy and understanding Mr Harper offered to the Quebecois has more to do with his party's rise in popularity in Quebec than the hopefully final settlement of the 'fiscal imbalance'. What so many forget is that Ontario benefitted I believe as much as did Quebec, at any rate both in large amounts due to their large populations, from this same solution.

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09 Apr 12:57

blossom

Hi Ken,
Canadians do not want an election right now, especially not Quebecers...
But watch my word, we haven't heard the last of accusations for the next few
weeks, and I believe that Harper is running scared, and wants to hurl us with
an election, because he knows that it's going to be his last chance, and not
even a majority.
bloss

Reply to Comment

11 Apr 19:59

Bernie

Yes, I think you are probably right. I was not trying to say that Dion's fortunes will rise in Quebec soon. What I was trying to do is get inside Harper's head and justify why I think Harper may call an election sooner rather than later.
. What I was trying to say is that I believe that Harper would see it advantagous to have it sooner.He knows how things are now. He doesn't know what things will be like 6 months or a year from now. He has to weigh the known prssent, weak Liberal party, financially challenged, backrooms boys disorganized, new leader; against a future where the Liberals may be financially sound, their organization and policies straightened out, and a leader who has gained experience, with time to make himself known across Canada, (not so much in Quebec) I think Harper would be worried about the latter, and for that reason would give into the pressure to have the election now.

Reply to Comment

09 Apr 09:29

blossom

Hi Bernie,
You're doing great!
Although I took a short break from politics, especially after our own election, and was
so fed-up, and stressed with the unknown forthcoming outcome, I did hear Wanjid Khan?
the one who crossed the floor, and advising S. Harper on foreign policy, and who was
supposed to give an expense report at the time - which he never did, and S.Harper had also
promised that he would deliver...Well, recently, Mr. Khan was interviewed, cpac, I
believe, and said that he only reported on his Middle East tour to his PM. Guess he
meant the hell with the rest of us? Don't you find this unusual? Even the interviewer
found that a bit trifling? Another issue which bothers me, Bernie, is that a conservative
gov't is floundering $25billion - That's apart for what is going to the military.Another worry in my Province, is all that money for
health-care, and just today it was announced that we have to cut surgery time for
lack of Doctors, and far too short of nurses, that are just stressing out, and opting
out of our medical system. This last week-end, no emergency or info-sante clinic
open to answer our calls??? What is going on???
Apparently there is corruption in our educational school boards, which has to do with
the grants and student loans; those that are on the preferred lists !!! As for Qc, I am
not sure which way the wind will blow, because so far the monies are not making a
difference where it should be. But I still do not see dumont and harper on the same
level plane.
bloss

Reply to Comment

11 Apr 09:17

Bernie

Thanks Bloss, Yes, I agree with sometimes it gets depressing and you have to get away from it for a while. I do that too, to recharge my batteries.
I can't see Dumont and Harper agreeing on too much. There will be some issues that they may have in common for political reasons, but I think their basic philosophies are too far apart for anything lasting.
Like all politicians Harper is being generous before an election. Whether that money is being spent for our best interest is questionable.

Reply to Comment

11 Apr 10:18

blossom

Hi Bernie,
Hope we all see through this mess...Just today, announcing a commission led by a
PQ (independent), and now in the Federal Harper gov't is so outrageous; it's unthinkable...
It's obvious that S.Harper is going to force an election,
when the House re-opens, on any pretext that he can find...It proves, that for Harper,
it's now or never! When I heard dumont say that lucien bouchard was busy in his private
business life for now, but one never knows about the future??? I don't think that the
rest of Canada wants to integrate the separatists within our Federal gov't...Wouldn't
that just be like inviting the taliban inside Pres. Karzai's gov't??? which is, of course,
what is happening out there.
Thanks for answering Bernie.
bloss

Reply to Comment

11 Apr 19:42

Russell McOrmond

I'm wondering about possible election-sparking issues. I would love to see a survey on C-30 related issues. While it might be because I am an environmentalist, I can't see how making C-30 a confidence vote can help the Conservatives.

The Hill Times lists crime related bills (reverse-onus, etc) as possibly sparking an election, but I can't see that as being controversial enough, so I'm stuck thinking there won't be an election or it will be on the science of climate change and/or the economics of the proposed solutions.

This is a series of poll questions. I suspect the Conservatives have much better access to polling than I do, so I must be missing something and give Canadians more credit than they deserve?

Where do Canadians stand on things such as carbon caps, the so-called carbon budget, and carbon trading: both within Canada (regional to allow provinces to compete, and polluting provinces to subsidize cleaner provinces) and worldwide (the environment is worldwide, and Canada remains irrelevant in solving the problem if we only navel-gaze within our boarders).

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08 Apr 10:09

7 replies so far. Join this conversation.

Bob Nelson

I promise to get rid of Stephen Harper. Visit www.judicare.ca

[updated Sun Apr 08 11:00:53 EDT 2007]

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08 Apr 11:00

1 reply so far. Join this conversation.

Polar_bear_endangered_thumb Ken Chapman

Nice to see a poll that relates to pre-budget and post-budget periods with sufficient time lapse to neutralize the impact of the media coverage bounce. Also nice to see nothing much has changed since Jan 2006 election results with respect to the relative position of the parties. Decima is a bit different and the Cons love to jump on one result and call it a trend. All other recent polling shows about the same-old-same-old results as in Jan 2006 and this SES poll.

At least Dion has maintained the Liberal position and the Cons are still unable to capitalize on the power inherent in holding office. In fact they are tied within the polls margin of error, if you want to take an optimistic view. Harper only wants an election if he can appear to be pushed into it. Give us a year more to see who Dion is and capable of, the same goes for what May stands for and if Layton can escape the gravitational pull of the NDP past.

The Cons have been able to buy an 8 point bounce in Quebec for about $4.0B in booty if you include the aerospace $900M announced this week. How long will that last with Charest saying it is not enough and a Quebec minority meaning they will be in constant campaign mode there.

The other regional results are telling too. The other key battle front is Ontario which sees the NDP and Greens eroding support and going from the highest uncommitted vote to the average...all of this repositioned support is split between the two major parties who are now neck and neck.

The West is most interesting where the Liberals have a 5 positive point bounce and the Cons are static and only 6 points up on the Libs. What is going on there? The West got nothing from the budget except dismay that Harper has turned into the kind of Quebec pandering politician that spawned the Reform Party in the first place. How much can he alienate his base before he starts to see them staying home or sending a harsher message over his CPC leadership status? That grumpiness about Harper is just below the surface...expect Ted and Link Byfield to be the lightening rods to hunt Harper down on this front.

Poor old Atlantic Canada can't quite grasp the changes or is it that they have the best contrarian perspective on what things are happening? They keep the Cons at bay with tepid but no change in support and they reduce Lib support giving it to the NCP and the Greens and then have over a 50% bounce in uncommitted voters at 11%. For those Maritimers who can't figure out if Harper is going to "punch or bore" them - relax - he is going to do both to you. You count even less in Harper's sense of Canada than the West does, meaning he does not understand nor does he care much about your wants and wishes as Canadians.

In conclusion nothing has changed in the minds of Canadians in the past 15 months as to keeping a minority government or if it is time for a new majority...but 64% of Canadians in an Angus Reid study says now it not the time for an election.

One big shift we have seen happen since Harper took power. We have a Prime Minister who has demonstrated very forcefully that he and his PMO is the absolute controlling factor in his Party. We also can see that his agenda is to achieve personal political power over the country with Harper as Canada's Cromwell. He will do this at any cost, be it cash, conflict, conspiracy or our national sense of social cohesion.

An Ipsos Reid study recently indicated 65% of Canadians felt they did no know Stephen Harper as a person...in other words who he is and what he believes in and stands for. This is after over 5 years of seeing him in federal political leadership roles. Well in the past 6 months we have seen his tactics from broken campaign promises (Income Trusts and Equalization for example) to hypocrisy on others (wait time guarantees to disregarding the need for child care spaces), to buying Quebec support (the Budget) and a bullying political personality (personal attack ads to cheap-shot Taliban supporter accusations) in how he tries to marginalize and intimidate people.

We can now tell much more about who Harper really is. To my mind he is much scarier than we thought than even in the 2004 election. The key questions for Canadians about Harper is do we trust him? Does he "get the country" and does he have a serious grasp of the critical issues of our time - like the environment? Can we rely on him to keep his promises? Given his obvious hunger for power do we feel he is the right "fit" to be our Prime Minister with a majority government given all the discretion and power of that office? Does he have the kind of character qualities we want to see govern us as a modern mature citizen based democracy?

These polls show Canadians have not yet made up their minds on how they would answer these questions. I have. My answer is no on all counts.

[updated Sun Apr 08 12:35:11 EDT 2007]

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08 Apr 12:35

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supper

This is Harper's window to drop the writ. The polls remain volatile and will be a hard election for all concerned. I am confident that once the election starts, Dion will do well in Quebec. He understands the language and the people. A drop for anything liberal was to be expected after Charest mismanaged the big bribe and basically lost Quebec's confidence. The real question will be Ontario and events during the election itself. A big setback in the war or an environmental disaster could take over the campaign. No wonder that even after all these ads and money given to Quebec, the tories are afraid to go to the people.

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08 Apr 13:23

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e guye

To your question - I think it should more properly be - if you're the opposition parties - do you call an election or not?

Mr Harper will not call an election unless he cannot govern - there is patently no reason to do so, and he has stated many times that he has no wish to call an election.

The next election, if it's an early one, will be called by the opposition parties in parliament if they vote down a confidence bill. They should know, or soon will, where Mr Harper will draw the line - what so many seem to forget, he is the Prime Minister and has every right to make Prime Ministerial decisions.

I look forward with interest to Mr Harper's environmental policies announcement slated for soon after parliament resumes.

Mr Harper's present position with the Canadian electorate is strong - particularly if you contrast it with that of the Liberal and NDP parties. He has gained widespread trust and respect across the country. Like many Canadians, I don't want a spring or early election, but if one is forced upon us by the short-sighted stubborness of opposition parties I'll be glad to join in the vote that will elect him to a strong majority government.

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08 Apr 19:18

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Tom Good

I believe Harper is conceited enough regarding his own abilities to believe he is the natural to be Captain Canada. He holds tight reigns on his party machinery, on his cabinet and on his caucus. I do not believe he sees his "about face" on numerous issues in the last number of months as contradictory in the least but rather just good tactics. I bet he feels that his brand is the best brand of political leadership for the land and the electorate will POSITIVELY support him. But, isn't that one of the contradictions of our system? Do we more usually vote FOR a party or vote AGAINST a party? Did voting FOR the Conservatives bring Harper to power or voting AGAINST the Liberals bring Harper to power? I believe it was more commonly the latter.

Harper has been in office long enough for the electorate to get the measure of the man and, it seems to me, the electorate is very uncertain as reflected by poll results. Harper's vote buying with Charet really did not pay off for him. But, I am equally sure the electorate looks at the Liberals, who still seem to be having head office troubles, and shake their heads. Harper sees this as a positive for him, and he is right, so it goes into the pot for the election gamble.

A two party system is ideal but we have had three federally plus the Bloc whose fortunes appear to be on the wane, for the moment. Now four federally with the Greens under Elizabeth May and they appear to be a growing force. The Greens and the NDP are generally in the same voter turf area thus decimating each other with no signs of amalgamation.. The Greens have also refused the Liberal overtures at this point in time. Harper must see this as a plus and he is right so that goes into the pot for the election gamble. The critical question for Harper will be trying to determine if Mario Dumont's votes provincially will come to the Conservatives federally as a majority government depends upon increased Quebec support. Somehow I think the Quebecois are too smart to do that in spite of the polls----but you never know.

If Harper can engineer his government's defeat and show righteous indignation, then I am sure we are in for an election by the Fall.

[updated Sun Apr 08 21:22:25 EDT 2007]

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08 Apr 21:22

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blossom

Hello Nik,
I say that S.Harper will - it's been his objective since he came into office...He souldn't,
and I wouldn't attempt it if I were him...This will not be good for the Country. Voters
are pessimistic, fed-up with the uncertainties, and another election for a minority gov't
is going to affect the issues of this Country. Harper is not only in election mode, but
not onto Kyoto targets - and this is where we shall see if our population is really adamant
about fighting global warming changes or not willing to step-up to the plate in order to do
so - and the sponsorship scandal, if an election is called when the House re-opens, will
be shown as Harper taking all demeaning advantages of all situations...He still has to
answer for the RCMP ongoing scandal, as well, and his re-inventing old Liberal policies
with old monies. There are a lot of estranged groups that do not escond to his political
ideologies, and it would be reckless of him to call an election!
blossom

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09 Apr 02:51

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Regina Beach Boy

Liberals gaining support in Ontario, what a surprise, I'm afraid the Liberals could run Stephan Dion's dog Kyoto and get 40% of the vote. Blind loyalty, just when it was getting great to be a Canadian again.

I wonder sometimes when folks from Ontario are slamming Albertans as extremists for voting in block for Conservatives, do they consider the fact that they are equally extreme in thier support for the Liberals? I mean the last time I looked there were no Conservatives or friends of the Conservative party being investigated. Its getting silly now!!

Give Harper and the Conservatives a chance and Please, Please stop buying the bogey man theory that the Liberals have carefully crafted for your edification.

[updated Mon Apr 09 17:51:50 EDT 2007]

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09 Apr 17:51

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bas1809

I don't believe the Prime Minister will directly call an election. I think it quite likely he will do what Government ought to do - govern - which will drive the Opposition up the wall, as Liberals believe as an article of faith that Harper is an interloper, the NDP disagrees as a matter of policy and the Bloc sees only that some of what the Government introduces isn't about largesse for Quebec. As a result, some bill will ultimately launch a firestorm, become a confidence motion, and we will find ourselves catapulted into an election, with the other parties claiming that the Conservatives forced an election by not abandoning their program, and the Conservatives noting that the Opposition forced an election. A pity that Canada's media will no doubt report the first of these two.

So, no, Harper won't call one yet. Solid numbers in Ontario having moved past the Liberals by 2-3 points will be the key. Frankly, no other region matters for a majority - and there is little appetite to coming back with yet another minority. (Remember, in many ways, this minority is more workable than the one Martin had 2004-06. A few extra seats would actually be a liability compared to today's count, or 155+.) The other thing of interest will be the detailed breakdown, seat by seat, in Quebec - since victory there depends on piling up the votes in specific seats rather than coming in second across the province. Are Liberal seats (even a few) in danger of toppling to the Conservatives in 514 Montreal? Are suburban seats in 450 and around Quebec City heading their way? As with the 905, "now you're talking" - but if those kinds of moves are not happening, there's no reason to rush to the polls. (Sorry, Greater Vancouver, but a few extra seats in 604 aren't really meaningful in this decision.)

The continued strength of the Conservative fund-raising machine means that the party can threaten election readiness for a long, long time without hurting their ability to actually campaign when the time does come. This forces their opponents to expend resources they really don't have to counter these moves - something that will hurt in the air war of the last 21 days of the campaign, when it arrives. It also gives them the opportunity to establish certain messages, creating a slow influence on public opinion. So the appearance of an imminent call will remain - and no doubt Stéphane Dion will continue to complain that it's "all so unfair". Too bad, so sad - one of the great lessons of Opposition is that "it's not about you" and that you get to do a lot of responding rather than leading.

When? Well, despite not having proclaimed the bill yet, why not 2009 as planned for the first fixed election date? Although I expect one of the Opposition parties will feel that it's to their advantage to go earlier - especially if there is early traction on the revised environmental strategy. But, for the Conservatives, staying in power and continuing to govern gives them all the options - and fits the mood of the electorate perfectly. For that reason, they won't engineer (in the sense of going in wanting to lose a confidence vote) a fall, but they probably will face one later this year.

Never forget all the Liberals who would like Dion to campaign - and lose - so that he can be replaced. All is *not* well in Grit land...

Cheers, Bruce

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09 Apr 21:22

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CanCC

Another good batch of folks elected to a den of centralist ottawashing. The last budjet is a blatant example of how the system cannot change. The provinces will continue as neutered annuitants to a centralist philosophy. We sent the best we could to change that senario, only to witness that the ROC has huge dependancy on central coffers and the provinces do not have the spine for effectual change that would strengthen their position within their specific jurisdictions. Those that want less Ottawa in provincial affairs have yet seen any difference in the way Ottawa does business. The separatist element within this country will continue to grow at the expense of the Canadian Conservative Party of Canada. Perhaps that needs to happen. I doubt that the provinces woul have come together to form Canada under the current criteria. That begs the real Question...'Why then, should we continue this charade?'

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11 Apr 12:45

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westerner (suspended)

Seems quite different than another poll out very recently which showed the LIberals and Conservatives tied at 32%. Why the large variation?

[updated Tue Nov 13 18:59:40 EST 2007]

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13 Nov 18:59

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