CPAC-Nanos Tracking CP 40, LP 25, NDP 19, BQ 9, GP 8 (ending September 24)

312 comments Latest by Beckie

Post your questions for Nik…

Tonight, Nik will be on PrimeTime Politics with Peter Van Dusen at 8 pm ET / 5 pm PT for his weekly “Nik on the Numbers” feature. If you have any questions regarding our tracking or polling in general, you can post them on the blog, Nik will be answering your questions live on the air.

Results of today’s CPAC-Nanos tracking poll show the Conservatives hitting the 40% mark for national support, a significant lead for the Tories over the Liberals. With the Liberals dropping to 25%, the 15 point difference between the two parties becomes the widest margin seen since election tracking began. The NDP follow at 19%, the Bloc Québécois at 9% and the Green Party at 8%. CPAC-Nanos’ second set of weekly regional breakdown numbers show the Conservatives as the frontrunners in Northern and Eastern Ontario, the Prairies, Alberta and the lower mainland in British Columbia. The Bloc Québécois leads in Quebec support, but is statistically tied with the Liberals and NDP in Montreal. In the Atlantic provinces and Toronto, the Tories and Liberals remain deadlocked, and in British Columbia (excluding the lower mainland) the Conservatives, Liberals and NDP are statistically tied.

Every Thursday, Nanos will release weekly regional numbers to see how party support fares at the provincial and regional levels (based on a five day track). The ten regions are Atlantic Canada, Montreal, the Rest of Quebec, Toronto and the GTA, South Western Ontario, Northern and Eastern Ontarion, Manitoba and Saskatchewan, Alberta, BC Lower Mainland and the Rest of BC. For more detailed information on the methodology and the statistical results visit the Nanos Research website at http://www.nanosresearch.com.

Methodology and Results

A national random telephone survey is conducted nightly by Nanos Research throughout the campaign. Each evening a new group of 400 eligible voters is interviewed. The daily tracking figures are based on a three-day rolling sample comprised of 1,200 interviews. To update the tracking, a new day of interviewing is added and the oldest day dropped. The margin of accuracy is ±2.8%, 19 times out of 20 for 1,200 random interviews.

The numbers in parenthesis denote the change from the previous Nanos Research Survey completed on September 23, 2008.

Question: If a FEDERAL election were held today, could you please rank your top two current local voting preferences? (First ranked reported)

Committed Voters - Canada (N=1027, MoE ± 3.1%, 19 times out of 20)

  • Conservative Party 40 (+3)
  • Liberal Party 25 (-1)
  • NDP 19 (-2)
  • BQ 9% (NC)
  • Green Party 8% (+1)
  • Undecided 15% (-1)

Question: Of the following individuals, who do you think would make the best Prime Minister? [Rotate] (N=1,201,MoE ± 2.8%, 19 times out of 20)

  • Conservative leader Stephen Harper 40% (+1)
  • NDP leader Jack Layton 17% (NC)
  • Liberal leader Stephane Dion 11% (NC)
  • Green Party leader Elizabeth May 5% (NC)
  • Bloc Quebecois leader Gilles Duceppe 3% (NC)
  • None of them 8% (-1)
  • Unsure 17% (+1)

Question: Which of the federal leaders would you best describe as: The most trustworthy leader The most competent leader The leader with the best vision for Canada’s future [Leadership Index Score - Daily roll-up of all three measures]

  • Stephen Harper 111 (+3)
  • Jack Layton 51 (+4)
  • Stephane Dion 38 (+6)
  • Elizabeth May 14 (-4)
  • Gilles Duceppe 12 (-7)

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Most Read Comments

Highest Rated Comments

Hill & Knowlton's seat projection, based on these numbers: CPC: 156 LPC: 63 ... more

Lex Llewdor (British Columbia) 25 Sep 14:13

Nik's numbers for Montreal Bloc 32 NDP 27 Liberal 23 CPC 13 Gre... more

skoblin (British Columbia) 25 Sep 14:09

OK, this is getting loopy. When are these numbers going to settle down into a s... more

Peter3 (Ontario) 25 Sep 14:13

Who ever agrees with everything a politician says? I'm a libertarian - I don'... more

Lex Llewdor (British Columbia) 25 Sep 19:29

We do in fact have a Charter of Rights and Freedoms in this country that protect... more

gfthompsonjr (New Brunswick) 25 Sep 19:43

Any one interested can see Ton Flanagan on TVO right now. ... more

larryl (Ontario) 25 Sep 20:17

Comments

Leofff

Wham!! I was waiting for that Liberal friendly rogue poll to fall off today. This is a disaster for the Liberals.

[updated Thu Sep 25 14:05:14 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 14:05

13 replies so far. Join this conversation.

skoblin

Nik's numbers for Montreal

Bloc 32
NDP 27
Liberal 23
CPC 13
Green 6

I do not know if this includes much of the impact of the arts funding furor, but incredible numbers for the NDP, even including the MOE. At this rate it looks like the numbers for the NDP may pan out in a number of seats, but hard to tell since the Bloc have gone up recently and this poll covers 20-24 September. I think Harper may have botched it for any party making a breakthrough in Quebec now with his culture comments. His comments seem to have caused the Tories the fall, the NDP to stop growing and the Bloc to recoup its strength according to the main poll. But as far as Montreal is concerned, if this subpoll is correct, we may be looking at massive voter shift in a number of Liberal ridings on the island.

[updated Thu Sep 25 14:09:32 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 14:09

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Foxer

The tories had no chance in montreal, and sinking there isn't much of a loss to them. It IS an amazing gain for the ndp, if they can translate that into seats.

Outside montreal the cpc is still competative and if they were going to make gains - thats where it was going to be.

The 'culture' thing was a mistake, but i don't think it'll hurt him long if he can appeal to quebecer's outside montreal.

[updated Thu Sep 25 14:25:14 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 14:25

skoblin

Well, the regional numbers do not appear to good for the CPC as well. Down 5 points outside Montreal with the Bloc up 10. Perhaps in the eastern township you may see some Tory gains, but the 'culture thing' can not have gone over well around Quebec city and the sovereigntist heartland of central Quebec.

[updated Thu Sep 25 14:34:21 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 14:34

Foxer

They were never going to take seats in montreal. Time will tell if quebec city and the areas around it care more about culture funding or the fact harper respects them as a nation - and whether or not they want direct access to the PM for goodies in the future.

[updated Thu Sep 25 14:59:38 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 14:59

Lex Llewdor

If he can't make significant gains outside Montreal, it will make for a very interesting parliament (especially if he still manages a majority).

[updated Thu Sep 25 14:34:37 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 14:34

skoblin

Incidentally, Nik will be commenting on the situation in Montreal today on CPAC.

[updated Thu Sep 25 14:40:36 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 14:40

skoblin

I really think the CPC's chances in Quebec are pretty much finished. Harper is going to be on the defensive now in the French debate and will have to either repeat his comments in French to Quebeckers or backpedal. Either way, not a good position to be in. His comments may have improved his party's standing in rural Ontario especially, but at the cost of a number of seats in Quebec which had appeared possible a week or two ago.

[updated Thu Sep 25 15:01:35 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 15:01

hollinm

skoblin...you may be right but there is still two weeks to go in the election and you know what they say. That can be a lifetime in politics.

[updated Fri Sep 26 05:46:07 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 05:46

skoblin

Interestingly enough, considering the margin of error, the NDP could be leading in Montreal as well. Looking at the numbers, both the NDP and the Bloc have made enormous gains in Montreal with the NDP probably getting most of its support from the Liberals. If the Liberals in Montreal only were to switch in droves to the NDP, there could be some serious gains for the Dippers in Quebec after all. I wonder how Justin Trudeau is doing.

[updated Thu Sep 25 14:58:01 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 14:58

Foxer

There were protests at trudeau's speech i believe. There is room there for a 'steal'.

I think if montreal sees the libs collapsing they may well move to the ndp in strength, and it could mean seats for the ndp.

[updated Thu Sep 25 15:00:52 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 15:00

skoblin

We agree then....that is exactly what I just posted in the first thread. Federalist support in Montreal simply wants to make sure it will be heard in Ottawa. Does not matter at this juncture whether it is NDP or Liberal, as long as it is one of them. If the Liberals drop any more, then there may be an exodus over to the NDP, simply to make sure the seats don't fall into Bloc hands.

[updated Thu Sep 25 15:19:11 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 15:19

Foxer

A very real possiblity. If the ndp can demonstrate they have the better chance - i think they'll take it.

[updated Thu Sep 25 15:49:15 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 15:49

Non-aligned in Toronto

The Liberals appear to be collapsing in Quebec to the point where even their base is disappearing. That qualifies as a paradigm shift from which they may never recover in that region. Interesting times indeed.

NDP may very well win several seats. How many depends on how efficient their vote is. CBC and the Star would be devestated if their fair haired boy Justin were to flop in Papineau!

[updated Thu Sep 25 16:17:35 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 16:17

Non-aligned in Toronto

I think that the culture thing as well as the young offender thing will definitely hurt the Conservatives outside Montreal, and it won't help them inside montreal either. Harper has come off message . The friendly sweater guy is gone and ol scary eyes is back.

[updated Thu Sep 25 16:12:49 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 16:12

Foxer

Meh - i'm not seeing it. I think any issue there will be short lived. I think at the end of the day while it's important to many quebecers there are other issues they care about as much or more.

We'll see tho. You may be right.

[updated Thu Sep 25 16:19:32 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 16:19

Lex Llewdor

The young offender thing has a built-in safety valve - provinces can set their own age limits. I can't see any way it can hurt Harper long term.

[updated Thu Sep 25 17:05:46 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 17:05

hollinm

non-aligned....you may think the young offender thing will hurt Harper in Quebec but I don't think so. This is nothing new. Harper has been pushing the crime agenda for two years.

If you want scary just watch and listen to Dion. He is one desperate dude and what he is saying does not make sense. There are only two choices Harper or Dion. Quebecers like the rest of Canada want leadership and "ol scary eyes" as you put it is the only choice.

[updated Fri Sep 26 05:51:16 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 05:51

Non-aligned in Toronto

Duceppe has been attacking Harper (successfully, if the polls are right) on this issue. See his fresh meat comments. So there is no question it is playing poorly there. The only question is : Will it last?

Maybe, maybe not.

[updated Fri Sep 26 12:51:46 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 12:51

hollinm

Don't think it will last and I suspect Harper will go to Quebec and smooth the rough waters b4 the election.

If Quebecers see that Harper is going to win I suspect they will come on board.

[updated Fri Sep 26 13:37:43 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 13:37

hollinm

Foxer....I agree Harper's strength is in the regions not Montreal but Layton could hurt Dion in Montreal for sure.

Harper will return to Quebec and clarify his comments on arts and culture and support the fact that funds have not been cut but reallocated to higher priorities.

On voting day Quebecers do not want a carbon tax, do not want Dion and Layton cannot form government. One thing about Quebecers, if it looks like Harper is going to get a majority, they will vote for the Cons.

The artists did not help themselves with their press conference. They looked arrogant and dismissive and proved Harper's point. By the way who were those people?

Nik's numbers do not show regional breakdowns within Quebec and there are probably a lot of ridings outside Montreal that agree with his "attack" on the elites.

[updated Fri Sep 26 05:43:50 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 05:43

Foxer

Well, sounds about right. I'll be honest, quebec is the province i understand the least (which is fair - I've often though quebecers understand bc'ers and albertans the least :) ) But this just doesn't have the 'feel' of a long term election issue outside montreal.

Time will tell. But i think harper will have something to mellow quebec with at some point.

[updated Fri Sep 26 09:20:35 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 09:20

hollinm

I agree. Quebec is very hard to figure out. They used to vote in a block for the Bloc but now all bets are off. What I do think is that there is a political realignment going on in Canada with this election.

Did you see the news conference with Dion this morning at a senior citizen's home? Very small crowd, the media was not very friendly and some of the Liberal supporters tried to stop the press from asking questions about the Manitoba candidate who suggested the jews had moved out of the towers before the 9/11 attack.

Dion was very poor and in fact did not understand some questions in English. Gerard Kennedy (it was his riding) had to translate into French b4 Dion replied.

Do Canadians really want this guy to be our prime minister? It is absolutely scary.

[updated Fri Sep 26 10:56:53 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 10:56

Foxer

Well no - no they don't :) if the polls are to be believed anyway.

dion's only attacking these days - he's completely given up on pushing his platform and that will only hurt him in the long run. It can lead to a small drop in cpc support for a very short time, but has no staying power.

Dion's got nothing left to offer and his message is going to get very dull very fast.

[updated Fri Sep 26 11:06:58 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 11:06

hollinm

Completely agree!

[updated Fri Sep 26 13:39:01 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 13:39

rm99

DION=PALIN

This is our KATIE COURIC interview! NO ANSWERS FOR SIMPLE QUESTIONS!!

Dion’s done. He’s going to get hammered in English Canada with this. Kind of ironic how he kept criticizing Harper over the last week but couldn’t say what he would do.

[updated Thu Oct 09 23:13:07 EDT 2008]

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09 Oct 23:13

Lex Llewdor

Hill & Knowlton's seat projection, based on these numbers:

CPC: 156
LPC: 63
NDP: 40
BQ: 49
GRN: 0

I know seat projection is horribly imprecise without really good regional breakdowns, but these are the first numbers I've seen that make me say "This looks like it might be a majority."

[updated Thu Sep 25 14:13:00 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 14:13

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Peter3

OK, this is getting loopy. When are these numbers going to settle down into a significant trend (other than impending Liberal disaster). Conservatives up in Ontario and West, down in Quebec and East. They are finally back in legitimate majority territory. Anyone offering odds on how long it will last? So far this has been the ceiling on Conservative support.

Check out the NDP numbers for Montreal in the 5-day regional breakout. It would be interesting to see how the arts funding brouhaha has played into this. Quebec is looking more and more volatile. I'm thinking Mr. Duceppe has perhaps peaked too soon.

There is also a new Sun media poll at the nanos site on voter volatility. It shows a very high level of movement among parties. No surprise, I guess.

[updated Thu Sep 25 14:13:06 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 14:13

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psiclone

I am curious as to what will happen when Dion's leadership numbers are the same as Ms May's and I wonder if their little political relationship will take a sudden turn for the worse and she kneecaps him and targets disaffected Liberals of which there seem to be quite a few of lately?

[updated Thu Sep 25 15:47:40 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 15:47

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Luc VNO

So it looks like we will get the Conservative majority we all wanted. Buyer beware though.... The Conservatives want to get tough on crime & look down our streets. You all think this isn't you that he is after, think again. Through the effects of continuous statute writing, everyone is a criminal. Every single Canadian breaks the law at least once every day. Speeding, J-walking, maybe you smoked a joint, but you did something. Think hard & you will find that you have broken a law today & maybe you should think twice before voting for someone who wants to crack down on you. Unfortunately, agreements we have made, NAFTA & WTO, stop us from writting any laws that could possibly affect someones percieved ability to make money, so they can only write laws that criminilize us, which Harper is more than willing to do.

I say again, buyer beware.

[updated Thu Sep 25 18:37:06 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 18:37

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Ken in AB

Did I read that right? "In the Atlantic provinces and Toronto, the Tories and Liberals remain deadlocked". TORONTO????.

[updated Thu Sep 25 18:37:57 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 18:37

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gfthompsonjr

Yes, the regional numbers do not look all that good for the CPC around Montreal - However, I don't believe there was any vision of great gains in that area. One thing we should keep in mind is that Duceppe needs only to run a campaign in one province, a fact that allows him to get much more exposure than the other leaders.

[updated Thu Sep 25 19:32:28 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 19:32

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Image_1__thumb Tory101

Stephen Harper is the most trustworthy leader by far!

[updated Thu Sep 25 19:43:00 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 19:43

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Image_1__thumb Tory101

Conservative Party and Undecided would be my two choices for if the election was held today.

Stephen Harper would make the best federal leader. The most competent leader, and the best vision for Canada by far.

Conservatives all the way.

[updated Thu Sep 25 19:45:44 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 19:45

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Image_1__thumb Tory101

Chris, Ontarion,
If the number stay steady Nic, will the Conservatives win a majority?

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:10:29 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:10

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Mr_Michael

When you poll people are you using the same group of people? These numbers are in such a state of flex, how can you truely gauge the true picture.

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:16:47 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:16

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Image_1__thumb Tory101

Chris, Ontario
When looking on election night, how many seats is a majority?

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:17:26 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:17

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ed84

I can't understand why people don't pick up on this hypocrisy from the Conservatives.

The latest comes from the crime front and giving stricter sentences for 14yr old youth. Two years ago they raised the age of consent from 14 to 16yrs old. I have no issues with protecting youth, that is how it should be, but that move two years ago suggested that they think youth at that age don't have the judgment and are too easily coerced into different situations. So how would committing a crime be any different? If you think youth don't have the judgment and are easily coerced into making bad decisions at that age, why is committing a violent crime any different?

This is the same party that talks about safety and safe communities but they are not for gun control.

Ermin

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:17:40 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:17

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Craig

Hi Nik, great show as always.

I have two questions:

1. Does Nanos poll the northern territories, or is it statistically impossible given the size and population? Do you have a general idea of the breakdown.

2. How is the leadership index calculated?

Thanks,
Craig

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:22:00 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:22

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fortescue

TPQ where are you??

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:30:13 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:30

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Cousinj

Hi Nik,

Will Nanos come out with the numbers based on age groups at any time during the election?

Thanks
JM

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:30:48 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:30

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John999

How do you feel when you hear candidates say they don't "look" or rely on the polls that you provide and only the final vote matters?

Does it seem silly to you?

- John

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:31:29 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:31

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Richard_thumb rsharp

My, things are not working out as they should. But I will never give up hope for human decency until its over, Mr. Harper hasn't a decent bone in his body. Not one. He's mean and vindictive and on and on.. This man would set us back about a century! He's reallty dangerous.

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:32:28 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:32

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Mr_Michael

Nik,

Do your numbers for GTA show if the Conservatives have made any significant in roads into breaking the Liberal strangle hold on the GTA.

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:33:38 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:33

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Lori

Hi Nick. Wondering about the large proportion of undecided/unsure in the Leadership Index questions. Do you screen out respondents who indicate they have no intention of voting. There are many Canadians (unfortunately) that are apathetic to our political process and if they are not even interested in voting, will likely have no real opinion on the competence, trustworthiness and vision of the leaders.

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:35:14 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:35

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Luc VNO

Nik,

What kind of situation do you think it would take to move the non-voting 40% of Canadians to the ballot box??

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:36:13 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:36

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Image_1__thumb Tory101

Chris, Ontario,

What are the key battlegrounds around the GTA and what are the numbers for Oakville-Burlington Regions Nik.

Thanks!

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:36:56 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:36

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Luc VNO

Nik,

What kind of situation do you think it would take to move the non voting 40% of Canadians to the ballot box??

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:37:47 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:37

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mcfly

What do you think the election would be like with a publication ban on polls?

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:41:49 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:41

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spstarr

Hi Nik,

As an addition to a previous question. If you identify yourself as Nanos in the survey, is it possible some people might try to cause a skew in your poll vs other polls by giving different answers to somewhat influence other people when they see the Nanos poll results?

Thanks,
Shawn.

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:43:05 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:43

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skoblin

Nik,

considering the large majorities the Liberals had in their ridings in Montreal in the last election, is there a realistic chance of the NDP actually translating their apparent support in Montreal into actual victories, and if so, which ridings do you see this happening in?

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:43:23 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:43

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Cousinj

Hi Nik,

Will Nanos do a poll on which television station voters watch during the election campaign or on election night?

Thanks,
JM

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:45:37 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:45

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John999

How do the 2 of you remain neutral and unbiased about your personal party preferences when presenting the news and statistics?

Is this sometimes difficult for you?

What kind of requirements were put upon you when you were hired for CPAC?

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:47:20 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:47

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goles

Hi Nik, Great show.

It seems there is a tendency for the parties to rely on one of two policy levers (i.e., spending vs regulation/legislation) in their daily annoucements. The Liberal and NDP seem to emphasize spending while the Conservatives seem to emphasize regulations/legislation (e.g., pollution penalties, prison sentences). In an economic uncertain time do you think that this is having an impact on voters impressions?

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:51:45 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:51

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Lori

Nik - do you have any sense of how conflicted people may be when their local representative is not affiliated with the same party of the leader they feel is best suited to run the country? Clearly people rank Harper as the strongest leader yet, particularly in areas like SW Ontario, we like our local Liberal incumbents.

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:54:34 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:54

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much

Nik,

Why are the Bloc not being considered as traitors?

Thx

[updated Thu Sep 25 20:58:59 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 20:58

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Informed

Clearly Stephen Harper he is speaking about real issues and making small spending programs announcements while talking about the slowing economy. He is dominating the centre and right position while the other parties are fighting over the left of centre voters.

[updated Thu Sep 25 22:25:31 EDT 2008]

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25 Sep 22:25

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a_peters93

These polling numbers seem to be jumping around a lot in the early going of this election. Do polling numbers tend to settle out after the leaders debate or do they settle out at all? And secondly, the Prime Minister has stated during his election campaign that he refuses to speculate on current polls as every poll he has seen as a federal politican has never accurately translated to the makeup of the elected house. Does the Prime Minister's statement accurate reflect what you have seen in your polling results over the years?

[updated Fri Sep 26 03:33:58 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 03:33

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MRM

Some extracts from a very interesting article in today’s G&M:

Globe and Mail Update

September 25, 2008 at 9:55 PM EDT

How damaging is it when members of your party begin to publicly turn on you, as is happening to Stephane Dion? And what can Mr. Dion do about it?

Greg Lyle (former chief of staff for premiers Gary Filmon and Gordon Campbell) It is never helpful to have your own party members voicing criticism. It is downright devastating to be criticized by your own team at a time when people outside the party are criticizing you as well.

Scott Reid (former communications director for Paul Martin): No campaign wants to take on friendly fire. It's distracting. It's unhelpful. And it's not a sign of success. But the question of how seriously it should be regarded depends upon two factors: How serious are the voices speaking out, and how serious are their criticisms?

Gerald Caplan (former NDP campaign manager): As I'm sure everyone concedes, the milk of human compassion flows through the veins of all socialists. So part of me really, really feels for Stephane Dion's public humiliation. Under his stewardship, Canada's Natural Governing Party seems well on the road to the worst result in its history. John Turner plummeted to 28 per cent in 1984. The core Liberal vote is usually deemed to be about 30 per cent. As of this moment, Mr. Dion will be lucky to get much above 25 per cent.

[updated Fri Sep 26 10:20:05 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 10:20

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Image_1__thumb Tory101

Stephen Harper is the best Prime Minister, I would only vote Conservative and Stephen Harper for the most trustworthy, competent, leadership, and the best vision for Canada!

Conservative all the way!

Chris, Ontario

[updated Fri Sep 26 13:11:15 EDT 2008]

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26 Sep 13:11

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rm99

DION=PALIN

This is our KATIE COURIC interview! NO ANSWERS FOR SIMPLE QUESTIONS!!

SEE THE SHOCKING DION VIDEO

http://www.stephentaylor.ca

Dion’s done. He’s going to get hammered in English Canada with this. Kind of ironic how he kept criticizing Harper over the last week but couldn’t say what he would do.

[updated Thu Oct 09 23:15:32 EDT 2008]

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09 Oct 23:15

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