CPAC-Nanos Tracking CP 36, LP 27, NDP 19, GP 9, BQ 9 (ending September 27)

241 comments Latest by robini

With their 15 point margin last week, the campaign was looking like a runaway freight train for the Harper Conservatives. However, a number of new factors have diminished the Conservative lead, which is still comfortable, to 9 points.

First, Harper’s culture comments renewed BQ support in Quebec. Combine the Richardson comments related to immigrants causing crime and Harper’s comments asserting Dion wanted the economy to perform poorly and the gap narrowed from 15 to 9 points. These two comments represent a tenuous lifeline to the Liberal campaign.

Tonight, Nik Nanos, President of Nanos Research and Official CPAC Pollster, joins Goldhawk Live host Dale Goldhawk at 7 pm ET / 4 pm PT to discuss the latest results. 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 26, 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=990, MoE ± 3.1%, 19 times out of 20)

  • Conservative Party 36 (-3)
  • Liberal Party 27 (+2)
  • NDP 19 (NC)
  • Green Party 9% (NC)
  • BQ 9% (+1)
  • Undecided 18% (+2)

Question: Of the following individuals, who do you think would make the best Prime Minister? [Rotate] (N=1,202,MoE ± 2.8%, 19 times out of 20)

  • Conservative leader Stephen Harper 36% (-1)
  • NDP leader Jack Layton 18% (-1)
  • Liberal leader Stephane Dion 12% (+1)
  • Green Party leader Elizabeth May 4% (NC)
  • Bloc Quebecois leader Gilles Duceppe 4% (NC)
  • None of them 8% (NC)
  • Unsure 17% (NC)

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 92 (+7)
  • Stephane Dion 53 (+11)
  • Jack Layton 50 (-6)
  • Gilles Duceppe 17 (+6)
  • Elizabeth May 11 (-9)

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.

Individuals with the top ratings make it to Nik’s Leaderboard

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Highest Rated Comments

Phew! But Harper still has a 9 point lead. Methinks he or his party would have... more

rsharp (Québec) 28 Sep 14:28

Does Canadian constitution allow formation of Green and Lib coalition government... more

shk (Ontario) 28 Sep 14:46

Things are tightening up again. Polls are like rollercoasters. Hold on and enj... more

fortescue (Ontario) 28 Sep 14:02

Wow. You're not the brightest bulb in the drawer, are you :) Nik's talented, ... more

Foxer (British Columbia) 28 Sep 21:09

I would have slept just fine with a nine point lead, much better than Stephane I... more

MRM (Manitoba) 28 Sep 21:22

rsharp 1. As a member nation we have obligations under both NATO and the UN.... more

HC in AB (Alberta) 28 Sep 21:28

Comments

fortescue

Things are tightening up again. Polls are like rollercoasters. Hold on and enjoy the ride. Quebec looks like they will determine whether its a majority or not?

[updated Sun Sep 28 14:02:03 EDT 2008]

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28 Sep 14:02

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Richard_thumb rsharp

Phew! But Harper still has a 9 point lead. Methinks he or his party would have to do something monumentally stupid to blow it now. Or Bushco does, which spills across our once unguarded border.

The Liberals are going to be the official opposition. The only real question is whether or not we get a Tory majority. And what then?

Maybe we should draw up a "behavioural contract" for Harper. I'll do the first draft:

1. I promise not to get Canada into any more wars unless in self-defence, defence of an ally or as requested by the United Nations' Security Council to prevent genocide.

2. I promise to stop my rush to deregulate the private sector, whether competiton law, financial markets, environmental protection, labour standards or consumer protection.

3. I promise not to drag up resolved social issues, unless a specific campaign platform. These would include: a woman's right to choose, the death penalty, soft drugs, young offenders, the separation of church and state...

4. I promise to leave the wheat board, CBC, Canada Post and other Crown corporations alone.

5. I promise not to interfere with the legitimate duties of the the human rights, privacy access to information and official languages commissions.

6. I promise to stop muzzling government departments, so that they too can do their jobs.

You get my drift. Please feel free to add to the list.

[updated Sun Sep 28 14:28:12 EDT 2008]

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28 Sep 14:28

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shk

Does Canadian constitution allow formation of Green and Lib coalition government ?

[updated Sun Sep 28 14:46:52 EDT 2008]

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28 Sep 14:46

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Kelvin

Not surprising result: three-point Tory jump on Sept. 24 was clearly an outlier and has passed through the sample. NDP's stalled at 19% though.

[updated Sun Sep 28 15:02:28 EDT 2008]

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28 Sep 15:02

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Foxer

Looks more like there was a sudden jump in the undecided - possibly people saying undecided instead of cpc - but it's very very odd that this is the second weekend in a row where there's a 'sudden and improbable' reversal.

The cpc dropping 2 points would be a little unusual - there's no indication of a sudden drop last night anywhere else. But more importantly, there's no reason for the libs to go way up while the ndp doesn't.

And that's the second weekend in a row that kind of thing has happened - sudden overnight drop for the cpc, sudden unexpected rise for the libs. And there's just no indication in any other poll that there was a reversal of that nature - in fact most would say the ndp has been gaining strength not the libs.

I dunno - we'll have to wait and see if it holds for a few days, if it 'suddenly' goes back up like we saw last week then i'm afraid we'll have to conclude there's a problem with nicks methods.

[updated Sun Sep 28 19:07:23 EDT 2008]

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28 Sep 19:07

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MBAGS (suspended for inappropriate comments)

Hello boys and girls - MBAGS here !! Oh the shame of my posters to the 'Ottawa Valley Borden Line' blog that got over 200 'hits' so far. They are cryin' in their beer about now !! Geez, ONLY 9 points instead of 15 - OY VAY, what will they do !! No sleep tonight - late for work tomorrow !! LOL - NO majority !! Maybe worse !! One would hope this side of the 'Mason-Dixon' errr... Manitoba border !!
36% A SOLID weak minority and if it holds or gets worse, harper is D-E-D, dead !! LOL.

I CAN dream, but with the numbers taking a 'dive' I can't help but taking my turn to 'gloat' a little.

ALL the 'write-offs' and BANG, a 'Liberal surge'(I invented that one). It's a small one, but obviously at the cost to the cpc and harper's goonies. If we get another one like in '06 for the Libs, wow, we got a 'horse race'. Sorry to those whom I offend, but I've gotten my brains beat out about the 'Ottawa Valley Borden Line' from 1961-1973 and they're scattering for the hills out west after just long enough to take a 'poke' at me for daring to bring up the fact that Ontario saved their butts for 12 years !! LOL Cheers - MBAGS !!

BTW - If you want to 'Google' 'Ottawa valley Borden Line' (fourth one down), you Can read the truth about how many years Ontario supported Alberta's oil production at a huge cost - GRATIS !! Diefenbaker legislated it !! (PM for PCs - majority 1958-1963). I was almost 18 when the NOP took hold. I remember !! The Libs under Pearson and Trudeau let it go for Alberta until 1973 and it was cancelled, but Ontario payed, oh did we pay !!

[updated Sun Sep 28 20:30:44 EDT 2008]

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28 Sep 20:30

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