Mulcair takes huge lead over Harper in election poll on economy

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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Mulcair leads election poll on economy

With Canada mired in an economic slowdown, new survey data suggest voters see Opposition Leader Thomas Mulcair and the New Democratic Party as the best choice to improve the country’s prospects.

A Globe and Mail/Nanos Research poll asked 1,000 Canadians last week how the election of each of the three main party leaders would affect the economy. And 47 per cent said a Mulcair victory would have a “positive” or “somewhat positive” impact. That was well ahead of Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s 31.7-per-cent positive result. Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau garnered 41.4 per cent.

Respondents were also asked what election result would have “the most positive impact on the Canadian economy.” While a Harper-led Conservative majority ranked highest, at 24.1 per cent, a Mulcair majority came in at 20.6 per cent, compared with 13.5 per cent for a majority Liberal government led by Mr. Trudeau.

The poll is a potential blow to Mr. Harper’s self-styled reputation as the best steward of the economy, a central part of his message since coming to office in 2006. “If you’re a Conservative strategist you have to look at a number like that and be a bit concerned,” said Nanos Research president Nik Nanos. “The biggest takeaway is the NDP is not seen as a bogeyman in terms of their impact on the Canadian economy.”

Former Conservative pollster Dave Crapper called the results “groundbreaking,” suggesting voters who appear to be warming to Mr. Mulcair and the NDP are ready “to give them credit” for being able to manage the economy – a reputation that has long eluded the party.

While the economy is expected to be a key issue in the fall election, strategists across the political spectrum said it’s premature to read too much into one poll. “Campaigns matter,” Mr. Crapper said. “And Harper is an excellent campaigner.”

Most suggested that Mr. Mulcair has benefited from the NDP victory in the Alberta election in May that ended 44 years of Progressive Conservative rule. Some also said the federal Conservatives, which have focused their efforts on hammering Mr. Trudeau, have yet to turn their firepower on Mr. Mulcair and the NDP. “Is Mulcair looking better having nobody taking a critical look at him?” one Conservative strategist said. “I’m sure that is helpful for him at the moment. I suspect that will not be the case for the next three months.”

Mr. Mulcair has talked up his economic platform recently in speeches to business audiences and during visits to Ontario farms and businesses. He has pledged to increase the minimum wage, cut small business taxes, introduce new tax credits, commit an extra $1.5-billion in gas taxes to infrastructure spending, introduce a national childcare program and deliver balanced budgets. “The NDP will have to be extremely diligent in making sure their platform adds up,” said Goldy Hyder, CEO of public affairs firm Hill+Knowlton Canada.

Former Harper government spokesman Jason MacDonald said: “If you dig deep we’re looking at a high tax and debt-focused policy coming from the NDP.” He added the election remains “an abstract notion” for many and that as it draws near “we’ll probably [see] what we’ve seen over time: people recognize … the Conservatives are [the party] that actually has a track record and a clear plan” on economic matters.

Canada’s economy has struggled in part due to weakening prices globally for oil and other commodities. The Bank of Canada initially forecast expansion for this year, but data suggest the economy contracted in the first half, putting Canada in a recession. While Canada’s economy throughout the global 2008-09 recession and subsequent recovery performed better than others, it now lags the United States. Mr. Harper and Finance Minister Joe Oliver have insisted the government will balance this year’s budget, despite last week’s warning from the Parliamentary Budget Officer that Ottawa could post a $1-billion deficit.

“The upcoming election will be about change [versus] more of the same,” said senior NDP strategist Brad Lavigne. “Do Canadians want to [stick] with Harper’s failed [economic] plan, or go with a new one? All indicators suggest Stephen Harper’s economic plan is not working.”

The margin of error on the Nanos poll is plus or minus 3.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

Trudeau rebuffs NDP suggestion of potential coalition government

Mulcair leads election poll on economy - The Globe and Mail
 
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captain morgan

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Mar 28, 2009
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A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
A Globe and Mail/Nanos Research poll asked 1,000 Canadians last week how the election of each of the three main party leaders would affect the economy. And 47 per cent said a Mulcair victory would have a “positive” or “somewhat positive” impact. That was well ahead of Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s 31.7-per-cent positive result. Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau garnered 41.4 per cent.

Don't know what this means

Respondents were also asked what election result would have “the most positive impact on the Canadian economy.” While a Harper-led Conservative majority ranked highest, at 24.1 per cent, a Mulcair majority came in at 20.6 per cent, compared with 13.5 per cent for a majority Liberal government led by Mr. Trudeau.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...ll-on-economy/article25716573/?service=mobile

Here is your metric on the issue Flossy... Canucks know that the only choice is Harper
 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
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Some days you just have to read below the @globeandmail hed!


Tories take huge lead in latest poll
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
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If I was the poller my biggest concern would be why they got two different answers for basically the same question.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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If I was the poller my biggest concern would be why they got two different answers for basically the same question.

Because they are thinking about the immediate economic benefit for that type of election result, but they realize that we need diversification in the long term.

Looking at the numbers, it's fairly close on the election question which shows a significant lack of confidence in Harper.
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
9,949
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kelowna bc
Two answers in such circumstances are not uncommon depending on how the question
is asked and what the expectations of the respondent is.
Canadians are pondering a change a big change they are tired of the current flavor and
Mulcair knows it. Harper has also ticked off the media and that won't help him for example
the line the Man in the Blue Suit has caught on and is attributed to the Prime Minister
coming to Kelowna for a photo op and nothing more. The forest is burning we need a pic
of the Savoir on the fire line.
Polls mean little right now they are snapshots. What upsets me is the election is supposed
to be much shorter but is expanding to be a US style thing unfortunately
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Because they are thinking about the immediate economic benefit for that type of election result, but they realize that we need diversification in the long term.

Looking at the numbers, it's fairly close on the election question which shows a significant lack of confidence in Harper.

Did they pool and then poll the clueless like yourself?

There are no instant fixes. That is complete and total lunacy.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
Two answers in such circumstances are not uncommon depending on how the question
is asked and what the expectations of the respondent is.
Canadians are pondering a change a big change they are tired of the current flavor and
Mulcair knows it. Harper has also ticked off the media and that won't help him for example
the line the Man in the Blue Suit has caught on and is attributed to the Prime Minister
coming to Kelowna for a photo op and nothing more. The forest is burning we need a pic
of the Savoir on the fire line.
Polls mean little right now they are snapshots. What upsets me is the election is supposed
to be much shorter but is expanding to be a US style thing unfortunately

This guy gets it.

People are looking beyond the election and the picture is not a rosy one if captain clueless remains in power.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,481
11,487
113
Low Earth Orbit
^^^
This guy gets it.

People are looking beyond the election and the picture is not a rosy one if captain clueless remains in power.

We have a diverse economy, it lacks access to Pacific markets. That issue has finally been addressed. Why is that so hard to understand? You were in high school when the egg was laid and hatched to build up western Canadian infrastructure.

At no point in time have the NDP objected to opening up the west.

This is huge and all three parties know it was long overdue and a necessity.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
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Vernon, B.C.
Are alternatives to Harper really going to increase performance at the same level of taxation??
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
Two answers in such circumstances are not uncommon depending on how the question
is asked and what the expectations of the respondent is.
Canadians are pondering a change a big change they are tired of the current flavor and
Mulcair knows it. Harper has also ticked off the media and that won't help him for example
the line the Man in the Blue Suit has caught on and is attributed to the Prime Minister
coming to Kelowna for a photo op and nothing more. The forest is burning we need a pic
of the Savoir on the fire line.
Polls mean little right now they are snapshots. What upsets me is the election is supposed
to be much shorter but is expanding to be a US style thing unfortunately

Be prepared for a long one, heard on the news tonight Cons have enough money in the bank for a longer campaign, they can spend $25 million for 37 days but if they have more than $25 million they can spend an extra $million for every 3 days, so if they want to run it for 49 days they are allowed to spend $29 million. Apparently the Libs and Dippers don't have that kind of bread.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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NDP surges past Conservatives, Liberals in latest poll






The New Democrats have surged to a double-digit lead in public support, gaining more distance over the other federal parties than they have at any time in the past two years, according to a new Forum Research poll.


About four in 10 Canadians surveyed (39 per cent) said they would cast their ballot for the NDP if an election were held today.






NDP surges past Conservatives, Liberals in latest poll | Toronto Star






New poll says NDP support climbing towards majority territory | CP24.com








 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
NDP surges past Conservatives, Liberals in latest poll






The New Democrats have surged to a double-digit lead in public support, gaining more distance over the other federal parties than they have at any time in the past two years, according to a new Forum Research poll.


About four in 10 Canadians surveyed (39 per cent) said they would cast their ballot for the NDP if an election were held today.






NDP surges past Conservatives, Liberals in latest poll | Toronto Star






New poll says NDP support climbing towards majority territory | CP24.com









Anything at this juncture means absolutely nothing, but Mulcair may as well have his 15 minutes in the sun.