At The Midpoint: The Federal Canadian Landscape Part II | Ipsos
Toronto, ON – With the Harper government at the halfway point in its majority mandate, a new CTV/Ipsos Reid survey shows the three main political parties clustered within a range of just five points among decided voters, and the underlying numbers indicate that at this time no single party has a lock on anything – other than the incumbent government which can use a Cabinet shuffle, the tools of parliament and its party apparatus to create some of its own winning conditions at the polls two years from now.
But the Ipsos Reid poll shows the Harper Conservatives are clearly in political trouble at this time in their mandate as switch voters
Toronto, ON – With the Harper government at the halfway point in its majority mandate, a new CTV/Ipsos Reid survey shows the three main political parties clustered within a range of just five points among decided voters, and the underlying numbers indicate that at this time no single party has a lock on anything – other than the incumbent government which can use a Cabinet shuffle, the tools of parliament and its party apparatus to create some of its own winning conditions at the polls two years from now.
But the Ipsos Reid poll shows the Harper Conservatives are clearly in political trouble at this time in their mandate as switch voters