Canada's Federal Election 2015: The Official Thread

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
Can you say Prime Minister Mulcair.


And how good would he be for anyone living west of the Ottawa River?
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
27,944
7,684
113
B.C.
Timing of Peter MacKay's departure politically damaging

"It seems a lot of people are abandoning Stephen Harper's ship these days," Mulcair quipped during a speech in Toronto after the news broke.

More than 30 Conservative MPs are not running in the next election — a big number, even if it is, as the government says, a natural turnover.

And the timing is certainly bad. As Clement told The House, all ministers were instructed to tell Prime Minister Stephen Harper months ago if they planned not to run in the fall election. Planning is paramount in any campaign, especially one expected to be so closely contested.

http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/politics/timing-of-peter-mackay-s-departure-politically-damaging-1.3093969
Maybe just maybe about 30 conservative MP's have reached that golden state of full pension , the wet dream of all politicians .
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
Maybe just maybe about 30 conservative MP's have reached that golden state of full pension , the wet dream of all politicians .

Anyway it's early days yet, a lot of sh*t can happen in 5 months in Politics!
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,814
467
83



ThreeHundredEight.com: May 2015 federal polling averages
ThreeHundredEight.com

A total of nine polls interviewed over 16,000 Canadians throughout the month of May, recording one of the most dramatic swings in voting intentions in years.



The Conservatives led in polls conducted in May, averaging 30.2% support. That was a drop of 2.2 points from April, however, and marked the third consecutive month of decrease for the Tories from 33%. It was their worst score since October 2014, and a significant departure from the 32% to 33% the Conservatives had managed over the previous six months.

The big shift boosted the New Democrats into second place, the first time they've polled this high in over two years, the last time being January 2013. The NDP was up 5.5 points to 28.5%, marking their third consecutive month of increase from 20% support three months ago. There have only been two cases of a jump this large in voting intentions since the end of 2008: when the Liberals jumped six points between June and July 2014, and when the NDP surged in the 2011 election campaign.

The Liberals were down 2.1 points to 28.4%. They have dropped or have been stagnant for 10 consecutive months now, having polled at 39% at their peak. May's score was their worst since March 2013, or the month before Justin Trudeau became party leader.

The Greens were down 0.9 points to 6.5%, while the Bloc Québécois was down 0.1 point to 4.2%. An average of 2.3% of Canadians said they would vote for another party or independent candidate.

Undecideds, when reported, averaged 16.6%.

There was a clear and dramatic shift last month. The Conservatives ranged between 29% and 36% in polls conducted in April, but ranged only between 28% and 33% in May. The Liberal range decreased from between 28% and 35% to 26% and 31%. The NDP ranged between 21% and 25% in April. In May, polls put them between 24% and 30%.


Click/tap to magnify
There were big changes in the NDP's voting intentions everywhere, but one of the biggest was in British Columbia. The NDP jumped 7.2 points to 31.9%, their best since March 2013 and their first lead since last fall. The Conservatives were down 2.9 points to 27.9%, their worst since July 2014, while the Liberals were down 1.9 points to 26.6%. They haven't been that low since January 2014. The Greens were also down, slipping two points to 11.6%.

The only good news for the Conservatives was in Alberta, where the stink of the provincial campaign seems to be drifting away. The Tories were up 3.6 points to 47.2%, halting a three-month decline. The New Democrats were up 3.5 points to 27%, their best on record. Their previous best before the recent surge was 21% in early 2012. The Liberals were down big, plummeting 6.1 points to 16.8%, their worst since January 2013. The Greens were down 0.9 points to 5%.

The Conservatives continue to hold steady in the Prairies, where they have averaged 39% to 43% for the past nine months. In May, they were down 1.8 points from April to 40% support. The Liberals were down 2.8 points to 27.3%, their worst since January 2013, while the NDP was up 4.3 points to 24.6%. The Greens were down 0.5 points to 5.6%.

Despite dropping 2.2 points, the Conservatives still led in Ontario with 34.5%. The Liberals, down over the last eight months from 43%, slipped 1.2 points in May to 32.3%. The NDP, which was at 17% just three months ago, was up 4.7 points to 24.9%, their best since March 2014. The Greens were down 0.6 points to 6.4%.

In Quebec, the New Democrats surged 7.2 points to 35.6%, their best since August 2012, when Thomas Mulcair was at the tail-end of his leadership honeymoon. The Liberals, who were at 37% eight months ago, continued their slide by 1.3 points to hit 24.9%, their worst since March 2013. Mario Beaulieu's Bloc Québécois was down 1.3 points to 16.5%, while the Conservatives fell 4.7 points to just 16.4%. That is their worst score since December, when the party started to see improvement in the polls. The Greens were down 0.2 points to 4.7%.

The Liberals only led in Atlantic Canada, where they were down 1.6 points to 43.6%. That's their lowest since July 2013 (they were at 51% three months ago). The NDP was up 3.6 points and moved into second with 24.3%, their best since July 2014, while the Conservatives were down 1.6 points to 22.8%. The Greens were also down, falling one point to 7%. Note that this is Elizabeth May's best result in any region after B.C.

With these levels of support, the Conservatives would likely win a plurality of seats with 128, followed by the New Democrats at 109, the Liberals at 99, and the Greens with two. The Bloc would be shutout.

Compared to April, this is a 15-seat drop for the Conservatives, a 14-seat decrease for the Liberals, and a 30-seat increase for the NDP. The Bloc had been projected to win one seat with the April averages.

The seat changes demonstrate the shift that took place in May, and the real world consequences of them. The NDP picked up seven seats in British Columbia, three in the Prairies, seven in Ontario, 11 in Quebec, and two in Atlantic Canada. It retained its projected wins in Alberta and the North.

..more..

ThreeHundredEight.com: May 2015 federal polling averages
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
4,340
113
Vancouver Island
Everytime just-in opens his mouth the libs slide a little farther. Dipper support is largely related to the lack of faith by moderate leftys in just-in. Of course polls are done by calling just a few people with carefully worded questions.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
0
36
Pierre Poilievre, the federal employment minister and chief spokesman for the Conservative party in the House of Commons, has “a very significant likeability issue in his riding,” according to pollster Frank Graves, whose company recently polled Poilievre’s suburban Ottawa constituency of Nepean-Carleton.


“My guess is that people are looking at him and saying the more I see of him, the less I like him,” said Graves.


This -- like many other portents -- suggests that the Conservatives' electoral prospects this fall are worse than the top line numbers indicate.


The voters who know Poilievre best don’t like him that much. He is the most prominent public face of his government.


Ever since Finance Minister Joe Oliver went off script in a TV interview -- musing about Harper’s granddaughter -- Poilievre has been fielding questions about Oliver’s budget, generally by warning about the opposition’s risky tax-raising schemes.


Poilievre is ready to cross check anyone at anytime. He has previously gone after, for example, former auditor general Sheila Fraser, and aboriginals who were abused at residential schools.


This week, he took to Twitter to promote a boycott of Tim Hortons, an unusual attack on a big employer by the employment minister.


Like a lot of what this government is doing these days, that move seems aimed at motivating core voters rather than reaching undecided voters. Not a good sign.




more




Poilievre popularity problem bad sign for party | Brantford Expositor
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
27,944
7,684
113
B.C.
Pierre Poilievre, the federal employment minister and chief spokesman for the Conservative party in the House of Commons, has “a very significant likeability issue in his riding,” according to pollster Frank Graves, whose company recently polled Poilievre’s suburban Ottawa constituency of Nepean-Carleton.


“My guess is that people are looking at him and saying the more I see of him, the less I like him,” said Graves.


This -- like many other portents -- suggests that the Conservatives' electoral prospects this fall are worse than the top line numbers indicate.


The voters who know Poilievre best don’t like him that much. He is the most prominent public face of his government.


Ever since Finance Minister Joe Oliver went off script in a TV interview -- musing about Harper’s granddaughter -- Poilievre has been fielding questions about Oliver’s budget, generally by warning about the opposition’s risky tax-raising schemes.


Poilievre is ready to cross check anyone at anytime. He has previously gone after, for example, former auditor general Sheila Fraser, and aboriginals who were abused at residential schools.


This week, he took to Twitter to promote a boycott of Tim Hortons, an unusual attack on a big employer by the employment minister.


Like a lot of what this government is doing these days, that move seems aimed at motivating core voters rather than reaching undecided voters. Not a good sign.




more




Poilievre popularity problem bad sign for party | Brantford Expositor
Well Frank Graves the liberal pollster , would you expect him to say anything different ?
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,814
467
83
Hey I needed to find someone as dumb as Harper.

The Bloc definitely fit the bill.