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Election 2011

Thanks to Gable, in the Globe and Mail, for this:

wededcar27co1_1269076cl-8.jpg

Reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/cartoon/editorial-cartoons-april-2011/article1966026/
 
recceguy said:
You mean when the Treasury Board, which seems to answer to no one, scraps it. Let's put the blame proper. Otherwise you risk sounding like one of those misinformed, too lazy to research, politically ignorant anti Harper screech monkeys.

That's what I'm talkin' 'bout!

Actually I do know something about it. TBS is answerable to cabinet and the chairman is a government minister and if Harper wants to find money somewhere, he will find it. Hope you don't live in Victoria or Toronto.
 
At the very least the Young Dauphin may well become the Young Pretender.

Nanos figures are just out, with the CPC at 38, the NDP at 28 and the Liberals at 23 or 24. I heard them on the radio, and will look for hard copies on line. Modified to add: I just found this story by Jane Taber which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provision of the Copyright Act:


Nanos Poll

Layton jumps well ahead of Ignatieff as voters get off ‘the political couch’


Jane Taber

Globe and Mail Update

Posted on Wednesday, April 27, 2011 7:19AM EDT

Jack Layton’s NDP may simply switch places with Michael Ignatieff's Liberals in the House of Commons while the Stephen Harper’s Conservatives hold on to their minority government, according to the latest Nanos Research poll.

Released Wednesday morning, the three-day rolling survey has the NDP firmly in second place with the Conservatives 10 points ahead – 37.8 per cent support for the Tories compared to 27.8 per cent for the NDP. The Liberals, meanwhile, are in uncharted waters, sliding downward night after night to 22.9 per cent support nationally.

Nik Nanos, The Globe and Mail/CTV pollster, points to the record turnout at the advance polls as an indication voters are now lusting for change.

“Canadians are getting off the political couch and going down the street to their local polling stations to try to shape the future in a little different way,” he says, noting this suggests a good turnout at the polls on May 2.

“So what probably started off as a bit of a snoozer of an election turned out to be an election where the federal leaders engaged on health care. ... Jack Layton ran a relatively positive campaign and a good campaign and that was part of his differentiator.”

The NDP’s strength nationally is built on its unprecedented strength in Quebec, where the party has 36.5 per cent support compared to 24.2 per cent for the Bloc Québécois; the Liberals are 20.3 per cent and the Tories have 13.6 per cent support. The margin of error in the province is plus or minus 6.4 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

“The Layton charisma caught on in the province of Quebec and it is starting to slowly spill over outside of Quebec,” says Mr. Nanos.

And Mr. Nanos attributes a phenomenon he calls “old leader-itis” to the Bloc’s poor fortunes at present. He says the sovereigntist party’s support plummeted after Leader Gilles Duceppe campaigned earlier this week with former Parti Québécois premier Jacques Parizeau.

Instead of bolstering his campaign it did the exact opposite.

“Parading out Jacques Parizeau was probably the equivalent of bringing out one of the Four Horsemen of the separatist Apocalypse. It was a bit of a signal that maybe this was the beginning of the end for the Bloc.”

On Wednesday night, meanwhile, Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff is campaigning in Toronto with former prime minister Jean Chrétien.

“We’ll see what that effect that has,” Mr. Nanos says. “Bringing out past leaders might not necessarily be a way to bolster support. It might actually put a spotlight on a campaign to say, ‘This campaign is not going well.’”

Indeed, the campaign is not going well for the Liberals – especially in Ontario, where they have been trending downwards for the fourth night in a row.

The Conservatives remain strong in the vote-rich province with 46.9 per cent support compared to 25.7 per cent for the Liberals, who had polled at 29.3 per cent only two days before. The NDP has 21 per cent support. The margin of error in Ontario is plus or minus 5.6 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

“We have seen a bit of an uptick for the NDP in Ontario but still not the same kind of orange pick-up that we have seen in Quebec in other parts of the country,” Mr. Nanos says. But the NDP have surpassed the Liberals in the Prairies – although still far behind the Tories.

Mr. Nanos says Canadians will not likely know for a couple of days whether these numbers will remain solid. After that, he says, it will be too late to stop these trends.

The poll of 1,020 Canadians was conducted between April 23, 24 and 26. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.



 
Nik on the Numbers

Please note that this three day tracking report is based on polling completed on April 23, 24 and 26. No calling was conducted by Nanos on Easter Monday and this track includes two days of calling from the holiday weekend plus calling on Tuesday.

The Harper Conservatives maintain a 10 point lead but support for the NDP continues to trend up with the NDP in second, followed by the Liberals in third.

Nationally, the Tories have 37.8% support, followed by the NDP at 27.8%, the Grits at 22.9%, the BQ at 5.8% and the Greens at 4.7%.

Factoring the margin of error for the regional sub-samples, Atlantic Canada is a three-way tie.

The NDP have a clear advantage over the BQ in Quebec. NDP support in Quebec stands at 36.5%, followed by the BQ at 24.2%, the Liberals at 20.3%, the Conservatives at 13.6% and the Greens at 2.0%.

West of the Ottawa River the Tories continue to enjoy an advantage over the opposition parties.

In Ontario, the Conservatives enjoy a comfortable lead over the Liberals and New Democrats (46.9%, 25.7% and 21.0% respectively) but Liberal support continues to trend down while NDP support moves up.

Although the Tories have a 20 point advantage in the Prairies, the New Democrats have surpassed the Liberals in popular support in that region (CP 49.6%, NDP 28.2%, LP 17.7%, GP 3.8%).

In British Columbia, the Tories are ahead with 40.9% support with the NDP and Liberals statistically tied (27.7% and 24.8% respectively).

One of two Canadians continues to identify party platform as their top vote driver 49.2%, followed by party leaders at 24.0%.

Visit the Nanos website at 4pm daily to get the latest nightly tracking update on the top national issue of concern and the Nanos Leadership Index comprised of daily trust, vision and competence scores of the leaders.

The detailed tables and methodology are posted on our website where you can also register to receive automatic polling updates.


  Methodology
A national random telephone survey is conducted nightly by Nanos Research throughout the campaign. Each evening a new group of 400 eligible voters are 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 error for a survey of 1,200 respondents is ±2.8%, 19 times out of 20.


  National Ballot Question: For those parties you would consider voting for federally, could you please rank your top two current local preferences? (Committed voters only - First Preference)

The numbers in parentheses denote the change from the three day rolling average of the Nanos Nightly Tracking ending on April 24th (n=1,200; committed voters only n=1023). *Undecided represents respondents who are not committed voters (n=1,200).

Canada (n=1020 committed voters)
Conservative 37.8% (-1.4)
Liberal 22.9% (-2.7)
NDP 27.8% (+4.2)
Bloc Quebecois 5.8% (-0.7)
Green 4.7% (+1.1)

*Undecided 14.9% (+0.2)

Vote Driver Question: Which of the following factors are most important to you today in influencing your vote [Rotate]? (n=1,200)

The numbers in parentheses denote the change from the three day rolling average of the Nanos Nightly Tracking ending on April 24th (n=1,200).

Party Policies 49.2% (-0.9)
Party Leader 24.0% (+0.7)
Local Candidate 14.1% (-0.1)
Traditionally Vote for Party 7.9% (-0.2)
Unsure 4.7% (+0.4)




 
It would be quite interesting if the election resulted in another minority Conservative government but with the NDP and Liberals switching positions and Jack Layton becoming the leader of the Official Opposition.

Would Ignatieff still support the idea that the leader of the opposition could form a government should the Conservatives be unable to maintain the confidence of the House?

I would suspect that the Liberals would seek to replace Ignatieff as quickly as possible and then give the Conservatives the chance to govern.  Being in 3rd place (or 4th depending on how the Bloc fares?) in opposition could actually be a big benefit to a Liberal party in the process of rebuilding.

They would have the freedom to oppose the Government whenever they choose leaving it up the the NDP and the Bloc to prop up the Conservative minority.  The NDP may not have much choice but to keep the Conservatives in power just like the Liberals did for the past few years.  They would risk losing their huge gains if they were seen as the reason that Canadians were forced to face another unwanted election so soon after this one. 

The Liberals would gain some intellectual maneuvering room by not being forced to vote in favour of policies which they publicly claim not to support.  They would also gain time to ease a new leader into his/her role and rebuild their finances.  The NDP on the other hand would now face much greater scrutiny and have to deal with the fact that they are claiming certain positions on one hand while voting in favour of the Conservatives on the other.  The NDP's only other alternative would be to force a new election and risk everything they've gained. 

The NDP resurgence could actually be a double-edged sword for the party.  Official opposition in a minority Conservative government could actually hurt them more than help them in the long term.  Probably better for them to be the official opposition to a Conservative majority so that they can retain some "idealogical purity" and try to consolidate the centre-left under their banner as the new alternative to the Liberals.
 
Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from ThreeHundredEight.com are the latest projections and analysis:

CANADIAN POLITICS AND ELECTORAL PROJECTIONS

11-04-27.PNG

April 27, 2011 Projection - Conservative Minority Government

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 2011
NDP takes another seat, and why they might not win 50 more
Several national polls were added to the projection this morning. There's the EKOS poll from yesterday and the Angus-Reid and Nanos polls from today, along with numbers from Innovative and Oracle. The net result is one seat gain by the New Democrats, who are now tied with the Bloc Québécois at 43 apiece.

But the Angus-Reid poll puts the NDP closer to the Conservatives than they are the Liberals, and we've now seen over a half-dozen polls released in less than a week showing the New Democrats in second place. My projection still has them in third. There are a few reasons for this.

Most importantly, this is simply how the projection model is designed. It is meant to react slowly to new trends until they can be shown to be consistent and prolonged. With the NDP surge coming at the tail end of the campaign this might be coming too quickly and too late for my projection model to capture it completely. That's a limitation of the math - but is it also perhaps a reflection of what might actually happen on Monday night?

While the latest poll numbers would seem to strongly disagree with my projection, I actually believe my own numbers are closer to what the result will be in five days.

If the polls are right, we are witnessing a transformation of Canadian politics. That shouldn't be taken lightly. The potential results of 2011 have been compared to the 1993 election, but even that parallel might not be on the money.

The emergence of the Bloc Québécois transformed politics in Quebec, but considering what was going on at the time in the province it was an almost inevitable result. Supporters of the Parti Québécois were easily transferable over to the Bloc Québécois and support for sovereignty was running hot.

In the West, anger over how the region had been treated by the mainstream parties boosted the Reform Party to prominence. That it would be so effective was certainly a surprise, but that this sort of populist right-wing conservatism could find wide support in the western provinces is not outlandish. And, in the end, the Reform/Canadian Alliance was reborn into the Conservative Party, so it's almost like Western Canadians never left the conservative movement - the Progressive Conservative Party just left the conservative movement for a decade.

Now, the Liberal Party is to be crushed at the polls and be replaced by a party further to the left, but not for any particularly compelling reason besides the notion that Canadians like Jack Layton more than they do Michael Ignatieff. This hasn't been a campaign about the policies pursued by these two parties, and likeability may not be enough to get first-time New Democratic voters out to the polls. And this is a major problem.

The biggest boost the party has been getting in the country is in Quebec. In fact, more than half of the NDP's boost in support is located in Quebec. But according to their own people in the province, they don't have a local organization worth its salt in more than six or eight ridings. If they win elsewhere, it will be due to their rising support and not their own local efforts. A swell of sympathy for the party might get them 25% in a lot of ridings in Quebec, but in order to get them up and over the 30% mark that puts them in contention they will need more than a likable leader in the face of the well-oiled and experienced ground organizations of the Bloc, Liberals, and Conservatives.

And that is the difference between voting intentions and actual votes. Voting Conservative or Liberal or Bloc is nothing new for a lot of voters, so saying they intend to vote for those parties is not a stretch. Saying they will vote for the NDP, a party that they have likely never voted for in the past, is far less likely to hold true when they reach the ballot box.

The 1988 federal election is often cited as an example of when NDP support couldn't carry over to election night. In fact, the party dropped roughly seven points between the start of the election and voting day. 

But I feel that the 2010 British election is a far better example. In that election, the Liberal Democrats were coasting in the polls, tied for second with Labour. While the Liberal Democrats are a centrist party, they do have a similar reputation in Britain as the New Democrats do in Canada: a third party with a likable leader, but a party lacking the gravitas of a government-in-waiting and a full slate of good candidates.

In the run up to the election, pundits had the Liberal Democrats making a historic breakthrough, taking them back to the days when they were a force in British politics. Nate Silver of FiveThirtyEight had the Liberal Democrats at 103 seats in his final projection. Other projectors had the Liberal Democrats winning a similar number of seats.

In the end, the Liberal Democrat vote toppled by about 4-5 points compared to their standings in the polls, and they only won 57 seats - which actually represented a loss for the party. The polls overestimated Liberal Democrat support and the party's weak organization failed against the stronger ones of the Conservatives and Labour. And, in the end, old voting habits were hard to break. 

And that's why we shouldn't be so sure that these levels of support for the New Democrats will hold on Monday night. It isn't because the pollsters are wrong - they are tracking voting intentions after all. But correctly capturing the ability of these intentions to turn into votes is a very different thing for a party like the New Democrats, despite polls showing respondents "certain" to vote for them and unlikely to change their minds. Polls tracking the likelihood of Canadians actualing voting often overestimate turnout by as much as a third.

Changes.PNG


Now that that's out of the way, let's get to the projection. The Conservatives are down 0.3 points to 37.2%, the Liberals are down 0.6 points to 25.8%, and the New Democrats are up 1.1 points to 22%. They have also captured a seat from the Bloc, and are now projected to win 43. The Conservatives and Liberals are unchanged at 146 and 75 seats, respectively.

Projection+Change.PNG


Regionally, the growth of the NDP is clear. They are up big in the Prairies, Ontario, Quebec, and Atlantic Canada, and are also taking steps forward in British Columbia and Alberta.

The Conservatives are mostly dropping, as are the Liberals. But the Grits are spared losing a swathe of seats to the Tories - for now - as both parties are dropping at roughly the same rate where it matters.

The one seat to change hands is Drummond, formerly held by the Bloc. François Choquette of the NDP is now the projected winner.

Several other seats are very close to turning orange. In the West, the NDP is trailing by five points or less in Surrey North, Vancouver Island North, Nunavut, and Saskatoon - Rosetown - Biggar, all Tory seats.

They are not within that range in any seats in Ontario, but several in Quebec (Brossard - La Prairie, Laval - Les Iles, and Saint-Lambert) and Atlantic Canada (Central Nova, Dartmouth - Cole Harbour, South Shore - St. Margaret's, and St. John's South - Mount Pearl) are trending towards the New Democrats.

If they capture all of those seats, the NDP would be at 54 in total, with the Conservatives at 140, the Liberals at 71, and the Bloc at 42. So there is still plenty of room for growth for the NDP in the short term. Capturing another 50 or so, however, will be difficult.

This
Parliament%2B11-04-27.PNG
is what the HoC would look like if this projections holds next Monday.
      PROJECTED CANADIAN PARLIAMENT
 
E.R. Campbell said:
I hope the Conservative tacticians are taking a close look at the 2004 general election.

In the 5th week the polls predicted a real cliff-hanger; it looked like a toss-up between a Conservative or Liberal minority. Then Paul Martin pulled the thing out of the fire in the last week - over the last week-end, actually. He made a frantic, almost mad dash across Canada - stumping five or six riding in two or three provinces each day. Harper relaxed. My assessment is that many, many Canadian voters saw that Martin really wanted the PM's job; he wanted Canadians' votes and Harper was taking them for granted.

On the day the 5th week polls were wrong: Martin beat Harper by over 800,000 votes and he got 135 seats to Harper's 99. I think that frenetic long weekend was a major factor in Martin's success.

In 2011 three long, hard days (this coming Fri, Sat, Sun) in NL, NB, QC, ON and BC - ending up, Sunday evening, in Calgary, might save the Conservatives from an embarrassing finish, might even produce a slim majority.

I think Canadians want their potential leaders to work for the job - that includes Stephen Harper.


This graphic, from threeHundredEight.com illustrates why Harper must make a late, almost frantic bid for votes.

Canada+Polls.PNG

Source: http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-JjB6YlLY2R8/TbcxY6O76MI/AAAAAAAAE8Y/wLFZ5o1n9-c/s1600/Canada+Polls.PNG


The trend on the graph, for the whole 2nd half of the campaign, is exactly what Stephen Harper does not want or need. Harper needs to reverse it, right now, by selling himself and his party and his policies, not by trashing Jack Layton (he can leave that to the Liberals and to a suddenly skeptical media).
 
Some election humour:

http://hallsofmacadamia.blogspot.com/2011/04/you-just-keep-piling-it-up.html

Fire officials investigating foul stench downtown

CP24 @ 11:30 a.m. - Tuesday April 26, 2011

Toronto Fire Services are trying to pinpoint the source of a foul stench that's lingering in parts of the downtown area.

A fire spokesman said crews were called to the Toronto Star's headquarters at Yonge Street and Queens Quay East on Tuesday morning.

Firefighters went through the building, but were unable to locate the source of the unusual odour.

Fire officials said the stench, similar to that of sewage, appears to have been stirred by Monday and Tuesday's heavy rainfall.

City spokesman Steve Johnson said city crews are looking into the matter.

Callers and e-mailers to CP24's newsroom said they smelled the odour near Yonge Street and Front Street and York Street and Bremner Boulevard near the lakefront.

Tune in to CP24 for updates.

People are taking to the Internet to add their two cents about the odour and its source. A hashtag created by CP24 - #whatsthatsmell - is the most popular trending topic with Twitter users right now.
 
I understand that in major media outlets a specialist, not the author, puts the headlines on stories. I wonder what the Good Grey Globe's headline writer is thinking with these:

My emphasis added
Ignatieff pleads with Quebeckers, Rae and Dosanjh renounce NDP
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/ottawa-notebook/ignatieff-pleads-with-quebeckers-rae-and-dosanjh-renounce-ndp/article2000418/

Ignatieff implores Canadians to return to the centrist fold
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/ottawa-notebook/ignatieff-implores-canadians-to-return-to-the-centrist-fold/article1999515/

Ignatieff attack backfires, Layton numbers soar
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/politics-audio/campaign-check-in-ignatieff-attack-backfires-layton-numbers-soar/article2000413/
 
I agree, only in part, with Senator (and former Vancouver mayor) Larry Campbell's assessment of the downstream impact of the NDP's rise, which he gives in the opinion piece, which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from the National Post:

http://news.nationalpost.com/2011/04/26/senator-says-it-might-be-time-for-liberal-ndp-merger/
Senator says it might be time for Liberal-NDP merger

Postmedia News  Apr 26, 2011

By Althia Raj

VANCOUVER — If Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff fails to capture a majority of the votes cast against Conservative leader Stephen Harper, a Liberal senator tells Postmedia News it could be time for the Liberals and the NDP to discuss merging the centre left.

“I think this realization is coming along [to] lots of parties,” Liberal Sen. Larry Campbell said Tuesday in Vancouver.

“Harper is where he is because he was able to sucker the Progressive Conservatives into joining a right–wing neo-conservative party. At any given time, I believe there is 30% of the vote (that) is neo-conservative. So that leaves you 70%. Then you knock off a little bit for the Bloc (Quebecois). I think there is a place for a centre-left party,” Mr. Campbell said.

“Now, it will push some people to the Conservative camp. It will push some people to try to form some socialist shadow of the NDP. But at the end of the day, I think if you take the Liberal and NDP and took a look at their major points, there is a lot of agreement there,” he said.

Mr. Campbell said he feels the two parties have far more in common than the Progressive Conservatives and Canadian Alliance ever did.

“I think that Stephen Harper put a gun to the progressive party’s head and said, you either join us or we will destroy you. I firmly believe that, so they joined, under duress,” he said.

Mr. Campbell made the remarks during an interview with Postmedia News moments before his leader Michael Ignatieff urged Canadians to vote for what he calls, the only party that can be a governing alternative to Harper.

Mr. Ignatieff told reporters his big centrist Liberal tent should be attractive to Liberal, NDP, Green and progressive conservative supporters.

“This country has been governed from the centre for 140 years and that is why Canadians have given their confidence in the Liberal party . . . That is where we have pitch our tent, the big red tent, since the beginning of time — not me, this is (former Liberal prime minister Wilfrid) Laurier,” he said.

But more poll results are suggesting fewer Canadians want to park their ballots with the Liberals and are looking at supporting the NDP.

In British Columbia, Campbell admitted the bandwagon effect of those polls — which he believes are “crap” — could throw some three-way races to the Conservative’s side.

Former B.C. premier and federal Liberal cabinet minister Ujjal Dosanjh is in a tough fight in his riding of Vancouver South.

He said he is concerned strategic voting and the NDP support might bleed some votes from the Liberals but he hoped his reputation might buck the trend.

“I think yeah . . . It may,” Mr. Dosanjh said Tuesday. “(But) I think ultimately, people will make judgments, both in terms of the national voting and in terms of (a) local candidate. I think that sometimes, (the) local candidates are worth three or four or five, 10% of the vote,” he said.

Although Mr. Ignatieff suggested Mr. Harper should be defeated at all cost, he refused to throw his support behind strategic voting.

“Should they (vote strategically)?” Mr. Ignatieff asked. “That is not for me to say. They will vote strategically, that’s what Canadians do. They have choices.”

Mr. Ignatieff also refused to entertain the possibility he might be forced by play second-fiddle to Mr. Layton when the votes are tallied up on Monday.

“Have I given the thought to if my aunt had a lower voice, would she be my uncle? You know, I mean, look . . . I’m fighting to win a federal election,” Mr. Ignatieff answered.

The Liberal leader told reporters the real reason he’s been pounding the pavement for the last year and half was to shore up Liberal support and to “get the base back.”

“The base is back,” Ignatieff told reporters. “We’ve had a whole operation under the radar for a very long of time to get that base out,” he said, adding he feels confident that on May 2nd, his efforts will have paid off.

But even if the party’s 800,000 supporters — those who stayed home during the last election in 2008 — show up on May 2nd, it is not clear it will be enough to throw the Tories off course or even to challenge a surge in NDP support.


I know I'm repeating myself, but, I think this (a Liberal-NDP merger that, essentially creates two national parties is Harper's aim and I believe it is a good idea – for Canada, not just for Conservatives.

I think such a merger is possible and will have this effect:

A hard left rump          A reinforced Green Party    A reduced Bloc Québecois,    A New Liberal Party occupying the Left of Centre,  A reinvigorated Conservative Party  and a gaggle of movements
formed from the NDP  on the Left of Centre part    also on the Left of Centre  Centre Left and even parts of the Centre              reinforced, with displaced Liberals,            on the hard right
                                  of the political spectrum      part of the spectrum          of the spectrum                                                      on the Centre, Centre Right
                                                                                                                                                                                                        and Right of Centre area of the political spectrum
 
I agree that an eventual merger of the Liberals and NDP into a single Centre/Left-of-Centre party which eliminates vote splitting and offers the possibility of alternating Centre-Right (Conservative) and Centre-Left (Liberal-Democrat) governments would be a good thing for Canada (as was the "Unite the Right" movement previously).

The results of this election though could have a major impact on if or when such a merger could happen.  If the Conservatives only manage a minority (or even a slim majority) I think that both the Liberals and NDP will see hope in the NEXT election and won't have any interest giving up the race.

If the NDP beats the Liberals (in either seats or popular vote) I don't think they'll have much interest in a merger since they'll be thinking that they will be able to simply replace the Liberals as the natural alternative to the Conservatives.

Until such time as the Conservatives can get enough support to form a firm majority government (with no obvious hope in sight of either the Liberals or New Democrats defeating them on their own) there won't be enough reason for the Red and Orange party faithful to throw in the towel.  They will have to see the writing on the wall of permanent opposition just as the PC's and Reformers did before they accept that a merger is the only logical solution.

 
Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29 of the Copyright Act from Wilfred Laurier University's LISPOP is their latest projection:

http://www.wlu.ca/lispop/seatprojections.html
conservativelogo.jpg
 
liberallogo.gif
 
ndplogo.gif
 
bqlogo.jpg

    147        60              69          32
    146            75                  43              43  ThreeHundredEight.com's projections for comparison.

Most polls appear consistent on the slightly enhanced Conservative majority plurality. The questions are: how big is the NDP surge? can they displace the Liberals? and does Jack Layton move into Stornoway?

The big question is: what are the implications for the Conservatives? Will the opposition parties be able, much less willing, to join forces and defeat the Tories? My guess is no - and our next federal general election is in not before 2013.


Edit: I forgot to include the link and I corrected the error noted just below.  :-[  :-[
 
Edward:  That's an increased plurality for the Conservatives, not a majority.
 
Homer Simpson doing his best Jack Layton impression right now:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bt0qeIrdRpk
 
You heard it here first ........  The Liberal Party will become the new Progressive Conservative Party.  :nod:


Or this:
  Akin: Liberal flop may reshape all parties  http://www.torontosun.com/2011/04/26/liberal-disaster-may-reshape-all-parties
 
Another poll, this time from The Hill Times, which shows a surging NDP. It is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provision of the Copyright Act. I find some of its predictions such as the one that the Bloc will be reduced to three seats dubious, but that may just be the cynic in me.


Grits set to lose long-held bastions in Montreal and Toronto to NDP, says dramatic new Forum Research poll
The Liberals are set to lose long-held bastions in Montreal and Toronto as the NDP closes in on becoming the official opposition with only four full days of campaigning, according to the results of a Forum Research poll conducted in collaboration with The Hill Times.

By Tim Naumetz

Published Apr 27, 2011 12:13 PM 
         
PARLIAMENT HILL—Liberals are set to lose long-held bastions in Montreal and Toronto as the NDP closes dramatically in on becoming the official opposition with only four full days of campaigning before the election on Monday, according to the results of a Forum Research poll conducted in collaboration with The Hill Times.

The survey conducted Tuesday night puts the NDP firmly in second place, barely behind the Conservative Party, as its support has continued to climb in regions across Canada following the stunning wave the party and its leader, Jack Layton, have generated in Quebec.

The poll of voting intentions of 3,150 Canadians gave the NDP 31 per cent support nationally, compared to 34 per cent for the Conservatives, who dropped by two percentage polls from the last Forum Research poll on April 21. Support for the Liberal Party, which may have hit rock bottom in the upheaval of the past two weeks, remained relatively unchanged, down to 22 per cent from 23 per cent on April 21.

With so little time left, and voter intentions firming up, it appears Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who has urged voters to give him a stable majority government from the outset on March 26, will in the end have his minority government reduced by as many as 10 seats, to a possible 137, Forum Research president Lorne Bozinoff told The Hill Times.

Despite musing about the possibility of an NDP government, notably on the new Sun News Network, Mr. Bozinoff said though Mr. Layton and his NDP appear most likely to form the official opposition, they would need to convert seats in unlikely areas of the country to displace the governing party.

Mr. Bozinoff’s poll and analysis based on past results in key ridings would give the Conservatives 137 seats, the NDP 108 seats if an election were held today, 60 for the Liberals and only three seats for the Bloc Québécois. If these results hold, the seat projections would have a range of plus or minus 10 seats for each party, Mr. Bozinoff emphasized.

“Right now there’s a 30-seat difference, so the NDP would need 15 more seats to switch [with the Conservatives], and those seats are not going to be in Quebec, Quebec is done, I think pretty much,” he said. “So it’s 15 seats the NDP are going to be looking for in the rest of the country outside Quebec, I think that’s going to be tough for them to find those seats, because we’re really down to the hard core seats now.”

If the voting intentions hold, the Liberals stand to lose at least four of the party’s Montreal fortresses to the NDP, including Westmount-Ville Marie, where former astronaut Marc Garneau is battling for re-election; Notre-Dame-de-Grace-Lachine, held by prominent Liberal Marlene Jennings since 1997; and perhaps even Papineau, another longtime Liberal seat where Justin Trudeau, son of Liberal icon Pierre Trudeau, who is struggling to keep a Commons seat. LaSalle-Émard, once held by former prime minister Paul Martin, is also set to fall to the NDP, Mr. Bozinoff told The Hill Times. Incumbent Liberal Lise Zarac is fighting to win the riding.

Several Quebec Conservative seats and most Bloc Québécois seats are also set to be swamped by the surprising NDP wave in Quebec

An analysis based on the poll findings and voter intentions in key ridings across Canada show Mr. Harper and his Conservatives are set to lose three seats to the NDP in the Québec City region— Beauport-Limoilou, where Syvie Boucher, a prominent Tory, is fighting for re-election; Charlesbourg-Haute-Sainte-Charles, won by Daniel Petit, another Parliamentary secretary with the Harper government; and Pontiac, the West Quebec riding where one of Mr. Harper’s most high-profile MPs, Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon, is battling to win re-election. The Liberals are set to lose their long-held bastion of Hull-Aylmer across the Ottawa River from Parliament, held by Marcel Proulx, and Gatineau, where former Liberal MP Françoise Boisvin is set to oust Bloc Québécois incumbent Richard Nadeau.

In Ontario, although the NDP is set to win at least two Liberal seats in Toronto, Beaches-East York, held by Maria Minna, and Parkdale-High Park, where Liberal star Gerard Kenney is set to lose the riding back to New Democrat Peggy Nash, it is the Conservatives who are poised to gain from the Liberal implosion in the province. The poll results show the Conservatives are closing in on Eglinton-Lawrence, held by prominent Liberal Joe Volpe, a former leadership contender, since 1988, and at least four ridings from Liberals in the Greater Toronto Area.

In the Atlantic, Geoff Regan, the son of former Nova Scotia Liberal premier Gerald Regan, faces the prospect of losing his re-election bid in Halifax-West to the NDP. The NDP also stands to win South Shore-St. Margaret’s from Conservative Gerald Keddy and in Newfoundland and Labrador’s St. John’s-Mount Pearl, barely won by Liberal Siobhan Coady in 2008.

“With the NDP continuing to gain steam from coast to coast, and both the Liberal and Conservative parties’ support lagging, the key question now is whether the NDP have the ground troops to deliver their vote on election day,” Mr. Bozinoff said.

The results are based on an interactive voice response survey of 3,150 randomly-selected eligible voters across the country, on April 26, with a margin of error of plus or minus 1.8 per cent 19 times out of 20.

The poll found the Conservatives have lost ground to the NDP in the Atlantic region, Ontario, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.

Among voters aged 18 to 24, the NDP is most popular at 33 per cent, followed by the Conservatives at 20 per cent and the Liberals at 18 per cent. It is possibly a crucial finding because of the dramatic rise in turnout for the advance polls conducted on the weekend, up 34 per cent from advance polls for the 2008 election. Support for the NDP is also highest among those aged 25 to 34, at 37 per cent. Conservative support peaks among voters aged 65 and over, at 45 per cent.

The poll found Mr. Layton’s leadership rating as a prospective Prime Minister has risen. Thirty-three per cent of the respondents said Mr. Layton would make the best Prime Minister, compared to 32 per cent for Mr. Harper and only 14 per cent for Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff.
 
That's great for the NDP, but like others have said, let's see what actually happens on election day.

How many 20 year-olds vote vs 60 year-olds?

Wook
 
I will be looking at the Weather network as well. A Conservative party activist who I know once told me the PC's and CPC pray for rain on election day, since NDP supporters typically stay home if the weather is bad. Maybe we could have fixed election dates in the middle of winter  >:D.
 
A story from the Canada Votes site that has Ignatieff talking about a NDP/Liberal merger is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provision of the Copyright act. I'm not sure that a serious contender would say something like this, opposed, say, to a pathetic also ran who is looking for at the least a coalition or a serious agreement.

Ignatieff doesn’t shut door on possible NDP-Liberal merger

April 27, 2011. 1:41 pm •

Posted by:
Althia Raj

Michael Ignatieff leaves door open to merger

SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. — Michael Ignatieff insists he is still in the race and believes Canadians will elect his party to form government Monday but if they don’t, he suggested Wednesday, he hasn’t shut the door on leading an effort to unite the country’s centre left.

“Once we have an election result, I’d deal with that eventuality when it arises,” he told reporters, after a townhall meeting with high school students in Sault Ste. Marie.

“But It’s very clear to me is that what is happening in the country is that two thirds of the country wants to get rid of Stephen Harper and so we will wait the result of the people,” the Liberal leader said.

Tuesday, Liberal Sen. Larry Campbell told Postmedia News if Harper was returned to power on May 2nd it could be time to discuss merging the NDP and the Liberals.

“I think this realization is coming along (to) a lots of parties,” he said in Vancouver.

“At the end of the day, I think if you take the Liberal and NDP and took a look at their major points, there is a lot of agreement there,” he said.

Ignatieff also told reporters he sees common sets of values between both parties.

“We have certain values that we have always shared and we’ve shared for 60 years,” Ignatieff said. “We share objectives with the NDP but for heaven’s sake contrast this,” he said holding his family-pack platform, “and what Mr. Layton is trying to offer to the Canadian people…(His) is not credible.”
Ignatieff insisted he is still in the running and he criticized the national media for starting to write him out of the race after a poll after poll — from pollsters Angus Reid, Ekos, Nanos and Ipsos Reid — have all suggested the NDP is vaulting into second place.

“This thing is not over,” Ignatieff said. “You guys are walking around as if it (is). We are in the middle of the third period here. And I am absolutely convinced that Canadians are going to wake up on the 2nd of May and think, ‘Wow. We need a government here. We need people who can get the deficit out of control, who can make promises they can keep.’”

Ignatieff will get some start power help Wednesday evening when former Liberal prime minister Jean Chretien will be at his side giving a speech at a rally in Liberal incumbent Ken Dryden’s York Centre riding.

“Jean Chretien will say, what we know he’ll say, which is I led three majority governments. I got the public finances of our country back in order. I dug us out of the Mulroney hole and Michael Ignatieff will dig us out of the Harper hole, that’s what he is going to say,” Ignatieff told reporters.

Chretien, however, was faced with a divided opposition, two parties on the right of the political spectrum, a small Progressive Conservative party and a popular Reform party then Canadian Alliance party, that split votes among right and right of centre supporters and allowed Chertien’s Liberals to hold on to power.

Now, it’s Harper that’s facing a divided opposition on the left.
 
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