Alberta CPC lead is back to their former levels, at 7%. That said, LPC is way ahead in Ontario/BC.
Notably Carney at +32% impression, Poilievre -15%.
Also interesting that Liason doesnt think Pierre can get past 39% or so in favorabilities as only his core base he can can appeal to.
MarkCEINE on
Mr. Poilievre is working hard at coming across more like Carney. I hope he really means it, because somewhere in the future he could win an election and through this experience may become a better leader if the time ever comes.
Kaurie_Lorhart on
>Do you approve or disapprove of the job Mark Carney is doing as Prime Minister of Canada.
Does anyone know if this is the question that’s asked, precisely?
I wonder because if someone asked me that, I am not sure how I would, or even could, answer. I approve of some stuff and disapprove of other stuff. I feel like if I said either answer, I’d be lying. I wonder how the general public reconciles with that.
While probably within the margin of error, the portion of “undecided” increased since the last poll (12->14).
It seems what we’re seeing is a 9% centre-right drift from the CPC to the LPC and a 4% centre-left drift from the LPC to the NDP. This would indicate that Carney should stick to his fiscal Conservative guns, whereas the NDP should stick to their “unapologetic socialism”. An election is in the interest of the NDP and Liberals, and probably in the interest of Conservatives who want to dump Polievre.
The only real change is an erosion of the Conservative vote in all directions. I’d say this favors the Liberals taking a few seats from the Conservative base around Quebec City and taking some of the Conservative votes in Bloc ridings where the Conservative are strong like Terrebonne.
4 Comments
Alberta CPC lead is back to their former levels, at 7%. That said, LPC is way ahead in Ontario/BC.
Notably Carney at +32% impression, Poilievre -15%.
Also interesting that Liason doesnt think Pierre can get past 39% or so in favorabilities as only his core base he can can appeal to.
Mr. Poilievre is working hard at coming across more like Carney. I hope he really means it, because somewhere in the future he could win an election and through this experience may become a better leader if the time ever comes.
>Do you approve or disapprove of the job Mark Carney is doing as Prime Minister of Canada.
Does anyone know if this is the question that’s asked, precisely?
I wonder because if someone asked me that, I am not sure how I would, or even could, answer. I approve of some stuff and disapprove of other stuff. I feel like if I said either answer, I’d be lying. I wonder how the general public reconciles with that.
While probably within the margin of error, the portion of “undecided” increased since the last poll (12->14).
With the latest Angus, Liason, and Ekos numbers, [the composite regression curve for Canada ](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vT8w0JxPJZfYwD1RwaZcNOIUnpVOh1EziJNNCvx6XVhD54qfDnVn4dX8jAcROjvpazLMBKd4c_lieEU/pubchart?oid=1193591461&format=interactive)shows the Liberal surge and Conservative slide leveling off:
Canada
* 2026-03-15 LPC-46 CPC-32 NDP-10 BQ-6 GPC-3 PPC-1
* 2025-04-28 LPC-44 CPC-41 NDP-06 BQ-6 GPC-1 PPC-1
It seems what we’re seeing is a 9% centre-right drift from the CPC to the LPC and a 4% centre-left drift from the LPC to the NDP. This would indicate that Carney should stick to his fiscal Conservative guns, whereas the NDP should stick to their “unapologetic socialism”. An election is in the interest of the NDP and Liberals, and probably in the interest of Conservatives who want to dump Polievre.
[In Quebec, composite regerssion curve](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vT8w0JxPJZfYwD1RwaZcNOIUnpVOh1EziJNNCvx6XVhD54qfDnVn4dX8jAcROjvpazLMBKd4c_lieEU/pubchart?oid=479661524&format=interactive) shows a leveling off of the Liberal surge and Bloc decline in the new year, with the Conservatives contrnuing to slide. Note that this doesn’t change much since the last election as there was a drift from the Liberal to the Bloc following the election; the recent Liberal surge has erased that.
Quebec
* 2026-03-15 LPC-44 CPC-16 NDP-06 BQ-27 GPC-3 PPC-1
* 2025-04-28 LPC-43 CPC-22 NDP-05 BQ-28 GPC-1 PPC-1
The only real change is an erosion of the Conservative vote in all directions. I’d say this favors the Liberals taking a few seats from the Conservative base around Quebec City and taking some of the Conservative votes in Bloc ridings where the Conservative are strong like Terrebonne.