YAPCOC - Yet Another Poll Confirms Orange Crush
With poll updates as they come in today...
Interesting riding by riding analysis showing Liberal and Conservative seats possibly falling to New Democrats. Is it worth consideration? Maybe not - I prefer EKOS, Nanos, Angus Reid, and here in B.C., Mustel for polling and analysis. For your consideration anyway:
Grits set to lose long-held bastions in Montreal and Toronto to NDP, says dramatic new Forum Research poll (April 27, 2011 - Tim Naumetz, The Hill Times) 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 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.
On the other hand, this fine piece is definitely worthy of consideration:
Minorities work fine - under better leadership (April 27, 2011 - Dan Gardiner, Postmedia News) Other countries have founding myths featuring prison breaks, rebellions, wars, and all manner of bloodshed. But not this country. The central event in the story of Canada's founding was a conference. Participants sat at a table. They talked. They negotiated and compromised. The most violent act was an especially vigorous shaking of hands. This goes some way to explaining why Canada is one of the world's most successful and boring countries. It also underscores the absurdity of the status quo in federal politics.
From Nanos: Nightly Tracking Day 31
Jack Layton now scoring highest on Nanos Leadership Index (PDF) up 13 points to 86.2, Harper down 23 points to 82.7. Wow.
Latest EKOS analysis...
THE NEW REALLY BIG QUESTION (April 27, 2011 - EKOS Politics) We update our seat projections based on our new three-day sample of nearly 3,000 potential voters. It continues to show a breathtakingly different Parliament in which the Conservative government is reduced to 131 seats but the muscular new NDP have 92 and the Liberals have 63. This new political math would produce a Parliament where the non-Bloc opposition would have 155 seats, a bare majority and 24 more seats than the Conservatives. We have therefore asked the public how they would like the Governor General to respond if he were to confront this increasingly likely outcome. We asked respondents how they would like the Governor General to react should the new government be defeated in a confidence motion immediately following the May 2nd election. The two choices were to either call another election or ask the leader of the opposition to form a government.
ELECTORATE FIRMING UP IN STRANGE NEW NORMAL (April 27, 2011 - EKOS Politics) It is unclear whether the electorate has truly grasped the significance of the sweeping changes that the NDP surge (now plateaued) has produced. The chief remaining question is how Ontario will deal with these new realities in the closing portion of the campaign.
EKOS-iPolitics poll: Liberals slipping, Tories and NDP hold steady (April 27, 2011 - Kathleen Harris, iPolitics.ca) Latest figures from an EKOS-iPolitics survey find the Conservatives holding on to a six-point lead with 34 per cent support, while the NDP has plateaued at 28.1 per cent and the Liberals have slipped slightly to 22.9 per cent. [...] Pollster Frank Graves said Ontario is the crucial one to watch because there is still much fluidity - especially for the rising NDP. "This is very interesting and important to watch," he said. "This started later in Ontario, and still has more legs."