Federal
Conservatives and Liberals tied, NDP falls back
Conservative minority seen
TORONTO June 5th,
2015 - In a
random sampling of public opinion taken by the Forum Poll™ among 1156
Canadians, equal proportions, just under a third, would vote for the
Conservatives (31%) or the Liberals (32%) if the election were held today,
while the NDP would attract just less than 3-in-10 (28%). This compares closely
to our last sounding of public opinion, when the three parties were with one
point of each other (May 14 - 31%, 31% and 30%, respectively). Under this
scenario, the Green Party would take few votes (5%) as would the Bloc Quebecois
(3%) or any other party (1%).
In
Atlantic Canada, the Liberals lead strongly (53%), in Quebec, they are ahead
(34%) of the NDP (24%) or the Conservatives (23%) or the Bloc (13%). In
Ontario, the three parties are at relative parity, with the Liberals slightly
ahead (Conservatives - 31%, NDP - 31%, Liberals - 33%). In the prairies and
Alberta, the Conservatives lead (44% and 49 respectively) in both regions the
NDP are second (27% and 29%, respectively) while the Liberals are third (23%
and 18%, respectively). In BC, the Conservatives and NDP are tied (33% and 32%,
respectively), while the Liberals trail very slightly (28%).
Of
note, close to one fifth of 2011 NDP voters will vote Liberal this time (19%),
while just fewer past Liberals will vote NDP now (15%). About one tenth of past
Conservatives will vote either Liberal (12%) or NDP (13%) this time around. As
many as one third of past Green voters will vote NDP in 2015 (34%).
Conservative Minority in the cards
If
these results are projected up to a 338 seat House, the Conservatives are set
to capture 151, nineteen fewer than required for a majority. The Liberals would
form the opposition with 101 seats and the NDP would hold the balance of power
with 83 seats. The Greens would retake their one seat, the Bloc would take one
and one independent (André Arthur, if he runs as an independent) would take a
seat.
Leader favourables are steady
Prime
Minister Stephen Harper has the approval of one third (33%) and his net
favourable score (approve minus disapprove) is a very negative -27. Opposition
leader Tom Mulcair has the approval of close to half (46%) and his net is a
very favourable +19. Justin Trudeau’s approval is just less than 4-in-10 (38%)
and his net is a neutral +2. These findings are very similar to those noted
last month.
Liberals, Conservatives in tie for expectations of victory
Exactly
equal proportions (just more than 3-in-10, or 31%) expect the Conservatives or
the Liberals to win the next election, while just fewer than one fifth have
this expectation for the New Democrats (18%). Just fewer have no idea who will
prevail (15%). Among New Democrats, one tenth believe the Conservatives will
win (13%), while twice this proportion think the Liberals will win (22%). One
half expect their own party to be victorious (48%).
"While we see the three major
parties at something close to parity here, we do not see much momentum on the
part of the New Democrats in supplanting the Liberals as the preferred
alternative to the government," said Forum Research President, Dr. Lorne
Bozinoff.
Lorne Bozinoff, Ph.D. is the president and founder of Forum
Research. He can be reached at lbozinoff@forumresearch.com or at (416)
960-9603.