There has now been multiple polls showing a tightening in Atlantic Canada and in BC (not sure the reason for the former, but the latter could be due to reconciliation). Additionally, I don’t think the Liberals can win Terrebonne with the Bloc around the 30% range (even in the Leger poll they were at 31%).
Medea_From_Colchis on
How long do the CPC have to sit around 33% (their usual base number) before they finally decide to get rid of Poilievre? The biggest sell for him was that he increased the party’s popular support to a level it had never seen. Now, he’s floating back around where O’Toole and Sheer found themselves, which was never enough to win a majority. You’d figure this could only keep up for so long before they move on.
Hot-Percentage4836 on
Too soon to tell if there is any post-Gladu movement (half the poll covers the pre-Gladu floorcrossing week). Though there’s great odds it may just be statistical noise, I take notice of the Quebec numbers. The first one of any public poll since February 1st that has the Liberals-Bloc gap below the 10%s (Liaison got 11-15% LPC leads for 8 straight weeks).
Once again, it may just be statistical noise, but it’d be funny if some kind of anti-Gladu movement in Québec spoils the Liberals odds in *Terrebonne* in the very few days before the main by-election day.
[deleted] on
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AL31FN on
I think the argument amount PP supporters are once Trump is no longer in power, PP would bring CPC back to the glory day of 2024
darrylgorn on
The Liberals are essentially teflon at this point, they don’t even need a majority to sustain governance. And this is all thanks to the existence of Trump and Pierre Poilievre.
There is no easier way to drive voters into the Liberal tent of ambivalence than to be one of those two individuals or to associate with either of them. If they end up winning these byelections and clinch a majority, it will only compel the Conservatives to keep PP in power and we might see another decade of Liberal dominance as a result.
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There has now been multiple polls showing a tightening in Atlantic Canada and in BC (not sure the reason for the former, but the latter could be due to reconciliation). Additionally, I don’t think the Liberals can win Terrebonne with the Bloc around the 30% range (even in the Leger poll they were at 31%).
How long do the CPC have to sit around 33% (their usual base number) before they finally decide to get rid of Poilievre? The biggest sell for him was that he increased the party’s popular support to a level it had never seen. Now, he’s floating back around where O’Toole and Sheer found themselves, which was never enough to win a majority. You’d figure this could only keep up for so long before they move on.
Too soon to tell if there is any post-Gladu movement (half the poll covers the pre-Gladu floorcrossing week). Though there’s great odds it may just be statistical noise, I take notice of the Quebec numbers. The first one of any public poll since February 1st that has the Liberals-Bloc gap below the 10%s (Liaison got 11-15% LPC leads for 8 straight weeks).
* Québec : LPC 36% (-3), Bloc 30% (+2), CPC 18% (-2), NDP 10% (+2)
Once again, it may just be statistical noise, but it’d be funny if some kind of anti-Gladu movement in Québec spoils the Liberals odds in *Terrebonne* in the very few days before the main by-election day.
[removed]
I think the argument amount PP supporters are once Trump is no longer in power, PP would bring CPC back to the glory day of 2024
The Liberals are essentially teflon at this point, they don’t even need a majority to sustain governance. And this is all thanks to the existence of Trump and Pierre Poilievre.
There is no easier way to drive voters into the Liberal tent of ambivalence than to be one of those two individuals or to associate with either of them. If they end up winning these byelections and clinch a majority, it will only compel the Conservatives to keep PP in power and we might see another decade of Liberal dominance as a result.