- Reaction score
- 2,827
- Points
- 940
If a week is a long time in politics, "never" shouldn't even be considered.Haletown said:... it puts a stake through the cold, dead heart of Trudeaupia, never for it to rise again
If a week is a long time in politics, "never" shouldn't even be considered.Haletown said:... it puts a stake through the cold, dead heart of Trudeaupia, never for it to rise again
Retired AF Guy said:Wasn't there a right-wing party being formed in Quebec? If they is any dissatisfaction with Jacko, may be we will see people drifting over to the right?
Swingline1984 said:It was around 14 million, or roughly 61%.
Bin-Rat said:As of January 1, 2011, Canada's population was estimated at 34,278,400, an increase of 40,400 (+0.1%) from October 1, 2010
as per http://www.statcan.gc.ca/daily-quotidien/110324/dq110324b-eng.htm
Now I am no math professor but 14 Mill out of 34 mill is NOT 60% cause 17 mill would be 50% But I dunno how they are doing there math
Bin-Rat said:Now I am no math professor but 14 Mill out of 34 mill is NOT 60% cause 17 mill would be 50% But I dunno how they are doing there math
Voter turnout: 14,720,580 of 23,971,740 registered electors (61.4%)
GAP said:The next fun exercise is going to be finding out what the federal retirement payouts for all those defeatedliberalsBloquistes is going to be.....
E.R. Campbell said:I followed ThreeHundredEight.com closely, posting their projections on an almost daily basis.
Here are graphs of their aggregations of polls - which are only as inaccurate as the original polls themselves, and the seat projections based on those aggregations.
The lessons:
1. Most polls misjudged the strengths of the parties but by, in aggregation, 3.5% (low) for the Tories. 3.3% (low) for the NDP and 3.9& (high) for the Liberals; and
2. The ThreeHundredEight.com seat projection model was too conservative. It failed to predict the vote splitting which, I am pretty certain, greatly benefited the Conservatives.
On the graphs Day 1 is 23 Mar 11, a few days before the election campaign, proper, began, and Day 42 is the final result.
I wouldn't sweat the 308 shift. At the eleventh hour he revises his model...... At which point he needs to show both models: the old one carried forward withouth change and the new one reworked backwards to demonstrate the trend. Otherwise he has just produced a "hide the decline" shift where a different reference is substituted at the end.
The problem is compounded by the inclusion of the Ekos poll which seems to be outside the norms detected by other pollsters.
Emphasising an outlier and adjusting your model does not good statistics make.
E.R. Campbell said:It is not just the Canadian electorate that is so polarized; we have seen very similar things in America, Australia and Britain. We have all imported aspects of the US culture wars, which go back to the mid 1960s. It is silly to blame Stephen Harper for Johnson vs. Goldwater, but Simpson doesn't much like Harper, so ...
Infanteer said:I wonder how much the NDP will call for Proportional Representation now that it would mean they need to give a few of their seats up to the Liberals?
GAP said:ADQ lead by Mario Dumont....
HavokFour said:I keep hearing that 60% of voters voted against the Conservatives, when the results clearly show that they voted against the Bloc and Liberals.
Am I crazy?
Party Party standing % Popular vote %
Conservative 167 54.2 5,832,401 39.6
Container said:Its that stupid "only 40% of Canadians voted so 60% Hate HARPER!" ridiculousness.
HavokFour said:I keep hearing that 60% of voters voted against the Conservatives, when the results clearly show that they voted against the Bloc and Liberals.
Am I crazy?
ModlrMike said:They were strangely quiet when Chretien achieved the same end.