- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 180
milnews.ca said:The the then-proposed Quebec law dealt with face coverings, too ....
Plus 100 other things including big crosses. The Conservatives are not objecting to religious symbols per se.
milnews.ca said:The the then-proposed Quebec law dealt with face coverings, too ....
Maybe, but it appears they've gone from "We'll have to take a close look at any law Quebec passes that makes it illegal for public servants to cover their faces due to cultural practices" to "We might consider not allowing Canadian public servants to cover their faces due to cultural practices."Rocky Mountains said:Plus 100 other things including big crosses. The Conservatives are not objecting to religious symbols per se.
milnews.ca said:Maybe, but it appears they've gone from "We'll have to take a close look at any law Quebec passes that makes it illegal for public servants to cover their faces due to cultural practices" to "We might consider not allowing Canadian public servants to cover their faces due to cultural practices."
George Wallace said:Although appropriate, I don't think I would feel comfortable with the staff at Revenue Canada wearing bandanas over their faces.
E.R. Campbell said:The Liberal Momentum becomes more and more apparent, just when it's needed.
Lumber said:You almost sound excited. ;D
E.R. Campbell said:The numbers are fun, the strategies and tactics are fascinating ...
...
I will not welcome an NDP government, if that's who we all choose. But I doubt it will do real, serious, long term harm to our country, despite my mistrust of the economic and fiscal motivations of M Mulcair's back-bench and base.
I am not really afraid of a government led by M Trudeau, if that's the party we select. Despite my reservations about his 'bottom', he can put together a pretty solid front bench. I doubt his government will do much real damage either.
I rather hope Prime Minister Harper's Conservatives are re-elected, despite my real, serious reservations about Prime Minister Harper as a leader ...
...
My :2c: because I think too many of us take all this too seriously ... Remember what Gloria Gaynor said: those political buggers will be back and we will survive, no matter which of 'em leads our country.
E.R. Campbell said:At this stage of the campaign, if I was a CPC tactician, I would want to say three things, over and over again:
1. "Look, folks, even Jeffrey Simpson says that Justin Trudeau's 'pledge to run deficits to kick-start the economy through infrastructure ... is misleading.' You cannot trust him; he doesn't have a plan, except to take money out of your pockets;"
2. "Justin Trudeau wants to let convicted terrorists stay in Canada, and he wants to let them continue to force their sisters to hide their faces behind niqabs;" and
3. "We've just signed the world's biggest, best ever, free trade deal: I'm for it, Mulcair's against it, and Justin Trudeau just doesn't understand it."
Tories hone final strategy down to a T, or three
SUBSCRIBERS ONLY
Jeffrey Simpson
The Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Oct. 09, 2015
The Conservative campaign, still looking for liftoff, will focus until voting day on the three Ts: trade, Trudeau and terror. The three Ts will be aimed in particular at older voters and backed by a television advertising campaign the likes of which Canadians have never seen.
Each “T” speaks to a wider Conservative message. Trade, such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement, is about managing the economy, which the Tories will insist they do best. Trudeau is about the Liberal Party’s leader, whose inexperience Conservatives will contrast with the experience of Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Terror is about keeping the country not just safe from foreign threats – Islamic jihadis – but from domestic threats to social harmony from women wearing niqabs.
The three Ts will be tied together by fear: of other parties messing up the economy, of being governed by Justin Trudeau and of practices of the “other,” as in the case of niqab-wearers. The three Ts will be driven home by a bombardment of television advertising.
The principal reason for the longest campaign since 1874, after all, is the Conservatives’ money advantage. They have more of it than the other parties. The longer the campaign goes on, the more the parties can spend. Brace yourselves for the Conservatives’ late-campaign bombardment.
In any election, those with the least interest and lowest amount of basic information about issues make up their minds at the very end, if they vote at all. Conservative voters also have lower levels of formal education than supporters of the other parties.
Television advertising is mostly directed at knowledge-challenged, marginally interested voters. Fear – of change, of the “other,” of threats – can be a powerful motivator for these groups, which is why the Conservatives will use fear extensively as the campaign draws to a close.
The Conservatives have another advantage beyond money – an advantage that loose reporting of political polls invariably misses. Conservative voters, the party believes and political science agrees, will turn out in larger numbers than supporters of the other parties.
Higher turnout revolves around age and commitment. Conservatives are by far the strongest party among seniors and the weakest for people under 35. Older voters, happily for the Tories, go to the polls in much higher numbers than do those under 35.
Imagine, say, that a media story reports an opinion poll showing the Conservatives and Liberals tied at 33 per cent. The poll says nothing about turnout. If three-quarters of Conservatives vote but only two-thirds of Liberals do in this hypothetical situation, the Conservatives will wind up ahead.
The party has spent a lot of time and money constructing a database that tells it where Conservative supporters are, what motivates them and how to get them to vote. Tories are counting on this knowledge to pull out voters on Oct. 19.
Conservative supporters are the most committed to their party. Asked by polling firms whether they have a second choice, almost half reply that they have none. It’s a Conservative vote or nothing for them. By contrast, only 10 per cent to 5 per cent of New Democratic or Liberal supporters report no second choice.
The flip side of the Conservatives’ strong, Tory-or-nothing base, is limited growth potential. They just aren’t going to swing many committed New Democrats or Liberals. So they have to fish among loosely committed voters, those who are genuinely undecided, and those who won’t follow politics until the last days of the campaign, if at all. The Conservative campaign also absolutely has to bring back some supporters from the last campaign who have drifted away.
For all these groups, Conservatives have to scare people about Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau whom they will say wants pot in the schools, has never run a candy store, flip-flops on issues and just “isn’t ready.” The subtext will be: You might not like Stephen Harper, but you know where he’s coming from and he has experience the other guy lacks.
Witness to which, the Conservatives will insist, are the trade deals the government has negotiated, including this week’s TPP, a nice political issue that has the Liberals making silly arguments about transparency (trade deals are never negotiated in public); and the NDP tying itself not to the wider public interest but to some nervous auto firms and unions, and embracing supply-managed farmers who will be exorbitantly compensated by Canadian taxpayers.
And, the Conservatives will not so subtly suggest, don’t forget the niqab, part of some “foreign” practice favoured by people from countries that breed terrorists, the final “T.”
Too Close To Call
New polls show Liberal on the rise, especially in Ontario
Bryan Breguet
Friday, October 09, 2015
Say what you want, but I seem to be causing shifts. A couple of weeks ago, I wrote that the Bloc was likely to disappear. Just after that, the Bloc was rising again. Then, earlier this week, I did an analysis showing that the Liberals of Justin Trudeau needed to have a significant lead in Ontario in order to really challenge Harper. I was also showing that at this point, this lead wasn't there (something that was confirmed by riding polls) The very same day, we started seeing polls with the Liberal either first or close. In particular, these new polls all show a lead for the Liberals in Ontario. There was Nanos first (+9 pts at some point, although it has slightly decreased to +7 this morning after some fluctuations), Abacus (+7), Forum (+3) and even Ekos now has the Liberals first overall and in Ontario (+7; although the one Ekos added to the poll average is from 2 days ago). There was also a new Leger (+3). And this morning, guess what, we have a new Mainstreet poll. Yes, the same guys who showed the Conservatives almost in majority territory a couple of days ago (by publishing a poll days after having collected the data). And the new poll now shows Conservatives and Liberals neck and neck overall, with the Liberals a full 7 points ahead in Ontario. So either they were wrong back then, or really the Liberals have had a good week (I suspect it's a mix of both).
So, Liberal supporters, you should maybe be worried of what I'm about to write because I could cause it to change: the Liberals are definitely on the rise. They are getting close to really challenging the Conservatives. (note: just in case, I'm joking here, I know I don't cause anything except maybe some anger to some people on Twitter)
The new projections are below. The Liberals are still second. I added the Nanos of this morning, as I do every 3 days. I'll add Ekos later when published as well.
See the details on the permanent page for the federal election.
Why are the Liberals still not higher? Well, first of all, the electoral system being what it is, the nationwide numbers are meaningless. You need to look at provincial ones. And there, you see the Liberals killing it in Atlantic, involved in a potential 4-way race in Quebec where they can't expect that many seats from, on the rise in Ontario where it's starting to pay off, up in Manitoba but still third in Saskatchewan (as confirmed by another Mainstreet poll this morning; Those guys are busy), still too far in Alberta to really expect more than 1-2 seats and finally, and this could become significant next week, potentially challenging for first in BC. But as of right now, I still see them slightly lagging in terms of seats.
Also, remember that I try to account for the systematic underestimation of incumbents by the polls. Therefore, if polls show CPC and LPC tied overall, my projections will give the Tories a small edge. Yes this is partially subjective and yes I'll live and die on it. At the same time, taking polls purely at face value is not necessarily better. Polls allocate undecided weirdly and again, have a strong tendency to underestimate incumbents (as well as the Conservatives in 2008 and especially in 2011). But you can hate me for these small adjustments. You should know however that I slightly changed them. I used to allocate 50% of undecided to the CPC and 25% to the NDP and Liberals each. I now give more to the Liberals and less to the NDP to reflect the fact the NDP is falling and dropping to third. You should also know that even without my adjustments, I'd still predict the Tories to be favourites. Just slightly less.
At the end of the day, if you hate my adjustments, just use the model yourself with your numbers.
The NDP is literally collapsing. In Quebec, it seems this party is now in danger of not finishing first. Although, to be fair, Quebec seems pretty unpredictable with polls showing the NDP ahead, others the Liberals and some even have the Tories. The only good news for Thomas Mulcair is that the Bloc seems to have fallen back below 20%. In Ontario, the NDP is now clearly under its result of 2011 and is polled as low as 14% in the new Mainstreet! There are 10 days left to this campaign and I'm not sure there is anything Mulcair can do to bounce back. At this point, they probably need to focus on Quebec and BC to save some seats. And maybe expect that some of the industrial Ontario will react to the TPP.
I'm not in the business of predicting what will happen in 10 days. But let's just say the last week should be interesting. If the numbers keep being good for the Liberals, I might have final projections that would be, literally, too close to call (finally! After covering so many elections with final predictions so clear - Alberta 2015, Quebec 2014, Ontario 2014).
GAP said:Interesting article in the local news last night.
Elections Canada has, since Monday, had 4 popup advance polls, mainly at Universities. Advance polls don't start here until Today, but they had these to catch the younger crowd.
It might have a good effect on "the hair"
Altair said:Yes, yes the ndp vote just needs to keep withering away. The vote split looks to be aiding the LPC.
Alternately, as the NDP and LPC leadership each seems to better fit the other party, the NDP base is bleeding to the LPC while LPC base is more slowly moving to the CPC; each group trying to find something closer to what they might historically have voted.Rocky Mountains said:As the NDP go down, both the Liberals and Conservatives have gone up. I suspect voters balancing an NDP/Liberal vote as opposite of a Conservative vote is fiction. It appears that the Conservatives may have even attracted more than half the NDP losses. Maybe people aren't as doctrinaire as many believe nor are there as many true Harper Haters as believed. In my opinion, it would take a pretty determined voter to want Trudeau as PM. Perhaps a lot of NDP supporters like a little more brains at the top.
I think that conservative bump is coming from quebec. I don't think the conservatives are going to win too many seats in Quebec even with this bump.Rocky Mountains said:As the NDP go down, both the Liberals and Conservatives have gone up. I suspect voters balancing an NDP/Liberal vote as opposite of a Conservative vote is fiction. It appears that the Conservatives may have even attracted more than half the NDP losses. Maybe people aren't as doctrinaire as many believe nor are there as many true Harper Haters as believed. In my opinion, it would take a pretty determined voter to want Trudeau as PM. Perhaps a lot of NDP supporters like a little more brains at the top.