Tory momentum slows in swing ridings since election call
CAMPBELL CLARK
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
September 9, 2008 at 9:14 PM EDT
OTTAWA — The wave of rising support that the Conservatives rode into the election campaign appears to have ebbed in the country's crucial battleground ridings since the writ was dropped, a new poll indicates.
The Conservatives have still gained ground since the last election in 45 ridings where the races were close, but their opponents have rebounded a little since the campaign for the Oct. 14 election officially opened on the weekend.
The Strategic Counsel poll for The Globe and Mail and CTV News tracks the 45 ridings in British Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec that saw tight races in 2006 or in recent by-elections.
Of the 45 ridings, 20 are in Ontario, 15 in Quebec and 10 in B.C. And they are a mix of 17 ridings won by the Liberals, 16 that went Conservative, eight won by the Bloc and four where the NDP prevailed. Surveys are conducted daily, with three-day running tallies comprising a poll of 1,325 Canadians.
Their status as swing ridings makes them key battlegrounds where the national election can be won or lost, or a minority government converted to a majority.
The first three-day rolling poll, conducted Sept. 4 to 6, indicated the Conservatives might be a developing juggernaut in swing ridings after Mr. Harper made a series of pre-election announcements and launched a barrage of TV ads. But the latest, conducted Sept 6 to 8, suggested the momentum has slowed.
In B.C, the New Democrats have shaved off some of the Conservative gains, and in Quebec, the Bloc has bounced back. And in Ontario, there are modest indications the Liberals have stanched the bleeding of support to the Greens.
“There's a bit of a coming home here,” said the Strategic Counsel's Peter Donolo.
In the 10 B.C. battleground ridings, the NDP gained seven percentage points, jumping to 24 per cent from 17.
It was the Conservatives who saw their big lead there slip a little, dropping four percentage points, to 41 per cent. The Liberals also dipped two points, to 23 per cent.
In the 15 Quebec ridings that had close races, the Bloc is now leading the Tories, not trailing. The Bloc jumped five percentage points, to 32 per cent, at the expense of both the Conservatives, now at 30, and the Liberals, at 21.
That's still a huge gain for the Conservatives since the past election, however, when they trailed the Bloc by 14 percentage points. Just as encouraging for Quebec Tories: they are tied with the Bloc for support among francophone voters.
In the 20 Ontario battlegrounds, the Conservatives remain stable at 41 per cent, four percentage points higher than in the past election. But the Greens have slipped five points since the campaign opened, losing to the Liberals (up two percentage points) and the NDP (up three).
Voters in battleground ridings, at least, appear engaged in the campaign, with large proportions saying they believe their vote can make a difference and that there are substantial differences between the two principal contenders for power, the Conservatives and Liberals.
Even among NDP and Green supporters, 6 in 10 see big differences between the two major contenders, perhaps an indicator that some might switch to a bigger party on voting day.
The poll also indicates that the Conservatives' strength in battleground ridings is fuelled by a commanding lead among male voters, those with higher incomes, and voters over 50.
The Liberals, who typically need a lead among female voters to win, are trailing the Tories among women in the B.C. and Quebec battlegrounds, and are essentially tied among women in the Ontario battleground.
“It used to be almost mirror image, where the men would disproportionately go for Conservatives. Now [the Conservatives] have still got their advantage with men and they've evened the score with women,” Mr. Donolo said.