Tories, Grits in dead heat
By CHRISTINA SPENCER, NATIONAL BUREAU
It's a tie.
Despite weeks of election brinkmanship over Afghanistan, crime legislation and the imminent federal budget, the Conservatives and Liberals are not wooing voters away from each other.
A new Nanos Research-Sun Media poll shows the two main parties each with 34% of support from committed voters. Both have made slight gains since early February -- at the expense of the New Democrats.
Support for the Bloc Quebecois and the Greens remained stable through the month.
"We have a dead heat," said pollster Nik Nanos. "If an election were precipitated as a result of the budget, it's really anybody's game."
The Liberals remain ahead of the Tories in Atlantic Canada and Ontario. The Tories lead in the West and the two parties are virtually tied for second place in Quebec, where the Bloc dominates voter preferences.
The NDP's loss of support went not to the Greens, but to the big parties, particularly the Conservatives.
LOCKED UP
"You have to remember the Conservative party in its current iteration is a combination of the old Reform Party and the Progressive Conservative party, so there's a bit of the protest vein still there," said Nanos. "When the NDP goes down in western Canada, the Conservatives actually benefit."
Even a month of verbal jousting over Canada's Afghanistan policy didn't move the numbers between Tories and Grits. Instead, voters perceive that the politicians are trying to work it out, Nanos said. "The issue does not really lead to an advantage for either party."
Why voters have not shifted alliances lies in what Nanos called "key vote drivers" -- the reasons people back a certain party in the first place.
The poll found that 19% of Liberal supporters, about one in five, back the party simply out of tradition, in other words, because they always have. No other party enjoys such levels of automatic support.
Among those who like the Conservative party, the key attraction is the party's policies and platform, cited by more than one-quarter of Tory electors as their motivation for voting blue.
LEADERSHIP NOT AN ISSUE
The NDP also garners high marks from supporters for its policies, and is clearly perceived by its backers as the most caring for working people.
More than half of Green supporters back that party as "best for the environment."
In determining what drives voters, the issue of leadership was ranked low by supporters of every party.
"The fact of the matter is that Canadians aren't thrilled about any of the federal leaders at this point," said Nanos. While it's true Conservative leader Stephen Harper usually leads Liberal Stephane Dion in polls on leadership, it's not what attracts voters to his party.
"What's driving the Conservative vote is the policy initiatives Stephen Harper is undertaking," Nanos said. "What's driving the Liberal vote is not Stephane Dion -- it is the tradition of voting Liberal."
The poll of 1,001 Canadians was conducted Feb. 16-20, 2008. It is considered accurate to within plus or minus 3.1%, 19 times out of 20. For more information, see www.nanosresearch.com