Boomers driving stronger preference for Canadian products and investments.
Ipsos launches Synthesio GEO a breakthrough product offering centered around brand intelligence that enables leaders to uncover how LLMs portray their brands and categories, benchmark against competitors, and take action to shape their presence in the era of generative AI.
Six-in-Ten (60%) Support Newfoundland and Labrador's Deal Allowing it to Keep its Equalization Payments Despite Increasing Oil and Gas Revenues But Eight-in-Ten (80%) Say Agreement Should be Available to All Provinces Most (75%) Ontarians, But Few (21%) Outside Ontario Say the Province Bears Unfair Burden in the Equalization System
Slim Majority (55%) Says Alberta Should Share its Extra Revenue from Oil While 45% Say Alberta Should Keep It But Most (68%) Do Not Think Alberta's Oil Wealth Poses a Threat to Canada's Federal System
English Speaking Voters December 16, 2005
Vote: Conservatives (33%), Liberals (32%), NDP (25%) Best PM: Martin (36%), Harper (31%), Layton (21%) Top Issues: Health (30%), Corruption (13%), Taxes (7%)
Debates Come Against Backdrop Of 40% Of Canadians Saying They Still Haven't Made Up Their Mind On Who To Vote For; Most Canadians (55%) Express A Lack Of Interest In On-Going Election; One-third (34%) Say They Feel "More Cynical And Discouraged About Voting" Than In Elections Past
NDP (17%, +1 Point) And Green Party (5%, Unchanged) Trail Front-runners - In Quebec, Bloc Quebecois Dominates (56% vs. 25% For Liberals) Grits Open Up Big Lead In Ontario (19 Points) Over Tories As Canadians Offer Tepid Reviews Of Tory Ads
Men And Women Talk Turkey
Seat Rich Ontario Yields 7 Point Lead For Martin's Liberals (41% Vs. 34% For Conservatives) NDP (16%, -1 Point) And Green (5%, Unchanged) Trail While Bloc Continues Dominance In Quebec (55% vs. 26% Liberals