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Ontarians And Access To Post Secondary Education
Two-Thirds (64%) of Ontarians, Including A Majority of Decided PC Voters (53%), Want Increased Provincial Funding For Universities and Colleges Even if it May Mean Canceling Tax Cuts or Reduced Spending in Other Areas
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Dramatic rise in workplace stress and related illness among Canadian health benefit plan members
The Aventis Healthcare Survey
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BC Election 2001 Voter Retention And Motivation
NDP Core Moving To BC Liberals; 43% Of 1996 NDP Voters Now In Liberal Camp Vs. 37% Who Are Staying With The NDP
BC Liberal Support Driven By Criticism Of NDP Record
A Failure To Show Honesty And Integrity Main Factor That Would Move BC Liberal Voters To Another Party -
Smoking Bylaw In Calgary April 2001
Calgarians Seek "Middle-ground" in Any New Smoking Bylaw - Banning Smoking in All Public Places is Not a Popular Option (42% Approve), Nor is Unfettered Public Smoking (11% Approve)
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BC Election 2001 Party Leaders
Majority Picks Gordon Campbell (52%) As Best Premier For BC; About Half As Many Choose Dosanjh (28%)
BC Liberals Have Momentum As Campaign Begins (24% Improved); Public Mood Turns Sour On NDP (37% Worse)
BC Public Sees Tax Cuts As Campbell's Main Issue (36%), Health Care For Dosanjh (38%), Environment For The Greens (35%) -
BC Election 2001 Specific Election Issues
British Columbians Hold Mixed Views On Budget Priorities For A New Government, But 64% Believe Tax Cuts Will Provide Enough Revenue To Pay For Services
62% Of British Columbians Support Referendum To Decide What Should And Should not Go Into Treaties With Aboriginal Peoples
62% Of BC Public Rejects Two-Tier Health Care, With 47% Strongly Against The Idea -
BC ELECTION 2001
Health Care (58%) Tops The List Of Issues BC Public Wants To See Debated In The Election Campaign; Education (21%) Taxes (19%), And The Economy (17%) Also Seen As Important
Majority Feels Liberals Would Outperform NDP On Most Major Policy Issues; NDP Trails BC Green Party On The Environment -
Canadians Remain Confident in Economy Soft Landing
Two-Thirds (65%) of Canadians Expect Slowdown but Continued Growth - Only One in Five (19%) Expect a Recession, Quйbec Most Negative (25%)