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Canadians Offer Their Thoughts On The Election As It Heads Into Its Last Week
Most (65%, +37 Points) Expect Conservative Victory
But Half (50%) Doubt Conservatives' Ability To Field Effective Cabinet Ministers And 56% Feel Stephen Harper Is Too Extreme To Be P.M. -
The Federal Election At Ten Days To Go
Ad Furor Wake Does Little To Shift Overall National Vote But Atlantic Canadians Now Tilt Tory
Harper Now Ties With Martin As Choice For "Best PM" -
The Fight For Edmonton Centre
Deputy PM Anne McLellan (35%) Trailing Conservative Opponent Laurie Hawn (42%) But Race is Too Close to Call
60% Approve of McLellan's Performance as Their MP and 54% Say She Deserves to be Re-Elected
But Only (25%) Say Their Decision of Who to Vote For is Based on the Candidate - 55% Say Their Vote is Based on Party's Stand on Issues -
In The Lead-Up To The Second Leaders Debate, Tories On The March
Tories (35%, +2 Points), Grits (31%, -1 Point), NDP (18%, Unchanged), Green (5%, Unchanged); Bloc At 45% In Quebec (-7 Points) Versus Grits (23%, -3 Points) And Surging Tories (19%, +7 Points); Seat Projection Model Suggests Tory Minority: Conservatives 129-133 Seats, Liberals 87-91, NDP 27-31, Bloc 56-60
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Election 2006 - Crime And Violence Issues
Conservatives (36%)Lead Liberals (24%) and NDP (19%) When it Comes to Dealing with Gangs and Gun Violence
In Toronto, 28% Give Paul Martin a Failing Grade for Providing Leadership and Solutions on Fighting Gun Crime -
Ministry of Finance Investigation
Majority (58%) Say Ralph Goodale Should Resign as Finance Minister Until RCMP Investigation is Complete - 42% Say It Is Okay For Him to Stay On
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With Three Weeks To Election Day The Tight Race Tilts Tory (33%, +1 Point) Over Liberals (32%, -1 Point)
NDP (18%, +2 Points), Green Party (5%, Unchanged) - In Quebec Bloc Quebecois (52%, -2 Points) Dominates
Momentum For Tories Nationally (+8 Points) And Vote Intentions In Ontario (38% vs. 36% Liberals) Gives Tories Edge Heading Into 2006