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Money, Time, Fatigue and Commitments Leading Barriers Preventing Canadians from Going to the Gym
Personal Goal/Life Choice and a Workout Buddy are Primary Motivators
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Despite Criticism on Handling of Syrian Refugee Crisis, Tories Lead on Issue
Voters Say Harper's Tories (38%) Would Make Best Decisions for Canada,
ahead of Mulcair's NDP (32%) or Trudeau's Liberals (30%) -
Harper Falls to Third Place behind Rivals on Previously Key Attribute Advantages
Harper Now Trails Mulcair and Trudeau on both Who is Best to Deal with Canada's Shaky Economy and Who Would Make Best Prime Minister
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As Election Kicks into High Gear, NDP (34%, +1) Remains in Lead with Grits (30%, Unchanged), Tories (29%, Unchanged) Stalking Closely
Battleground Ontario a Tie between the Grits (36%) and Tories (35%), NDP (29%) Close; BC a Three-Way Race among NDP (37%), Liberals (31%) and Tories (28%)
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Majority Supports Liberal-NDP Government, Regardless of Who Leads It
But Only One in Three Supports a Governing Partnership that Includes the Tories in Any Way
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Three in Ten (29%) Canadians Increased Their Debt Load Over the Summer
Two in Ten (22%) Canadians Exceeded their Summer Spending Budget;
Three in Ten (32%) Didn't Set a Summer Spending Budget -
In Presidential Election, Canadians Would Elect Democrats (55%) in Landslide Victory over Republicans (17%) and Independent Candidates (28%)
7 in 10 (69%) Canadians Can't Decide Who They'd Vote for in US Republican Party Nomination Race, But for those who do Donald Trump (38%) Leads Jeb Bush (22%) while other Candidates Barely Register
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Duffy's Revenge: The Fallout of the Trial Harper (31%, -7) Now Last as Best Choice for PM, Mulcair (37%, +6) Stands First with Trudeau (32%, +2) Following
One in Ten (13%) Have Changed Their Vote as a Result of Trial
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Federal Election Gridlock Continues as NDP Holds Steady (33%), Liberals (30%, +2) and Conservatives (29%, -2) Jockey for Second
In Battleground Ontario, Grits (33%), NDP (32%) and Tories (31%)
Locked in Three-Way Tie