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Ontario Politics A Week Before the Ontario Progressive Conservative Leadership Convention
Ontario PCs Have Slim Lead (35%) Over Liberals (32%), NDP (24%) And Green (8%)
Disapproval Of Premier McGuinty's Performance Climbs From 46% In April To 61% -- Only 29% Approve Of Premier's Performance
Half (52%) Say Liberals Have Ontario "Wrong Track", 42% Say "Right Track" -
Ipsos-Reid/ Canadian Nuclear Association Survey
One Year After the 2003 Blackout, A Minority of Ontarians (43%) Feel Secure About the Future of Canada's Electricity Supply
Most Ontarians (61%) and Canadians Nationwide (56%) believe that Canada's Electricity Supply Should Include a Mix of Many Sources--Including Nuclear Energy -
Albertans Split On Healthcare Reforms
43% Of Albertans Favour Klein's Approach To Reforming Canada's Healthcare System, While 39% Prefer Martin's - But Many "Don't Know" Which Approach Is Better (18%)
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Canadians Support Democrat John Kerry For Next U.S. President
Majority Of Canadians (60%)Would Vote For John Kerry As Next President of The United States Versus George W. Bush (22%)
Strong Majority (73%) of Canadians Agree They Like And Admire Americans, But Only 29% Say They Like And Respect Current Bush Administration
Canadians Expect Kerry Would Do Better Than Bush In Being A Friend to Canada (56%) And Dealing With Prime Minister Paul Martin And His Government (54%) -
For The Record: 2004 Federal Election Polling Post Mortem
How 3.78% of All Votes Cast On Election Night Handed The Liberals A Minority Government and The Conservatives A Back Seat
Evidence Indicates That Last Hour Vote Shifting In Ontario and Quebec Had Greatest Impact on Outcome
Election Polling and Seat Projection Methodologies and Apparatus Sound--Voters Shifted Intentions After Polling Results Released -
Dead Heat In British Columbia
NDP (38%, Down 6 Points) Lose Support To Greens (18%, Up 7 Points) Creating Tie With BC Liberals (37%, Unchanged)
NDP Leader Carole James (54%) Continues To Lead Premier Gordon Campbell (35%) In Job Approval
Three-in-Ten (30%) Think Province In Better Shape Than When Liberals First Elected; Four-in-Ten (42%) Say Worse Shape -
British Columbians - Federal Election Part II
Residents Split On Whether Liberals (45%) Or Conservatives (40%) Will Win And Form Government
Most Acceptable Minority Government Would Be A Liberal-Led, NDP-Supported Coalition -
Conservatives Extend Lead In British Columbia
Conservatives (38%) Lead NDP (26%) and Liberals (25%)
Seat Projection Model Suggests Conservatives 24-28, Liberals
4-8, NDP 2-6 - If Vote Held Tomorrow -
Liberals And Conservatives Tied In Voter Support, But Tories Have Edge In Seats
Seat Projection Model Suggests Conservatives Could Win Plurality Of Seats (115-119), Liberals (99-103), NDP (22-26), Bloc Quebecois (64-68)