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Seven in Ten (71%) Say United States Not Justified In Refusing Contracts to Canada
In Post Saddam Capture, Most (55%) Feel Canada Should Not Change Its Level of Support For U.S. In Iraq
Canadians Split on Whether the United States is Heading in "Right Direction"
But, Most (60%) Believe Canada-U.S. Relations Will Improve Under Martin Government -
New Conservative Party Starts At 21%--Highest Level Of Support For Opposition Party, With Exception Of 2000 Election, Since 1993
But Liberals Sill Have Commanding Lead With 48%, NDP At 14%, Bloc 9%, Green 4%...As 62% Say New Party Unlikely To Defeat Martin's Liberals
Half Of Canadians (52%) Expect New PM To Shake Things Up In Ottawa--Most Say It's For The Good -
Vancouver Mayor And Council - One Year Review
Mayor Larry Campbell (68%) Outpaces Vancouver City Council (58%) But Both Enjoy Majority Job Approval
Safe Injection Site/Four Pillar Approach is their Biggest Achievement - Biggest Letdown is Dealing with Squatters/Homelessness/ Panhandlers - Olympics Cuts Both Ways
Majority Thinks Campbell and Council Too Soft on Panhandlers (55%), Property Crime (52%) and Squatters (51%)
Overall, Vancouverites Split on Whether City is Now in Better (25%), Worse (26%) or Same (48%) Shape -
Toronto Megacity Vote Turns into Two Man Race With Miller in Lead for Mayor's Chair
Miller (37%) Holds Lead Among Decided Voters with Tory (31%) in Second Spot
Meanwhile, Hall's (19%) Support Tumbles, Nunziata's (6%) Collapses and Jakobek (2%) Out of the Race -
Support for New Conservative Party Drops With Official Announcement of Merger
Four in Ten (39%) Canadians Likely to Vote for New Conservative Party, a Decline from 46% in Early October
Seven in Ten (68%) Say New Party Will Face Same Problems of Alliance in Breaking Through in Ontario and Quebec
If Former Ontario Premier Mike Harris Was Leader, One in Three (32%) Nationally Say They Would Seriously Consider Voting for New Party - 29% in Ontario -
Jack Webster Awards 2003: BC's & Canada's Top News Stories Of The Year
British Columbians Select Forest Fires (43%) as BC's Top News Story Of Yhe Year
SARS (29%) Top Choice for Canadian News Story of the Year -
Consumer Economic Confidence Remains High
Home Purchase Intentions (14% Likely to Buy) and Near Record Low Job Anxiety (18%) Drive Economic Outlook
One-Year Outlook on Canadian Economy Highest Since April 2003, Matches Robust Numbers in July 2000
Ipsos-Reid Canadian Economic Confidence Index Up 0.74 Points Since August to 113.07 -
Uniting the Right...?
While Almost Half (46%) of Canadians say it's Likely they'd Vote for a Merged Progressive Conservative/Canadian Alliance Party in the Next Federal Election...
In a Head to Head Vote, Federal Liberals Led by Paul Martin (51%) would Trump a New United Conservative Party (32%)...
As Federal Liberals Continue to Lead Today with 47% of the National Decided Vote -
Parents (86%) Viewed by Ontarians as Most Important Factor in Development of Proper Social Values in Children
Half (52%) Believe Parental Encouragement and Involvement Contributes Most to Educational Success, Teachers (28%) Place Second
52% Believe All Schools Would Improve if Parents Could Freely Choose the School for Their Child -
While Seven in Ten (71%) Canadians Agree Parliament, Not Courts, Should Make Laws in Canada. . .
Eight in Ten (78%) Agree That Courts Are Within Their Right to Issue Legally Binding Decisions That Are Based on Constitutional Grounds
But Slight Majority (54%) Feel That Judges in Canada Have Too Much Power