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Majority (90%) Say Former PM Chrйtien Should Come Clean and Testify on Sponsorship Program
Chrйtien (29%), Martin (22%), Share Blame With Gagliano (16%) and Public Servants (7%) for Scandal
Two Thirds (65%) Want Election to Wait as Grits Continue Tailspin in Wake of Scandal - Liberals Fall to 35%, Conservatives up to 27%, NDP at 17%, Bloc at 11% as Liberals Enter Minority Territory -
Scandal Rocks Grits Support
LIBERAL VOTE PLUMMETS TO 39% (DOWN 9 POINTS FROM 48%), WHILE TORIES GAIN (24%, UP FIVE POINTS FROM 19%); NDP (18%, UP TWO POINTS FROM 16%), BLOC (10%, UNCHANGED),
AND GREEN (5%, UP 1 POINT FROM 4%) -
Out Of The Gate: Impressions Of The New Conservative Party Leadership Race: A Race of Unknowns
New Conservative Party Stalled at 19% - But Liberals Maintain Commanding Lead With 48%, NDP 16%, Bloc 10%, Green 4%
Canadians Split on Whether Martin Should Call
an Election This Spring -
Majority (71%) Of Canadians Think Canada Did "Right Thing" By Not Supporting U.S. In War Against Saddam Hussein
Half (48%) Still Oppose The War, Half (47%) Think U.S. "Made A Mistake"
Canadians Split On Forum For Saddam Hussein Fair Trial But Prefer International Option (58%) -
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 -
NDP Closing The Gap In British Columbia
NDP (37%, up 6 points) Steal Support From BC Liberals (41%, down 4 points) and Green Party (14%, down 3 points)
Two-Thirds (64%) Have No Impression Of New NDP Leader Carole James; 23% Positive - 10% Negative
Gordon Campbell Matches His Lowest Approval Rating As Premier (37%, down 2 points) -
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 -
58% Say New Ontario McGuinty Government Justified In Breaking Promises: Bring Down Deficit First
Ontarians (65%)Believe Size Of Deficit Is Real
Half (49%) Approve Of New Government Performance - Liberals Lead (51%) PC's (27%), NDP (16%), Green (6%) As Honeymoon Continues -
Post Convention Poll Has Grits at 43% (down from pre-convention 46%) as NDP Gains (15%) - Tories (14%), Alliance (10%), Bloc (9%), Green (5%) Trail
Little Changes On Top-Line Vote Support Over Pre-Convention Sounding, But Regions Tell A Different Story.
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Six in Ten (60%) Say Prime Minister Chrйtien Should Leave Now (47%) or By Christmas (13%) - Just Four in Ten (38%) Say He Should Stay On Till February
Electorate Give Paul Martin Time to Bide: Only 30% Say Call Election Immediately - 68% Say Later: Within a Year (41%) or Until 2005 (27%)
On Eight Issue Fronts, Canadians Express Modest Expectations of the New Prime Minister When Compared to Chrйtien Era- But Improved US Relations Top List