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BC Public Provides Backup To Police On Issue Of Police Brutality
Public Overwhelmingly (89%) Thinks Their Local Police Do A Good Job At Performing Duties In Professional And Respectful Manner
Two-in-Ten (22%) Say Incidents Of Police Brutality Are Common
One-in-Ten (13%) Are Personally Worried About Being A Victim Of Police Brutality -
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 -
Jack Webster Awards 2003: BC's Newsmaker Of The Year
Public Selects Robert Pickton (37%) As BC's Newsmaker Of The Year; Premier Gordon Campbell Is A Close Second (28%)
Public Thinks Media Important To Society (95%) And Themselves Personally (83%) -
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 -
Liberal Juggernaut Appears Headed Towards Majority Government . . . With Liberals (48%) Leading Conservatives (31%) and NDP (15%) in Decided Voter Support in Post-Debate Poll
Majority (52%) of Liberal Supporters Give Party Mandate On Platform . . . Not Just Throwing Tories Out (36%)
If Finances Worse Than Expected, Six in Ten (59%) Say Liberals Should Make Their Platform Promises Work Within Current Provincial Revenue, not Through Increased Taxes (18%) or Increased Deficit (11%) -
Heading Into Leaders Debate, Ontario Liberals (50%, +1 Point) Continue To Hold Decisive Lead Over Conservatives (33%, -2 Points) . . .
While NDP (12%, Unchanged) and Green Party (4%, +2 Points) Continue to Trail
Eves (34%) and McGuinty (31%) Close As to Who Is Expected to Win Debate
However, Six in Ten (60%) Continue to Desire Change in Government As Liberals Appear Poised to Form Majority Government Barring Significant Gaffe Between Now and Election Day -
At Mid-Point in Campaign Ontario Liberals (49%) Hold Commanding Lead Over Governing Conservatives (35%)
NDP (12%) and Green Party (2%) Continue to Trail
Six in Ten (61%) Say It Is Time for a Change in Government
Eves (36%) Leads McGuinty (31%) for `Best Premier' -
Toronto - For Better or Worse?
One-Third (34%) of Torontonians Say They Wouldn't Live Anywhere Else Other Than Toronto - Up 12 Points Since 1992
But 60% Say While Generally Content, There Are Definitely Things They Don't Like About the City
Four in Ten (41%) Torontonians Say City Worse Place to Live Today than Five Years Ago as Satisfaction in Services Declines Significantly Over Past Decade -
Two-Thirds (66%) of Canadians Believe Blackout Result of Technical, Not Supply Problems - 61% in Ontario Agree
Seven in Ten (71%) Confident Electricity Companies Will Be Able to Sustain Demand Over the Next Number of Years, However Just 58% of Ontarians Concur
One in Three (34%) Willing to Pay More for Hydro In Order to Invest in a More Fail-Safe System - 42% in Ontario
Premier Eves (71% - 73% in Ontario) Leads List as Doing a `Good Job' During Blackout