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35% Of Canadians More Suspicious Of People Who Are Of Arab Descent Or Muslims From The Middle East In 9/11 Attacks Aftermath
Poll Compared to Exact Question of September 21, 2001 Poll Shows Increase --Up From 27% Then
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Just Under Half (44%) of Canadians Say They Would Consider Voting For A United CA / PC Party
United Party Would Retain Support from Most Current CA (87%) and PC (78%) Supporters and Could Attract One-Quarter of Current Liberal (27%) and NDP (26%) Supporters
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Ontario Liberals (44%) and Tories (42%) Move Into Virtual Tie Range as Approval Ratings for Leaders Eves and McGuinty Push Ahead While NDP (13%), Hampton Falter
Voters say Eves' Tories have Ontario on the Right Track (59%) Up from 54% in February, 2002
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Four in Five (78%) Canadians Would Vote for Convention To Replace Prime Minister If Given Opportunity
Three-Quarters (73%) Believe Important Government Business Has Taken Second Place to Internal Liberal Dispute
A Majority (55%) Blame Prime Minister for Division in Liberal Party - 23% Blame Paul Martin
Two-Thirds (64%) Say Prime Minister Clinging On for Power's Sake Alone
Liberals (41%) Drop 5 Points Since Mid July But Still Retain Lead -
Eight in Ten Canadians View Pope as Sincere (86%), Honest (84%), Forgiving (82%), and Humble (81%), As well As Conservative (83%)
Almost as Many Describe John Paul II as a Peacemaker (79%) and a Force for Good in the World (79%)
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Eves' Post-Budget Ontario Tories Up Smartly (40%) Into Virtual Tie As McGuinty's Liberals Fall (42%) And Hampton's NDP (17%) Climb
However, A Majority (55%) Say It Is Time for a Change, While 41% Say Conservatives Deserve To Be Re-Elected
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What's on the Minds of British Columbians
Eight-in-Ten (78%) British Columbians Satisfied With Direction of Their Life
Seven-in-Ten (72%) Feeling Hopeful About Their Future
Health and Balancing Work/Personal Life Most on Minds of British Columbians; Sex Life Last on List - Just Behind Road Network -
BC Federal Political Scene June 2002
Canadian Alliance Support In BC Jumps 7 Points To 31%, Closing Gap On Federal Liberals (35%)
Chrйtien's Approval Rating Falls 9 Points To 43%, Well Back Of New Alliance Leader Stephen Harper (53%)