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Canadians Choose Obama's Inauguration (31%), H1N1 Flu (26%), Economic Recession (22%) as Biggest News Stories of 2009
Quebec only Region that Places H1N1 pandemic (33%) ahead of Obama's Inauguration (27%)
Those With Kids (46%) in the Household Twice as Likely as Those Without (22%) to Say H1N1 was the Top Story -
Canadians Choose Obama, Jackson, Woods as Biggest Newsmakers of 2009
Three Quarters (72%) Agree that President Obama has
Lived Up to their Expectations -
Majority (65%) Says they were at Least Somewhat Affected by the Recession, But Three Quarters (73%) `Optimistic' That 2010 Will Be a Good Year for Creating Jobs and Getting People Back to Work
Two in Three (67%) Agree Their Personal Outlook for
2010 is Bright -
In Wake of Tiger Woods Revelations and Fallout, Canadians Split on Whether Celebrities are Entitled to Privacy
Gender Divide Shows Men (59%) and Women (45%)
Don't Agree on the Issue -
At Year End, Majority (55%) Disagrees That Canada's Minority Government is Working Well
Only Three in Ten (28%) Believe Politicians in Ottawa Got a Lot Done This Year, But Majority `Disagrees' (62%) that a New Set of Political Leaders to Parliament would Make Things Better
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British Columbians Not Impressed with What's in Their Provincial Cabinet
24 of 25 Cabinet Members Have More Negative than Positive Ratings
Solicitor General Kash Heed the Only Exception (17% Positive, 15%Negative)
Public -
Most Think They Can't Vacation for Less than $100 Per Person, Per Day
Despite Economy, Most Canadians Plan to Spend As Much (54%) or More (19%) on Their Next Holidays than the Last
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Changing Conditions, Changing Traditions: Six in Ten (58%) Canadians say that Changes in the Economy Have Caused them to Re-evaluate This Year's Christmas Spending or Traditions
One in three (31%) strongly agree they'd prefer to receive a meaningful gift that would help someone else rather than receiving another traditional gift - especially among older Canadians (43%)