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Arctic Tour and Economic Rebound Put Tories in Driver's Seat
Conservatives (39%) Jump to 11-Point Lead Over Liberals (28%), followed by NDP (14%), Green (10%) and Bloc (8%)
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McGuinty Liberals Stay the Course Amidst Summer Blues
Ontario Liberals (45%) Continue to Lead Tories (31%),
NDP (12%) and Green Party (11%) -
Support for Mission in Afghanistan Holds Steady (48%) But Come 2011 Majority (52%) Says It's Time for Canada to Pull Out
Over 8 In 10 (82%, Up From 77% in 2007) Proud Of Men and Women Who Serve In Canada's Armed Forces
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Torontonians Deliver Report Card to City Hall
Majority (77%) Gives `Good' Marks For City Overall, But One Half (50%) Give Bad Marks for Level of Taxes for Services
Highest `Good' Marks
Go To Job Police Chief Is Doing (88%) -
Toronto Residents Signal Miller Time is Over: Mayor David Miller's Approval Rating Plummets From 69% in 2005 to 43% Today as Majority (57%) Says City on Wrong Track
In `Head to Head' Vote Challenge, Both John Tory and George Smitherman Beat Incumbent Mayor by 7 Points Each
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Majority (53%) Say Harper Conservatives Doing `Good Job' and Should Continue Governing as Only 39% Believe Ignatieff Liberals Would Do `Better Job'
But Tory Kudos Don't Translate as Liberals (35%) and Tories (34%) Continue in Tight See-Saw Horserace
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Despite Election Rhetoric, Seven in Ten (68%) Canadians Say There's `No Need for an Election', Majority (51%) Says Country Heading in `Right Direction', Minority (41%) `Wrong'
Volatile Party Standings Don't Give Either Major Party Edge
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As PC Leadership Hopefuls Continue Campaigning, McGuinty Liberals (45%) Still Lead Progressive Conservatives (32%) By Wide Margin
But Among Identified Provincial PC Voters,
Elliott (35%) Leads Hudak (24%), Hillier (22%) and Klees (20%) in Preference for Leadership -
Canadians Rebound from Economic Recession Funk: Highest Level of Economic Confidence Outlook Seen in 18 Years of Polling
All Consumer Confidence Cylinders Firing; Job Anxiety Declines
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Tories (35%) Take Slim Lead as Liberal (33%) Support Begins to Level Off
Seven-Point Grit Drop in Ontario Likely Driven by Improving Economic News, Conservative Attack Ads