Search
-
Three Quarters (75%) Believe U.S. Unjustified In Deporting Maher Arar
Half (52%) Believe Security Forces Targeting Arabs
Majority (62%) Believe Terrorists Operating in Canada, But Almost Three Quarters (72%)Confident No Terrorist Attack In Canada In Next Two Years -
Canadians Moderately Hopeful About Future With Martin Government
But, Do Not See Big Change From Past Liberal Governments
-
Canadians Are Divided On Big Federal Issues
Slim Majority Want to See Gun Registry Scrapped
Canadians Are Split About Same Sex Marriage
Martin's Healthcare Plans Receive Tepid Endorsement -
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 -
Canada's CEOs Modestly Optimistic With National Economic Expectations For 2004
While More Think Economy Will Grow Strongly Since Last Year (23%, +5 Points), Majority (73%) Say Economy Will Have Slower Growth
But, CEOs Confident (86%) There Will Not Be Major Economic Downturn In Next Two Years -
Canadian Online Gift Purchasing Flat During 2003 Holiday Season
Canadians Spend $972 Million Online Purchasing Gifts, Virtually Unchanged From 2002
-
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%) -
The Internet Is Changing The Way Canadians Socialize
Nearly Seven-In-Ten Online Canadians Use The Internet For Social Activities
-
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 -
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