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British Columbians - Federal Election Part II
Residents Split On Whether Liberals (45%) Or Conservatives (40%) Will Win And Form Government
Most Acceptable Minority Government Would Be A Liberal-Led, NDP-Supported Coalition -
Canadians' Preferred Minority Government Combination: Liberals Supported By NDP
Canadians Much More Receptive Of Liberal-Led/NDP-Supported Minority Government Than Conservative-Led/Bloc-Supported Minority Government
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Conservatives Extend Lead In British Columbia
Conservatives (38%) Lead NDP (26%) and Liberals (25%)
Seat Projection Model Suggests Conservatives 24-28, Liberals
4-8, NDP 2-6 - If Vote Held Tomorrow -
Liberals And Conservatives Tied In Voter Support, But Tories Have Edge In Seats
Seat Projection Model Suggests Conservatives Could Win Plurality Of Seats (115-119), Liberals (99-103), NDP (22-26), Bloc Quebecois (64-68)
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As The Final Week Begins, Too Close To Call
Seat Projection Model Suggests Conservatives Take 110-114 Seats, Liberals 107-111, NDP 19-23, Bloc Quebecois 64-68 -- If Vote Held Tomorrow
Conservatives Stumble As Liberals Slip Back Into Lead In Decided Vote
Liberals (34%, Up 5 Points), Conservatives (28%, Down 4 Points), NDP (16%, Unchanged), Green (6%, Down 1 Point) - Bloc Quebecois (53% In Quebec Vs. 23% Liberal) -
Albertans Are Concerned About Public Education
70% Of Albertans Say That The Alberta Government Is Currently Spending "Not Enough" On Public Education
Nine-In-Ten (90%) Albertans Agree That "class size makes a big difference in the quality of education delivered at public schools"
Three-Quarters (76%) Of Albertans Agree That "The Government should fund public education to ensure that all kindergarten to Grade 3 classes in Alberta have fewer than 17 students per teacher"