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Smoking Bylaw In Calgary April 2001
Calgarians Seek "Middle-ground" in Any New Smoking Bylaw - Banning Smoking in All Public Places is Not a Popular Option (42% Approve), Nor is Unfettered Public Smoking (11% Approve)
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BC Election 2001 Election Outcome
Vast Majority Of British Columbians (77%) Feels The NDP Does Not Deserve To Be Re-Elected
61% See Major Changes To The Direction Of The Province If Liberals Win; Vast Majority Think Changes Will Be Positive (77%)
71% Of BC Public Think It's Unlikely Liberals Will Win All 79 Seats; 75% Think It Would Be A "Bad Thing" If This Were To Happen, And 28% Would Vote Strategically To Prevent It -
FEDERAL POLITICS IN ALBERTA APRIL 2001
Stockwell Day's Approval Hits New Low (33%) in Alliance's Backyard, Running Fourth Among the Four Federal Leaders
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Online Tax Filing Catches On In 2001 With Greater Success Planned Next Year
Canadian Sites such as National Post Online Jump to the Challenge to Reach the 50% of Canadian Internet Users Who Plan to File Online in 2002.
~ Ipsos-Reid Study ~ -
BC Election 2001 Party Leaders
Majority Picks Gordon Campbell (52%) As Best Premier For BC; About Half As Many Choose Dosanjh (28%)
BC Liberals Have Momentum As Campaign Begins (24% Improved); Public Mood Turns Sour On NDP (37% Worse)
BC Public Sees Tax Cuts As Campbell's Main Issue (36%), Health Care For Dosanjh (38%), Environment For The Greens (35%) -
BC Election 2001 Voter Participation And Vote Change
Eight-In-Ten Eligible Voters "Definitely" Intend To Cast A Vote On Election Day; BC Liberal And NDP Supporters Equally Likely To Vote
An Issues Election? - 48% Say Most Important Vote Consideration Is Where Parties Stand On The Issues; 21% Say Leaders And 20% Say Candidates Most Important
Three-In-Ten Decided Voters Are "Likely" To Change Their Vote; Rate Is Double Among Green Party Supporters
Half Of Decided Voters Say They Do Not Have A Second Choice Party -
BC Election 2001 Specific Election Issues
British Columbians Hold Mixed Views On Budget Priorities For A New Government, But 64% Believe Tax Cuts Will Provide Enough Revenue To Pay For Services
62% Of British Columbians Support Referendum To Decide What Should And Should not Go Into Treaties With Aboriginal Peoples
62% Of BC Public Rejects Two-Tier Health Care, With 47% Strongly Against The Idea -
BC Election 2001 Party Preferences
BC Liberals Headed For Election Landslide With Support Of 70% Of Decided Voters; NDP Well Back At 16%, BC Green Party In Double-Digit Support For First Time (10%)
Majority Of Liberal Voters (57%) Say They Are Voting Against The NDP Rather Than For The Liberals (42%)
Liberal Voters More Certain (65%) About Their Choice Than New Democrats (47%); BC Green Vote Is Softest (28% Certain)
BC Voters Most Resistant To NDP; 50% Would Never Vote For The Party, Compared To Only 1-In-10 Who Would Reject The BC Liberals, Unity BC Or Green Party -
BC ELECTION 2001
Health Care (58%) Tops The List Of Issues BC Public Wants To See Debated In The Election Campaign; Education (21%) Taxes (19%), And The Economy (17%) Also Seen As Important
Majority Feels Liberals Would Outperform NDP On Most Major Policy Issues; NDP Trails BC Green Party On The Environment -
Survey Shows Canadians Rate The Value Of Their Telecommunication Services Higher Than Americans
87% of Canadians Rate their Telecommunications Services as "good or very good"
Compared with 79% for Americans, According to Canada/US Consumer Study