Montreal Gazette

Battle for second place tightens as CAQ heads for majority

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Despite a continuing erosion of its lead in popularity, François Legault's Coalition Avenir Québec remains headed for a majority government in the Oct. 3 Quebec election while the fight for second place — and the role of official opposition — becomes even more intense, a new poll suggests.

The Léger Marketing survey, conducted for the Québecor media conglomera­te in the wake of last Thursday's leaders debate televised on Radio-canada, shows the CAQ polling 37 per cent — a drop of five percentage points since the campaign was launched at the end of last month but neverthele­ss enough to place the party in majority territory. In the 2018 election, the CAQ, garnered 37.4 per cent of the vote and won 74 of the 125 seats in the National Assembly.

Québec solidaire holds a distant second place at 17 per cent, followed by the Quebec Liberals with 16 per cent and the Quebec Conservati­ve Party and the Parti Québécois tied for the fourth spot with 15 per cent.

While the survey found that 27 per cent of respondent­s felt that Gabriel Nadeau-dubois of Québec solidaire would be the best choice to be leader of the official opposition, 25 per cent felt that job should go to PQ Leader Paul St-pierre Plamondon, 15 per cent supported Liberal Leader Dominque Anglade and 13 per cent favoured Conservati­ve Leader Éric Duhaime.

The fact St-pierre Plamondon placed second on the opposition leader question even though his party has languished in last place since the start of the election campaign is an indicator of how well the PQ campaign has been managed. It is also a reflection of an increasing­ly positive perception of St-pierre Plamondon by the electorate.

The PQ'S popularity has increased by six percentage points since the start of the campaign.

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