Ottawa Citizen

HAS PM’S POPULARITY TAKEN HIT? NP3

WE ETHICS PROBE

- LEE BERTHIAUME

Nearly half of Canadians would support an election being called if the federal watchdog finds Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to have violated the Conflict of Interest Act again over the WE charity affair, a new poll suggests.

The survey by Leger and the Associatio­n for Canadian Studies also suggests the WE controvers­y has taken a bite out of Trudeau’s popularity, as well as that of the federal Liberal party, putting the Conservati­ves within striking distance of victory.

“To me these are numbers that will certainly worry or concern the Liberals at this moment because even though it’s in the summer, this is raising a lot of eyebrows,” said Leger executive vice-president Christian Bourque.

The online poll of 1,531 adult Canadians took place July 31 to Aug. 2, in the days following Trudeau’s appearance before a parliament­ary committee to answer questions about the deal with WE. It cannot be assigned a margin of error because internet-based polls are not considered truly random.

The survey results come as federal ethics commission­er Mario Dion is investigat­ing both Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau over whether they broke conflict-of-interest rules in relation to the government’s decision to give the WE organizati­on a sole-sourced contract to run a $912-million student-volunteer program.

Trudeau was previously found to have broken the Conflict of Interest Act for accepting two paid family vacations from the Aga Khan and for improperly pressuring Jody Wilson-Raybould, who was then attorney general, to halt the criminal prosecutio­n of Montreal engineerin­g giant SNC-Lavalin.

The prime minister has apologized for not recusing himself from the WE decision, given the connection­s that he and his family have to the Toronto-based developmen­t organizati­on, but denied any wrongdoing. WE backed out of the deal in early July.

Forty-nine per cent of survey respondent­s said that if Trudeau is found to have broken the ethics law a third time, there should be an election to decide if he is fit to continue serving as prime minister. Thirty-five per cent disagreed and 16 per cent said they did not know. Conservati­ve supporters, unsurprisi­ngly, were most in favour at 78 per cent.

Perhaps most troubling for the prime minister and his Liberals is that support for the party among decided voters has slipped by six percentage points in the last two weeks, with the Conservati­ves, who have not yet elected their new leader, reaping the most recent benefits.

The poll shows 33 per cent of decided voters supporting the Liberals versus 31 per cent for the Conservati­ves and 20 per cent for the NDP. The Bloc followed with eight per cent and the Greens at six.

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