Saskatoon StarPhoenix

POLL SHOWS MAJORITY REJECTS OAS CHANGE

Findings show plans unpopular

- MARK KENNEDY

OTTAWA — Three-quarters of Canadians oppose raising the age of eligibilit­y — to 67 from 65 — for the old age security (OAS) benefit, a new poll has found.

The national survey by Ipsos Reid, conducted this week for Postmedia News and Global TV, suggests Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s government could have a tough public-relations battle on its hands as it moves forward with plans to reform the country’s public pension plan.

John Wright, senior vice-president of Ipsos Reid, said in an interview the potential policy shift — making seniors wait two years longer for pension benefits — is clearly unpopular when considered “in black and white.”

“This dog won’t hunt,” said Wright.

However, he cautioned that public opinion could shift once the government’s plans are actually announced and if Harper successful­ly explains the financial necessity for scaling back rising pension scheme costs.

Still, he said the political ramificati­ons less than a year into the majority Conservati­ve government’s four-year mandate are clear.

“I think Harper’s going to weather a storm, because it comes at a time when the Liberals and NDP are rejuvenati­ng and this is something which they can grab on to,” said Wright. “This is red meat for the opposition parties. It gives them the first chance to nail the government on something which is widely recognized as sacrosanct. They are going to take this flag and run it up the tallest poll and will muster every source for demonstrat­ions on the Hill.”

“THIS IS RED MEAT FOR THE OPPOSITION PARTIES.” JOHN WRIGHT, IPSOS REID

Among the findings of the poll:

• 74 per cent of Canadians oppose increasing 67 from 65; the OAS age eligibilit­y to

• Women (81 per cent) are more likely to be opposed, compared with men (66 per cent);

• Canadians aged 35 to 54 (81 per cent) are also most likely to be in opposition, followed by Canadians aged 55 and over (73 per cent) and 18 to 34 (64 per cent);

• Opposition is strongest in Atlan

tic Canada (86 per cent), followed by those living in Saskatchew­an and Manitoba (76 per cent), Ontario (75 per cent), Quebec (75 per cent), British Columbia (71 per cent) and Alberta (58 per cent).

For the Jan. 30-Feb. 1 survey, a sample of 1,002 adults from Ipsos Reid’s online panel was interviewe­d. The margin of error is 3.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

The new findings came as debate raged in the House of Commons Thursday over the issue, which emerged as a political bombshell a week ago when Harper used a speech in Davos, Switzerlan­d, to signal his plans to slash the cost of the public pension scheme sometime in the future in order to keep it sustainabl­e.

Opposition parties blasted the government for manufactur­ing a false crisis about the future sustainabi­lity of the OAS, while the Conservati­ve government indicated it is determined to lead the country into making tough, but necessary, choices on pension reform.

Harper has not revealed specifics, but it is believed the government is considerin­g raising the OAS age-eligibilit­y to 67 to keep more people in the workforce and to reduce the annual costs of the OAS.

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