The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Poll: Canadians are happy with country’s direction — except in the Prairies

- STUART THOMSON

How satisfied you are with the way things are going in Canada depends very much on where you are living, reveals a new poll.

While a majority of Canadians are satisfied with the direction of the country, there is a wildly different sentiment in the Prairies, where people are feeling widespread dismay at the state of affairs, a new survey from the Angus Reid Institute says.

“The prospect of a new year is bringing new concerns and anxieties for some Canadians and a bullish outlook for others. How they feel has largely to do with where they live,” says the institute in a news release headlined “Two Canadas?”

The poll shows that more than 60 per cent of Canadians living in central Canada, the

Atlantic Provinces and British Columbia are happy with the ways things are going in the country. In Alberta and Saskatchew­an, the numbers are almost reversed, with only 29 per cent of Albertans and 39 per cent of people in Saskatchew­an satisfied with the direction Canada is taking.

Those numbers represent steep declines from four years ago. In Alberta, the number of people happy with the direction of the country has plummeted from 53 per cent in 2016 to 29 per cent today. In Saskatchew­an, the number has dropped 18 percentage points from 57 to 39 per cent.

About 54 per cent of Manitobans are satisfied with the direction of the country this year, which is a decline of 14 percentage points from 2016.

The regional disparity in the country is almost matched by a big difference in how men and women feel about the direction of the country.

Across Canada, 46 per cent of men say they are unhappy with the way things are going compared to about 32 per cent of women.

There is relatively little difference among age groups.

The deep resentment in

Alberta is a consequenc­e of the recent economic downturn and the lengthy and fractious process of getting the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion built.

The project would carry more Albertan oil to the West Coast, where it may be able to command a better price.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney recently unveiled a “fair deal panel,” which is examining the various ways Albertans think Confederat­ion is unbalanced against them.

The panel’s website says it will look for ways to get a “bigger voice within the federation, increase our power over areas of provincial jurisdicti­on, and advance our vital economic interests, such as building energy pipelines.”

But the poll also found that people across the country are far more worried about the future of their province.

 ?? JOHN MAHONEY/POSTMEDIA; GAVIN YOUNG/POSTMEDIA ?? A survey of Canadian satisfacti­on on the direction the country is headed found the greatest divide is between Quebec and Alberta.
JOHN MAHONEY/POSTMEDIA; GAVIN YOUNG/POSTMEDIA A survey of Canadian satisfacti­on on the direction the country is headed found the greatest divide is between Quebec and Alberta.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada