The Prince George Citizen

Liberal popularity slump stops

- Joan BRYDEN

OTTAWA — A new poll suggests the federal Liberals have stopped the bleeding from the beating they took in the SNCLavalin furor.

The Leger poll suggests the Liberals have closed the gap slightly with the front-running Conservati­ves since April and dissatisfa­ction with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his government has eased a bit.

More significan­tly, the poll also suggests the Liberals have opened up a 14-point lead over the Conservati­ves when it comes to which of the two main parties Canadians would prefer to see form government after the Oct. 21 vote.

At the same time, however, the poll suggests more Canadians are worried about the prospect of four more years of Trudeau’s Liberals than they are about the Conservati­ves regaining power.

The poll of 1,528 Canadians, randomly recruited from Leger’s online panel, was conducted between June 7 and 10 for The Canadian Press; polling experts say online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not generate a random sample of the population.

Thirty-eight per cent of respondent­s said they would vote for Andrew Scheer’s Conservati­ves if an election were held today, versus 29 per cent for Trudeau’s Liberals - a two-point dip for the Tories and a two-point uptick for the Grits.

Another 13 per cent said they would vote for Jagmeet Singh’s NDP, 11 per cent for Elizabeth May’s Green party and three per cent for Maxime Bernier’s fledgling People’s Party of Canada.

Fifty-eight per cent registered dissatisfa­ction with Trudeau’s government, down seven points, while 36 per cent said they were satisfied, up five points.

And 25 per cent picked Scheer as the leader they think would make the best prime minister, unchanged since April, while 22 per cent picked Trudeau, up two points. Another eight per cent picked May, six per cent chose Singh and four per cent Bernier.

A Leger poll in April found support for the Liberals and Trudeau had sunk to a new low, in the immediate aftermath of the SNC-Lavalin affair.

Trudeau lost two senior cabinet ministers, a top aide and the country’s top public servant as a result of allegation­s that his former attorney general, Jody WilsonRayb­ould, was improperly pressured by the Prime Minister’s Office last fall to halt a criminal prosecutio­n of the Montreal engineerin­g giant.

While the latest survey suggests only very modest improvemen­t for the ruling party on most questions, the biggest change came when respondent­s were asked whether Canada would be better off under a Liberal or a Conservati­ve government: 34 per cent preferred the Liberals versus 20 per cent the Conservati­ves.

In April, the Liberals had only a five-point lead over the Conservati­ves (30 to 25) on that question.

Leger executive vice-president Christian Bourque speculated that the shift is due to people getting past their initial reaction to the SNC-Lavalin affair and focusing on the choice they’ll have to make at the ballot box in October.

“My guess is that all the news coverage, all the polls and all the pundits saying that the Conservati­ves were surging, that the Liberals were in trouble, maybe some people are waking up and saying, ‘Wait a minute here, I stated my case on whatever my thoughts were on the Wilson-Raybould crisis and therefore (said) not Trudeau but, hey, what’s the outcome?’ ”

But the poll also suggests there are some contrary impulses at play as voters contemplat­e the coming election. Forty-six per cent of respondent­s said they’re most worried about the prospect of four more years of Trudeau’s government while 37 per cent said they’re most concerned about the prospect of the Conservati­ves regaining power.

Bourque said the results suggest to him that the coming campaign could see the Conservati­ves trying to turn the election into a referendum on Trudeau’s leadership and the Liberals trying to turn it into a referendum on what their party stands for.

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