Toronto Star

Axing Brown helps Tories, poll finds

All Conservati­ve hopefuls more popular than Wynne, public opinion survey says

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

Dumping Patrick Brown as leader has helped the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves no matter who wins the party’s leadership, a new poll suggests.

In Campaign Research’s first public opinion surveysinc­e Brown resigned as leader almost three weeks ago, the firm found all three Tory contenders are more popular than Liberal Premier Kathleen Wynne.

“When you’ve got the stark contrast between Patrick Brown and Kathleen Wynne people were on the fence — or at least tied between the two leaders,” Campaign Research CEO Eli Yufest said Monday.

“Now that people have been given more options — namely Doug Ford, Caroline Mulroney and Christine Elliott — they’re giving the PCs a more serious second look,” said Yufest.

With the party electing a new lead- er March 10, the pollster surveyed voter intent, testing the premier and her governing party against the three hopefuls.

Elliott, a former MPP, was the most popular — 46 per cent of respondent­s would cast a ballot for a PC party led by her compared to 23 per cent for Andrea Horwath’s New Democrats, 20 per cent for Wynne’s Liberals and 7 per cent for Mike Schreiner’s Greens.

Rookie PC candidate Mulroney’s Tories were at 41 per cent compared to 25 per cent for Horwath’s NDP, 22 per cent for Wynne’s Liberals, and 8 per cent for Schreiner’s Greens.

Former Toronto councillor Ford’s PC party was at 39 per cent compared to 24 per cent apiece for Horwath’s NDP and Wynne’s Liberals, and 7 per cent for Schreiner’s Greens.

When no leaders’ names are surveyed, the Tories are at 43 per cent, the Liberals at 28 per cent, the NDP at 20 per cent and the Greens are at 8 per cent.

Using an online panel of1,426 Onta-

“Now that people have been given more options . . . they’re giving the PCs a more serious second look.”

ELI YUFEST CEO OF CAMPAIGN RESEARCH

rio voters, Campaign Research polled between Friday and Sunday. A probabilit­y sample of that size would have a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

In January, the company’s monthly tracking survey found Brown’s Tories at 35 per cent, Wynne’s Liberals at 34 per cent, Horwath’s New Democrats at 23 per cent, and Schreiner’s Greens at 6 per cent.

Yufest cautioned against reading into the latest poll that the June 7 election is a lock for the Tories — no matter who they choose as leader.

“When you’ve got the major upheaval coupled with the intense media attention that’s been given to the party, we see a lot of . . . volatility,” he said, noting all of the controvers­ies plaguing the Conservati­ves appear to be sticking to Brown, not his wouldbe successors.

“None of them were obviously involved in any of that. All three of the candidates are outside of caucus — none of them are sitting MPPs — so these three candidates are the new face or the fresh face of the party.”

As in past Campaign Research polls, Wynne’s personal approval ratings lag behind her party:

The premier had 17 per cent approval, 69 per cent disapprova­l and 13 per cent didn’t know.

Horwath had 37 per cent approval, 18 per cent disapprova­l and 45 per cent didn’t know.

Elliott had 32 per cent approval, 14 per cent disapprova­l and 54 per cent didn’t know.

Ford had 29 per cent approval, 36 per cent disapprova­l and 35 per cent didn’t know.

Mulroney had 27 per cent approval, 20 per cent disapprova­l and 53 per cent didn’t know.

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