National Post

Dinner table debate begins

Thanksgivi­ng holiday seen as ‘resonating chamber’ for vote talk

- By Bruce Cheadle

OTTAWA • Advance polls opened Friday for voters wishing to get a jump on the Oct. 19 election, but the real action may take place around dinner tables, TV sets and camp or cottage closings.

Since long before the 78-day election campaign began, the October holiday weekend has been circled on calendars as a crucible where the fortunes of Stephen Harper, Tom Mulcair and Justin Trudeau could be forged: Far-flung families gathering just as voters begin focusing on who should form the next government.

“Urban legend!” Tom Flanagan, Harper’s former chief adviser, barked in an email.

“I know of no evidence that holidays are important in elections because people talk about politics when families gather for a big dinner.”

John Duffy, a former adviser to Liberal prime minister Paul Martin, has a different take.

“Whenever friends and family gather late in a campaign the conversati­on can turn to politics and, if it does, the influence of family can be important,” the principal at Strategy Corp., said in an interview.

“It’s a commonplac­e that long weekends are resonating chambers.”

Duffy, who is not involved in the current Liberal campaign, has reason to know.

He was on the losing end in January 2006 when Harper’s Conservati­ves first took power following a long campaign that spanned the December 2005 Christmas holiday, during which public opinion turned decisively against the incumbent Liberals.

A bombshell RCMP release on Dec. 28 detailed a criminal investigat­ion of alleged insider trading in the finance

It’s not just the family factor. There’s not a lot of news being made usually

minister’s office. A cloistered, holidaying public with little other news and lots of opportunit­y to gossip kept the shrapnel ricochetin­g for days.

“It’s not just the family factor,” said Duffy. “There’s not a lot of news being made usually. So if you can actually get something through into the relative quiet of people’s lives during one of these holiday periods, it can have quite an effect.”

Author Paul Wells, in his 2006 book Right Side Up: The Fall of Paul Martin and the Rise of Stephen Harper’s New Conservati­sm, said Conservati­ve campaign guru Doug Finley saw the holiday period as a decisive opportunit­y, even before the RCMP’s sledgehamm­er interventi­on.

“Finley thought that if the fundamenta­ls were strong going into Christmas, and Harper kept popping up on TV screens, folks who were already sick of talking about the bundt cake would mention that this guy Harper might not be so bad — and hear some agreement around the living room,” wrote Wells.

Mike Marzolini of Pollara Strategic Insights, a former Liberal party pollster, predicts what he calls “some interestin­g opinion changes” this weekend, but strongly warns against reading much into any holiday polls.

He’s been doing daily tracking of federal and provincial campaigns since 1985 and says he’s thrown out an entire holiday weekend of polling more than eight times.

“What I know from experience to be absolutely true is that all polls conducted over a family holiday weekend are wonky — without exception.”

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