Ottawa Citizen

Trudeau out of touch with Canadians: poll

O'Toole seen as second weakest federal leader

- JESSE SNYDER

• Justin Trudeau is more out of touch with ordinary Canadians than other federal leaders, a new poll suggests, and is seen as the weakest party leader by a sizeable margin among the voting public.

In a Leger poll, 30 per cent of voters who were asked what has surprised them the most about the current campaign said Trudeau “seems out of touch with the concerns of ordinary Canadians,” the highest recorded result across 11 personal leadership traits and four party leaders.

Conservati­ve Leader Erin O'Toole was seen as next most out of touch at 15 per cent, followed by Jagmeet Singh (eight per cent) and Yves-François Blanchet (seven per cent).

Trudeau was also singled out as the weakest party leader by 22 per cent of respondent­s, compared with 10 per cent for O'Toole, eight per cent for NDP leader Singh, and six per cent for Bloc leader Blanchet.

The polling data comes in the final weeks of a campaign where the Trudeau Liberals have seemingly failed to broaden their popular support, and have instead seen a gradual decline in public opinion since the beginning of the election. The party is now in a dead heat with the Conservati­ves at around 33 per cent.

Doubts about Trudeau's leadership qualities mark a distinct shift from the 2015 election, when he distinguis­hed himself as a charismati­c leader who innately understood issues like the financial anxieties of the middle class and the environmen­t.

“If you think back to 2015, he really connected,” said Andrew Enns, executive director at Leger. “That was one of the things people talked a lot about, is that he really connected with the average Canadian on those major issues.

“This is a bit of a flag as to why that Liberal campaign is really not taking off to the degree that perhaps they thought it might.”

The reason for the Liberal leader's slumping support, Enns said, could simply be the onset of a sort of Trudeau fatigue, particular­ly after a global pandemic in which the prime minister was a highly prominent figure, making dispatches to the public twice a week.

The other leaders, meanwhile, appear to be facing the opposite problem. Asked what character traits best represente­d various leaders, the most popular choice by respondent­s in the Leger survey for O'Toole, Singh, and Blanchet was “don't know.” Twenty-four per cent said they knew nothing about O'Toole's character, 22 per cent for Singh, and 29 per cent for Blanchet.

The next most common response for O'Toole, at 19 per cent, was that he is “not someone I can relate to.” That was also the next most popular response for Blanchet, at 15 per cent of respondent­s, as well as the belief that he is a “strong leader.”

Singh, who polled higher than all other leaders in terms of likability, was also known for his “energy and enthusiasm,” chosen by 22 per cent of voters.

The survey, which was conducted between Sept. 3 and Sept. 6, suggested Trudeau's popularity had fallen the most in the last week, with 40 per cent of

respondent­s saying their impression­s of the Liberal leader had worsened.

Maxime Bernier had the next-worst week, according to the poll, with 31 per cent saying their impression­s of him had worsened, followed by O'Toole (27 per cent) and Green leader Annamie Paul (27 per cent).

Singh had the best week with 23 per cent saying they had an improved opinion of the NDP leader, and just 16 per cent saying it had worsened.

Higher public impression­s of the NDP leader have been among the most substantia­l themes of the election campaign so far, helping to bolster support for Singh at the expense of the Liberals.

“He's a positive figure, he comes across very energetic, he's well-spoken,” said Enns. “I think what's happened a bit is there's progressiv­e voters who have been with the Liberals but have started to drift away due to disappoint­ment or disillusio­nment.”

At the same time, O'Toole's support has also receded slightly in recent days, particular­ly after a series of attacks by the Liberals on the Conservati­ve's firearms policy, which O'Toole has now walked back.

Senior Liberals had been claiming O'Toole would legalize “assault weapons” in Canada, despite that the previous Conservati­ve plan would only reverse the May 2020 ban on 11 classes of “military-style” semi-automatic rifles commonly used by sport shooters.

“I think the damage for the Conservati­ves is it put O'Toole on the defensive, and it blunted the momentum that he had from the previous week,” Enns said. “On the flip side, it gave the Liberals a little oxygen.”

In the Leger poll, 55 per cent of respondent­s said the Liberals' policy to increase gun control was done for political gain, rather than to address a high-priority issue.

Sixty per cent of respondent­s said party promises to cap prices on mobile phone plans was pure politics, while 59 per cent said a tax on the “super rich” was for partisan gains.

Forcing provinces to shut down for-profit health-care centres was viewed as the most blatantly political policy at 69 per cent.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Doubts about Justin Trudeau's leadership qualities mark a distinct shift from the 2015 federal election, when “he really connected,” says Leger's Andrew Enns.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Doubts about Justin Trudeau's leadership qualities mark a distinct shift from the 2015 federal election, when “he really connected,” says Leger's Andrew Enns.

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