The London Free Press

Trudeau, Singh have led their parties to 50-year-low in polls

- ANGUS REID STUDY

A new data analysis from the Angus Reid Institute has combed through 50 years of political polls and uncovered some historical trends and oddities. Most recently, it found that the popularity of Canadian federal party leaders is at a five-decade low. And that's not one of them — it's all of them.

UNPOPULAR LEADERS

Data gleaned from the Ontario Data Documentat­ion, Extraction Service and Infrastruc­ture Initiative found that, going back to 1974, there has never been a time when the leaders of the three main federal parties have polled as low as this year.

As of April, the pollster determined, the most popular federal party leader, Pierre Poilievre of the opposition Conservati­ves, has a net rating of -12 points, calculated by combining favourabil­ity with unfavourab­ililty in polling numbers.

And he's the most popular. New Democratic Party Leader Jagmeet Singh has a net rating of -14, which is his worst in seven years as party leader. And Prime Minister

Justin Trudeau of the governing Liberals has a net approval rating that is downright chilly at -38.

TRUDEAU NUMBERS TRENDING DOWN

The prime minister's numbers become even more dire when one looks at the trending direction. In data from this decade, Liberal and NDP leaders start out with net positive numbers of around 10 in 2020, while the Conservati­ve leader (then Erin O'toole) has a rating of -43. However, by the following year, Trudeau had dropped to -9 while Singh was at just 6, and O'toole had risen to -28.

The next three years saw the Conservati­ve numbers increase in each poll (though never crossing into positive territory) while Trudeau and Singh continued to sink.

NDP REACHES ALL-TIME LOW

Historical­ly, the New Democrats have almost never strayed into negative territory, and remain relatively popular in opinion polls, even though they have never won a federal election.

“In 2011 Jack Layton (NDP), Michael Ignatieff (Liberal) and Stephen Harper (Conservati­ve) were all in negative territory, but the intensity of dislike towards Layton was relatively slight,” the Angus Reid Institute notes. “In the late 1980s both John Turner (Liberal) and Brian Mulroney (Conservati­ve) were heavily disapprove­d of, but (NDP) Ed Broadbent soared in public opinion polls.”

More recently, however, numbers for the NDP leader (Singh since 2017) have been heading down and staying down. After positive figures in 2020 and 2021, the NDP fell to -1 the following year, and then an even zero. In the latest numbers, Singh has the distinctio­n of holding the worst rating ever, at -14.

Why so low? “It appears that the NDP'S supply and confidence agreement with the deeply unpopular Liberal government has increased Singh's profile and influence enough that he, too, is now garnering considerab­le criticism,” the Institute suggests.

CHRÉTIEN IS TOPS

At the other end of the popularity ladder is Liberal Jean Chrétien, who in 1994, early in his 10 years as prime minister, scored a record-setting 42 on the scale.

In fact, throughout his time as prime minister, he consistent­ly pulled in positive numbers, dipping as low as 14 and as high as 34. Liberal numbers wouldn't fall below zero again until 2003, the same year Paul Martin took over as prime minister.

TALE OF TWO TRUDEAUS

In 1974, when data collection began, Liberal leader Pierre Trudeau had already been prime minister for six years, and his first number was a respectabl­e 14, though still lower than the NDP'S David Lewis (17) and the Conservati­ves' Robert Stanfield (18). But the bloom was clearly off the rose; in subsequent years his popularity would plummet.

In 1976 he scored a dismal -25 during a period of high inflation, before struggling back to numbers around zero through the rest of the decade, and then a drop in 1981 from which he never recovered.

That year saw Trudeau post a -19, which sank to -34 and then -33. In 1985 the Liberal numbers rebounded to -3, after John Turner had taken the helm.

A similar fate seems to be befalling Trudeau's son Justin. In 2014, the first year after he took the party reins, he scored a rating of 7. Two years later, as prime minister, his score was 29, and it stayed positive for each of the next two years before beginning to fluctuate.

Since 2021 it has been mired in negative numbers. And just as Singh has brought the NDP to its lowest rating since 1974, Trudeau's current -38 is a lowwater mark for his party.

In its analysis, the Angus Reid Institute notes: “Our divisive politics appears to have created an era where all leaders can remain under water at the same time. Evidently a falling tide lowers all boats.”

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Federal party leaders Justin Trudeau, Pierre Poilievre and Jagmeet Singh are all unpopular, polls show.
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS Federal party leaders Justin Trudeau, Pierre Poilievre and Jagmeet Singh are all unpopular, polls show.

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