Toronto Star

Poll shows 49% back PCs despite leadership chaos,

Elliott was most popular pick to head up Conservati­ves, followed by Ford, Mulroney

- JAREN KERR STAFF REPORTER

Half of Ontario voters would favour the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves in the next provincial election, according to a new public opinion poll.

The Forum Poll surveyed 949 Ontario voters, 49 per cent of whom said they would support the PCs in the June 7 election, a jump of seven percentage points in just a few weeks.

The Liberals have the support of 24 per cent of voters, while the NDP has 19 per cent.

The results are largely due to voter dissatisfa­ction with Premier Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals, according to Lorne Bozinoff, president and founder of Forum Research, which conducted the poll on Friday and Saturday.

“The premier doesn’t seem to connect with the electorate,” Bozinoff said, adding the party has “14 years of accumulate­d baggage,” including voter complaints about hydro rates and other scandals.

Respondent­s were given five options for candidates they would like to lead the party. Christine Elliott, a moderate who lost the 2015 Ontario PC leadership race to Patrick Brown, was the most popular at 22 per cent

She is trailed by former Toronto city councillor Doug Ford, brother of late mayor Rob Ford, at 16 per cent. Close behind, Caroline Mulroney, a lawyer and daughter of former prime minister Brian Mulroney, earned 14 per cent.

Brown, who resigned as PC leader amid sexual misconduct allegation­s in January only to rejoin the race last week, had 13 per cent of respondent­s say he would be the best leader.

In January, CTV News reported that two women accused Brown of sexual misconduct. Brown denies the allegation­s and has vowed to clear his name.

Five per cent of voters picked Tanya Granic Allen, a self-described social conservati­ve. Thirty-one per cent of respondent­s said they don’t know who should be leader.

A poll conducted in late January found the Tories had the support of 42 per cent of voters.

“The constant stream of media at- tention and fervour surroundin­g the leadership race has done nothing but help the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves,” he said. “Even Patrick Brown’s reentry into the race isn’t yet showing as a negative, with just as many people saying they agree with the decision as disagree.”

Bozinoff said Elliott’s popularity stems from her being a scandal-free “brand name” that connects well with voters.

Results based on the total sample are considered accurate, plus or minus three percentage points,19 times out of 20.

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