A new poll shows that more respondents prefer newly minted Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre as Canada’s prime minister compared to incumbent Justin Trudeau.
The new poll, conducted from Sept. 19 to 20 and released Sept. 29, found Poilievre leading in all provinces except B.C., Quebec, and Atlantic Canada.
In British Columbia, where Trudeau has traditionally garnered more support, the poll shows he now has 38 percent of respondents’ support—just 2 percentage points ahead of Poilievre.
Earlier Poll
The new poll follows another poll also by Ipsos, released a day earlier, on Sept. 28, that showed the Tories nudging ahead.The earlier poll, conducted between Sept. 19 and Sept. 21 and also exclusively for Global News, found the Conservatives leading the Liberals by five percentage points among decided voters.
Among the 1,000 Canadian adults surveyed, 35 percent said they preferred the Tories compared to 30 percent for the Liberals, 20 percent for the NDP, and 7 percent nationally for the Bloc Quebecois. That gap is wider in Ontario, where 37 percent of respondents said they would vote for the Tories compared to 30 percent for the Liberals.
The results of the new poll released Sept. 29 show that respondents are now viewing the Liberal leader in a more negative light compared to his new Conservative counterpart.
In particular, 37 percent of the respondents said Trudeau was “in over their head” as prime minister, compared to 21 percent for Poilievre.
The two Ipsos polls both carry a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.