Latest poll projects Conservatives with 114-118 seats, Liberals with 104-108
Tories, Grits seen at parity with campaign half over
Globe and Mail Update
UPDATED AT 11:36 PM EDT Wednesday, Jun 9, 2004
As the campaign hits the midway point, the Conservatives are in a position to form a minority government as it battles the Liberals in a neck-in-neck race, a poll suggests.
Nationally, the Liberals have 32 per cent voter support, compared with 31 per cent for the Conservatives. The NDP has 16 per cent support, according to a poll conducted for The Globe and Mail and CTV by Ipsos-Reid.
Since the last Ipsos-Reid poll, which was released on Saturday, the Conservatives and Liberals have not budged. In the first 18 days of the campaign, the Liberals have fallen from 35 per cent while the Tories have risen from 26 per cent.
In Ontario, the Liberals have the lead over the Conservatives with 40 per cent compared with 35 per cent. In Quebec, the Bloc has a substantial lead and in Atlantic Canada, the Conservatives are now within striking distance of the Liberals
A seat projection by Ipsos-Reid would give the Conservatives between 114 and 118 seats and the Liberals between 104 and 108. In the House of Commons, 155 seats are needed for a majority.
The campaign hits a crescendo next Monday and Tuesday when the major party leaders cross paths at the French and English TV debate, their big chance to go on the offensive in front of a mass audience before the June 28 vote.
Liberal Leader Paul Martin said his party would stay the course by pointing to the differences between his party and Stephen Harper's Tories. “We're into the playoffs in terms of this campaign,” he told reporters while attending the Group of Eight summit.
The poll of 2,000 Canadians was conducted between June 4 and June 8 and is considered accurate plus or minus 2.2 per cent, 19 times out of 20.
It says that 61 per cent of Canadians are opposed to a Conservative-Bloc coalition while 57 per cent would accept a Liberal minority working with the NDP.
Tories, Grits seen at parity with campaign half over
Globe and Mail Update
UPDATED AT 11:36 PM EDT Wednesday, Jun 9, 2004
As the campaign hits the midway point, the Conservatives are in a position to form a minority government as it battles the Liberals in a neck-in-neck race, a poll suggests.
Nationally, the Liberals have 32 per cent voter support, compared with 31 per cent for the Conservatives. The NDP has 16 per cent support, according to a poll conducted for The Globe and Mail and CTV by Ipsos-Reid.
Since the last Ipsos-Reid poll, which was released on Saturday, the Conservatives and Liberals have not budged. In the first 18 days of the campaign, the Liberals have fallen from 35 per cent while the Tories have risen from 26 per cent.
In Ontario, the Liberals have the lead over the Conservatives with 40 per cent compared with 35 per cent. In Quebec, the Bloc has a substantial lead and in Atlantic Canada, the Conservatives are now within striking distance of the Liberals
A seat projection by Ipsos-Reid would give the Conservatives between 114 and 118 seats and the Liberals between 104 and 108. In the House of Commons, 155 seats are needed for a majority.
The campaign hits a crescendo next Monday and Tuesday when the major party leaders cross paths at the French and English TV debate, their big chance to go on the offensive in front of a mass audience before the June 28 vote.
Liberal Leader Paul Martin said his party would stay the course by pointing to the differences between his party and Stephen Harper's Tories. “We're into the playoffs in terms of this campaign,” he told reporters while attending the Group of Eight summit.
The poll of 2,000 Canadians was conducted between June 4 and June 8 and is considered accurate plus or minus 2.2 per cent, 19 times out of 20.
It says that 61 per cent of Canadians are opposed to a Conservative-Bloc coalition while 57 per cent would accept a Liberal minority working with the NDP.





