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Majority of Albertans opposed to government's approach on key issues, poll suggests

Just a little more than a week before the start of the governing party's leadership review vote, a new poll suggests a majority of Albertans are dissatisfied with the United Conservative Party's handling of key issues in the province.

Angus Reid poll also finds governing UCP in statistical tie with Opposition NDP

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney speaks during a press conference held in Calgary on March 25. A new Angus Reid Institute poll suggests a majority of Albertans disapprove of the premier's performance. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Just a little more than a week beforethe start of the governing party's leadership review vote, a new poll suggests a majority of Albertans are dissatisfied with the United Conservative Party's handling of key issues in the province.

The poll by the Angus Reid Institute,which conducted an online surveybetween March 10and 15,found that those surveyed disapproved of the government's performance on each of the 13 issues posed, which ranged from economic issues to the COVID-19 response.

"This has been a time for Jason Kenneywhere, almost from Day 1, he has contended with the challenge from being squeezed from two very intense, very equally passionate sides of the Alberta political spectrum," said Shachi Kurl, president of the Angus Reid Institute.

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Asked about the new poll while speaking Thursday at a press conference in Medicine Hat, Alta., Premier Jason Kenneyhighlighted provincial initiatives while speculating thatthe cost of living, inflation and frustrations around the pandemic had ledto division in the province.

"It's no secret that you had a lot of polarization in COVID.That frustrated a lot of people on both sides," Kenney said.

Statistical tie

Despite the low approval ratings on those key issues, the poll indicates the UCPis in a statistical tie with the Opposition NDP in vote intent.

That's an improvement over the party's performance in recent months, as it had trailed the NDPin the second half of 2021, according to polling.

The UCP is in a statistical tie with the Opposition NDP after trailing for three quarters, according to a new poll from the Angus Reid Institute. (Angus Reid Institute)

Thirty-eight per cent of Albertans said they would vote for the UCP in an upcoming provincial election, according to the new survey, while 40 per cent said they would vote for the NDP.

The Wildrose Independence Party the party that formed after the merger of Wexit Alberta and the Freedom Conservative Party has seen its prospects fade by about half, with 11 per cent in support of the party now compared with 20 per cent in June 2021.

"The Wildrose is the 'X' factor. The Wildrose party is the wild card in Alberta politics," Kurl said.

"A lot of UCP voters who have drifted over to Wildrose Independence will find themselves taking stock and asking themselves the question, 'Is the UCPgovernment that we're angry with better at the end of the day, from our perspective, than an NDP government?'"

In the survey,70 per cent of those who voted for the UCP in 2019 now say they will vote for them again in the next election, while 18 per cent say they have moved to the Wildrose Independence Party.

Ninety-six per cent of those who voted for the NDPsay they'll do so again, and the party has pulled around seven per cent from those who ticked the box for the UCPin the last election.

Premier's approval

The latestAngus Reid Institute premier approval ratings, published March 18, indicatedKenneywas seeing an approval rate of 30 per cent, the second-worst among provincial premiers, after Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson. Kenney'snumber was up four percentage pointsfrom January 2022.

At 55per cent, a majority ofAlbertanshold unfavourable views of Opposition leader Rachel Notley, with 40 per cent holding favourable views.

Duane Bratt, a political scientist with Mount Royal University, said thatbased on the poll results, the UCP brand appears to be more popular than the premier.

"So are people assuming that Kenney will no longer be leader of the UCP party? That's one possibility," Bratt said.

"The other is the assumption the UCP holds itself together. I think that's a very dangerous assumption to make going into this leadership reviewwhen there are huge cleavages within the party."

Duane Bratt, a political scientist at Mount Royal University, says though inflation was the top concern for those surveyed, leadership candidates for the UCP have spent much of the campaign talking about autonomy and separatism. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

Elsewhere in Canada, Ontario Premier Doug Ford has seen his approval rating jump by 13 points in advance of a June 2 provincial election, while support for theConservative Party in Quebec has surged, doubling since January.

The Angus Reid Institute said its online survey was conductedamong a representative randomized sample of 5,105Canadianadults who are members of the Angus Reid Forum.For comparison purposes, a probability sample of this size would carry a margin of error of plus or minus two percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

The total sample for Alberta is 584, which would carry a margin of error of plus or minus four percentage points, 19 times out of 20.