Manitoba's election is now the NDP's to lose - Action News
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ManitobaAnalysis

Manitoba's election is now the NDP's to lose

With just over a week until the next provincial election, two things are going very well for the Manitoba NDP, polls suggest: strong support for the party itself and a significantvoter retreat from the Liberals.

Pair of polls paint a rosy picture for New Democrats, but 10 remaining days are an eternity in campaign time

A man in a suit stands at a podium.
Opinion polls in Manitoba give NDP Leader Wab Kinew the best chance of being elected premier in the next 10 days. But those 10 days represent one-third of the formal campaign. (James Turner/CBC)

If the New Democrats manage to hold on to the lead polls suggest they have right now in Manitoba, there won't be much of a contest on election night.

Two things are going very well for the NDP: strong support for the party itself and a significantvoter retreat from the Manitoba Liberals.

Polls released this week by the non-profitAngus Reid Institute and for-profit firm Probe Research suggested 47 to 49 per cent of Manitoba votersintend to cast ballotsfor the NDP.

Support at that level spells victory over the past century, no Manitoba political party with 44 per cent of the popular vote or betterhas lost an election.

Even a smidge below 44 per cent doesn't get you there, at least if you're the Tories. Progressive Conservative parties led by Sterling Lyon in 1981 and Hugh McFadyen in 2011 came close to garnering 44 per cent and still managed to lose elections to the NDP.

In both of those races, support for the Manitoba Liberals collapsed into the single digits. That provided the NDP with an advantage in what essentially became head-to-head races with the PCs in northern Manitoba, Brandon and the northern half of Winnipeg.

Thisis another year where the Liberal vote appears to be collapsing. Both the Angus Reid and Probe polls suggest only nine per cent of voters intend to cast a ballot for a Liberal.

That means the dynamic we see right now in Manitoba strong support for the NDP coupled with a weak Liberal showing may prove lethal for the Progressive Conservatives.

Even if both the PCs and Liberals claw back a few percentage points of support, recent electoral history suggests the path to victoryfor the PCs becomes narrow, hinging upon favourable splits in swing constituencies.

In 1999,both the NDPand Gary Filmon's Progressive Conservatives garnered more than 40 per cent of the popular vote, while the Liberals under Jon Gerrardcaptured 13 per cent.

Gary Doer's NDP still captured eight more seats than the PCs 32 to 24 and a majority government thatyear.

Liberal support sank in 1981, 2011

This year, the polls are looking a lot more like 1981 and 2011.

In 1981, Howard Pawley's NDP edged Lyon'sPCs in popular support by 47 to 44 per cent. But the Liberals, led by the now-forgotten Doug Lauchlan, only cobbled together seven per cent support. The result was an 11-seat NDP majority.

A man looks toward the camera as others, including a man holding a TV camera, stand behind him.
In 2011, Hugh McFadyen and the PCs only trailed the NDP by two percentage points in the popular vote but still lost to the NDP by 18 seats. The culprit was a poor showing that year by the Manitoba Liberals. (David Lipnowski/The Canadian Press)

In 2011, Greg Selinger's New Democrats edged past McFadyen's Tories by an even narrower range of popular support, 46 to 44 per cent. ButGerrard's Liberals only managed 7.5 per cent of voters.

This allowed Selinger to win 37 seats the highest total ever won by an NDP premier in this provinceas well as an 18-seat majority.

All of this discussion, however, is predicated on the idea nothing will change in Manitoba between now and the Oct. 3 vote. There is every reason to suggest a lot will.

For starters, the favourable polls for the NDP have the potential to mobilize diehard PC supporters who can't stand the idea of the NDP'sWabKinewbecoming premier in time to issue Thanksgiving greetings to Manitobans.

A woman in a suit speaks at a podium.
Manitoba Progressive Conservative Leader Heather Stefanson has 10 days to turn her party's fortunes around. (James Turner/CBC)

Similarly, there may be a temptation for NDP supporters and campaign workers to take their feet off the gas.

"There [are] hazards in those numbers because it can lead to complacency," said Probe Research president Scott MacKay.

Kinew clearly understood this risk when he made an appeal to voters on Friday.

"Polls don't change governments," he said in a carefully worded statement at a campaign appearance in Tuxedo."Only voters can do that, and that's why we need everyone to get out and vote this year."

Appeal to Liberal voters

There is also the possibility Kinew has overplayed his hand when it comes to Liberal voters. Three times this week at the Tuxedo event, during a televised leaders' debate and in front of the Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce Kinew appealed directly to Liberals for their votes this year.

There are voters who do not appreciatebeing told overtlywhat to do. If polls suggest many Liberal voters were already leaningNDP, why mess with success?

A man in a suit speaks at a podium.
Leader Dougald Lamont must find a way to ratchet the Liberal support up from the single digits to hold on to the three seats the party had when the legislature was dissolved. (James Turner/CBC)

More importantly, 10 days is still a very long time in the context of a 28-day political campaign. The Progressive Conservatives are not finished rolling out their platform. The negative adsyou expect to see from a party running from behind haveyet to appear en masse.

The bottom line is that campaigns matter, even at the end, and provincewide popular opinion can change.

Last spring inAlberta, for example,the United Conservatives and NDP were running neck and neck in several polls two weeks before the election. The UCPended up winning the popular vote by almostnine percentage points.

A provincewide NDP lead doesn't automatically mean the party will be able to flip every one of the seats on itstarget list. If Manitoba's race grows closer, the election-day machinery on the groundfor both the NDP and PCs becomesmore important.

The NDP must win 11 more seats than the party has right now to form a majority government. There are few easy outs among the potential targets occupied right now by Liberals and PCs.

In other words, this race is not over, even with polls painting a rosy picture this week for the NDP.

As advance polls open Saturday, this is now Wab Kinew's election to lose.