Manitoba election: Liberal support on the decline in Winnipeg, poll suggests - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 03:48 PM | Calgary | -7.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Manitoba election: Liberal support on the decline in Winnipeg, poll suggests

A new poll released by a firm run by three Liberals suggests support for Rana Bokhari's party is on the decline in Winnipeg as election day nears.

Liberal slide coincides with slight rise in approval ratings for NDP, PCs

On April 19, Manitobans will decide whether NDP Leader Greg Selinger (left), Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari or Progressive Conservative Leader Brian Pallister (right) will be next to lead the province. (The Canadian Press)

A new poll released by a firm run by three Liberals suggests support forRana Bokhari's party is on the decline in Winnipeg as election day nears.

Insight Manitoba polled a random sample of 3,454Winnipeggers between March 26 and April 3 and found approval ratings for theManitoba Liberal Party have slidby three percentage points in Winnipeg since the beginning of March. The party went from a 19 to 16 per cent approval rating in Winnipeg.

The drop coincides with a boost in support for the Manitoba Progressive Conservatives and the New Democrats in the Winnipeg battleground. Support for the NDP inched up from 21 to 24 per cent; approval for a Brian Pallister-ledgovernment rose from 35 to 38 per cent.The Greens remained steady at five per cent, according to the poll.

The number of undecided voters also shifted, from 20 per cent to 17 per cent in Winnipeg.

Reaction to Liberal decline

The poll results came as asurprise to Insight Manitoba co-founder Eric Stewart, he said.

"We didn't expect this much movement this soon in the election.... We think it's an indication of a trend," he said.

Thepoll alsosuggestsprovince-wide,thePCs are still in the lead at 42 per cent; the NDP sits at 22 per cent; the Liberals at 15 per cent; the Greens at five per cent; and just two weeks away from the election, 16 per cent ofManitobansremain undecided.

RoyceKoop,a political analyst at the University of Manitoba, said the dip in Liberal support is good news for New Democrats.

"If the Liberals' popularity keeps going down it will help both parties but it will help mostly the NDP," saidKoop.

"The more the Liberal vote goes down in Winnipeg, themore the NDP is going to benefit from that and hold on to some of those seats that the Tories would have been able to pick up as a result of a split vote."

As we near April 19, it will become more difficult for any party leader to turn voter opinion, Koop added.

"That includes GregSelinger. It's getting harder for him to come back in the polls, and it includes [Rana]Bokhari, she's set a campaign narrative, a lot of these errors are cemented in the minds of voters," hesaid.

'We're all about sample size'

Insight Manitoba is new to the provincial polling game, but its directors already claimto be a more reliablesource forvoting statistics in Manitoba than other polling companies.

"We're all about sample size," said co-founderEricStewart, adding the company also prides itself on its low margin of error and "qualifying questions" it usesto eliminate certain results for more accurate data.

"That's why we think it's better than what's out there."

Stewart,GeraldDenais andJames Cook surveyed 4,592 people in the province in the most recent pollsignificantly morethan any other poll the CBC has reported on during this campaign.

Insight Manitobawas born out of dissatisfaction with the quality of polling done on a national scale leading up to the 2015 federal election, Stewart said.

All three men count themselves as Liberals;all three worked on Liberal member of ParliamentRobert-Falcon Ouellette's campaign. (Stewart was Ouellette'scampaign manager during the 2014 Winnipeg mayoral election.)

Cook is running Michelle Finley'sprovincialcampaign for the Liberals in St. James. Stewart had been acting in an advisory role for Finley's campaign until recently.

As far as the optics ofthree Liberal-affiliated people putting out a poll that doesn't reflect well on that party, Stewart said the data speaks for itself.

"I'm confidant in the numbers we have and the numbers we presented. If our goal is to present accurate numbers and data people can rely on, I am happy about that regardless of the results towards a party which I have beenknown to be affiliated with," Stewart said.

A probabilistic sample of thesize used in Insight Manitoba's pollfor Winnipegwould yield a margin of error of +/- 1.65per cent, 19 times out of 20.

Manitobans head to the polls April 19.

With files from CBC's Chris Glover and Nelly Gonzalez