Kinew flips script for Manitoba, ranks most popular among Canada's premiers, new poll suggests - Action News
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Manitoba

Kinew flips script for Manitoba, ranks most popular among Canada's premiers, new poll suggests

Manitoba has Canada's most popular premier, after a string of surveys in which the province's past leaders ranked dead last,a new poll suggests.

'It's been quite a while since we've seen Manitoba's premier scoring this high': political analyst Chris Adams

A man in a suit sits behind a microphone and looks on during a press conference
Wab Kinew, seen in a file photo from early November, is enjoying a post-election glow, says pollster Chris Adams. (Kelly Clark/The Canadian Press)

Manitoba has Canada's most popular premier, after a string of surveys in which the province's past leaders ranked dead last,a new poll suggests.

In the poll from the Angus Reid Institute,57 cent of respondents said they approveof Kinew's leadership.

He's only held the position since the Oct. 3 election, when he led the NDP to a majority government.

"It's been quite a while since we've seen Manitoba's premier scoring this high," saidpolitical analyst Chris Adams,an adjunct professor of political studies at the University of Manitoba.

"This poll, over 50 per cent of Manitobans scoring Wab Kinew in a favourable light, is quite remarkable."

Kinew's election victoryunseated the Progressive Conservative Party, which had held two consecutive majority governments.

ThatpromptedPC LeaderHeather Stefansontoannounceon election night that she intends to resign her position once the party chooses a successor sometime in the new year.

During her tenure, Stefanson had the lowest approval rates of all provincial leaders, ranging from 21-28 per cent.

When her predecessor, Brian Pallister, stepped down in late 2021, he went out with the worst approval rating in the country at 32 per cent.

But like Kinew, Pallisterenjoyed a high approval ratingwhen he wasfirst elected, with53 per cent in2016.

Kinew'spost-election honeymoon is built on promises more than performance so far, both the Angus Reid analysis and Adams suggested.

The Angus Reid survey cited his throne speech, in which hepromised to repair the health-care system,address the rising cost of living, convert thousands of homes to geothermal energyand make Orange Shirt Day a statutory holiday,among other priorities.

"It is the period in which people are glowing with their admiration of this new government, but it's very early," Adams said.

"Right now Manitobans haven't had a chance to see whether these promises and commitments will be carried through."

A bar graph shows popularity numbers for premiers
Manitoba's Wab Kinew is ranked as the most popular premier in Canada while Quebec's Franois Legault has plummeted into last place, a new Angus Reid poll suggests. (Angus Reid Institute)

Kinew's rating wasjust ahead of Manitoba's neighbour, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, who went up four percentage points from his previous rank, to sit at 54 per cent.

But, Adams said, 16 per cent of Manitoba's respondents said they weren't sure how to rateKinew. That's the highest uncertainty across all of the provinces.

Moe, by comparison, had more "strongly committed ratings," with just three per cent of respondents saying they aren't sure about him, Adams said.

Quebec PremierFranois Legaultwas last in approval ratings among the nine leaders at 31 per cent, dropping16 points.

This most recent poll was conducted online from Nov. 24 to Dec. 1, using a representative randomized sample of 3,749 Canadian adultswho are members of the Angus Reid Forum.

These types of polls do not have a margin of error, but a probability sample of that same size would have a margin of error of two percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

The sample size in Manitoba was 291, which would have amargin of error of plus-or-minus sixpercentage points, 19 times out of 20.

"Two hundred and ninety-oneis not a huge sample, but it gives you a sense of where things are going," Adams said.

The survey was self-commissioned and paid for by the Angus Reid Institute.

With files from Meaghan Ketcheson