Bowman leads Motkaluk 2-to-1 in mayoral poll, but majority of voters still undecided - Action News
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Manitoba

Bowman leads Motkaluk 2-to-1 in mayoral poll, but majority of voters still undecided

Brian Bowman is Winnipeg's preferred choice for mayor, but "a huge pool" of undecided voters means the incumbent candidate has yet to have a lock on re-election in October.

'We don't love him, we don't mind him, but we are open to other alternatives': pollster

Brian Bowman is the preferred candidate of Winnipeg voters, according to a Probe Research poll. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

Brian Bowman is Winnipeg's preferred choice for mayor, but "a huge pool" of undecided voters means the incumbent candidate has yet to have a lock on re-election in October.

That's the conclusion of a CBC-commissionedProbe Research poll that suggests 22 per cent of Winnipeg voters intend to select Bowman as mayor on Oct. 24.

Eleven per cent would choose challenger Jenny Motkaluk, according to the poll, which found 57 per cent of Winnipeg adults undecided about their intentions during the final week of August.

"There's a huge pool ofundecideds,"said Mary Agnes Welch, a senior Probe researcher."More than half ofWinnipeggersare undecided on who they want to vote for for mayor. That's asizablenumber, even two months out from an election."

Probe Research polls of mayoral voting intentions in 2010 and 2014 pegged undecided voters at 25 per cent and 23 per cent of the population, respectively, approximately one month before the vote.

Mayor Brian Bowman is Winnipeg's preferred candidate, but the undecided vote remains high, Probe Research suggests. (CBC News Graphics)

Although Bowman leads Motkaluktwo- to-one in the poll, the large proportion of undecidedssuggests the incumbent could be looking over his shoulder, Welch said.

"I wouldn't call it a horse race by any stretch yet, but I think JennyMotkalukmight be doing a little better than a lot of people anticipated at this point," the pollster said.

Bowman called the poll encouraging but said the only poll that matters is on election day.

Bowman leads Motkaluk 2-to-1 in mayoral poll

6 years ago
Duration 1:59
Brian Bowman is Winnipeg's preferred choice for mayor, but "a huge pool" of undecided voters means the incumbent candidate has yet to have a lock on re-election in October.

"I have no illusions. I am going to have to work very hard with my volunteer team, that you saw here tonight, to earn the support of Winnipeggers," Bowman said following a Thursday night campaign launch at RBC Convention Centre.

Motkalukalso said she's pleased by the Probe poll.

"That puts us within striking distance," she said Thursday in an interview ather Ness Avenue campaignoffice.

"For a first-term incumbent mayor to be only polling at 22 per cent, indicates to me thatWinnipeggersare looking for a change."

Mayoral candidate Jenny Motkaluk is the candidate of choice for 11 per cent of Winnipeg voters, a Probe Research poll suggests. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

The online Probe Research poll of 600 Winnipeg adults, recruited from a panel to reflect the general population, was conducted between Aug. 27 and 31. It has an error margin of four per cent.

The poll suggests seven other mayoral candidates Don Woodstock, Tim Diack, UmarHayat, Doug Wilson, Chris Clacio, Desmond Thomas and Venkat RaoMachiraju enjoy a combined total of five per cent support from Winnipeg voters.

A 10th mayoral candidate, Ed Ackerman, had yet to register prior when the poll was conducted.

Incumbent'sapproval down

Probe Research also asked voters about Bowman's performance as mayor and found his approval rating has slid over the past year.

The poll suggests 52 per cent of Winnipeggersstrongly or moderately approve of Bowman's performance, down from 59 per cent during the fall of 2017.

The percentage of Winnipeggers who strongly or moderately approve of Brian Bowman's performance has dropped since 2015, but his overall rating remains above 50 per cent. (CBC News Graphics)

"He's still at 52 per cent approval which is not bad in a city that is cranky about a lot of stuff," Welch said.

"We don't love him, we don't mind him, but we are open to other alternatives and I think to some degree the Portage and Main issue really has been a catalyst."

The same Probe Research poll found 67 per cent of Winnipeggersoppose reopening the intersection to pedestrians, something Bowman promised when he ran for mayor in 2014.

Bowman said he attributes the drop in his approval to some changes he's made at city hall, including the institution of growth fees.

"They've been difficult changes," he said. "You're going tohave people that are going to agree or disagree. One thing that I thinkWinnipeggersknow is that I've been working very hard and I've been honestaboutthe challenges Winnipeg faces and I'm going to continue to do that."

On mobile? Click here for the full poll.