Vote Compass: Stephen Harper seen performing well in French-language debate - Action News
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Vote Compass: Stephen Harper seen performing well in French-language debate

People inside and outside Quebec had starkly differing impressions of who won the French-language debate on Thursday, according to results from Vote Compass.

Gilles Duceppe also did well at least according to Quebecers

Quebecers and non-Quebecers alike thought Conservative Leader Stephen Harper performed well in the French-language debate. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Inside and outside Quebec, those who watched the French-language debate on Thursday had starkly differing impressions of who won.

But both groups agreed Conservative Leader Stephen Harper put in a good performance, according to results from Vote Compass, CBC's online voter engagement survey.

Among Quebec respondents, more consideredBloc Qubcois Leader Gilles Duceppethe winner ofthe Sept. 24 debate, with Harper getting the secondmost votes.

Non-Quebecers, however, handed it to Harper and in fact thought Duceppe performed the poorest of the five candidates.

The results are based on 11,276 respondents who participated in Vote Compass between Sept. 24 and Sept. 25.

InsideQuebec, 29 per cent thought Duceppe won the debate, followed by Harper (20 per cent), NDP Leader Tom Mulcair (18 per cent), Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau (eight per cent) and Green Party Leader Elizabeth May (three per cent), according to the Vote Compass results.

Twenty-three per cent didn't have an opinion about who won.

The results looked different outside the province, where 31 per cent thought Harper won the debate, followed closely by Trudeau (30 per cent), Mulcair (18 per cent), May (five per cent) and Duceppe (two per cent).

Thirteen per cent didn't say.

Animated debate

The French-language debate on Sept. 24 was the first debate in this election that featured all five party leaders. (Christinne Muschi/Canadian Press)

The debate, which took place in Montreal, was the first French-language debate of the campaign, as well as the first to include all five party leaders.

It was considerably more animated than the first two English-language debates, and featured a fair bit of crosstalk.

While the leaders argued over a range of topics, some of the most significant clashes centred on the issues of religious accommodation, Quebec sovereignty and stewardship of the economy.

Mulcair, whose party has been leading in the polls in Quebec, came under fire during the debate from both Duceppe and Harper for defending the idea that a woman should be allowed to wear a facial covering while taking the citizenship test.

Elizabeth May, whose command of French is acknowledged to be the weakest among the leaders, had one of the most memorable quips of the night, when she exclaimed, "What is the impact of the niqab on the economy? What is the impact of the niqab on climate change? What is the impact of the niqab on the jobless? It is a false debate meant as a distraction from the real challenges for Canada."

The Vote Compass results for the debate were also polarized when broken down by the first language of the respondent.

Thirty-six per cent of English speakers thought Harper won the debate, 26 per cent of French speakers thought Duceppe won and 31 per cent of those who specified another language thought Trudeau won.


Developed by a team of social and statistical scientists from Vox Pop Labs, VoteCompass is a civic engagement application offered in Canada exclusively by CBC News. The results are based on 11,276 respondents who participated in Vote Compass between Sept. 24 and Sept. 25.

Unlike opinion polls,respondents to Vote Compass are not randomly selected. Similar to opinion polls,however, the data are a non-random sample from the population and havebeen weighted in order to approximate a representativesample. Vote Compassdata have been weighted by geography, gender, age, educational attainment,occupation, religion, religiosity and civic engagement to ensure the sample'scomposition reflects that of the actual population of Canada according to censusdata and other population estimates.