Greens surge in volatile P.E.I. political poll - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:40 AM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Greens surge in volatile P.E.I. political poll

There has been a lot of movement in P.E.I. political allegiance in the last three months, according to the most recent poll from Corporate Research Associates.

Number of undecided voters down

There has been a lot of movement in P.E.I. political allegiance in the last three months, according to the most recent poll from Corporate Research Associates.

The poll shows the Green Party up and the Progressive Conservatives down. It also shows relatively large movements in Liberal and New Democrat support, but within the margin of error of the poll.

If an election were held today on Prince Edward Island, for which party would you vote?
November February
Liberal 37% 42%
Green 25% 34%
PC 28% 17%
NDP 11% 6%

The margin of error for decided voters was plus or minus 6.6 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

Liberal support is up compared to Novemberwhich keeps the party inits number one position.

Since 2016 the Greens and PCs have been battling back and forth for second place in the CRA poll.

The Progressive Conservatives had been bouncing aroundin the mid-20 per cent support range, before jumpingto 28 per cent in November.

Green support leapedahead of the PCs in February of last year and matched the Tories in May, before falling behind again for the final two CRA polls in 2017. The Greens took back second placewith a big increasein the February poll just released.

CRA CEO Don Mills says the Liberals are being challenged by the Greens.

"They've got a contest, obviously, with a party that's never had designs before on power, and now it's close," he said.

"Part of it has to do with continuing fairly high levels of dissatisfaction with the Liberal government, which has been nearly split in terms of satisfaction over the last year or so. So now we have a race with a new kid on the block."

A more decisive electorate

The number of undecided voters also appearsto have changed significantly.

That votehad been running steadily at about 25per cent for more than a year, and fellto 20per cent in February.

Leader preference in the poll was largely unchanged with Green Leader Peter Bevan-Bakerholding onto the top position, followed by Premier Wade MacLauchlan.

CRA reached 300 Islanders by telephone for the poll, from Feb. 2 to 28.

The margin of error for the poll wasplus or minus 5.7percentage points.