We'll start with the latter's poll, which shows a widening gap between the Progressive Conservatives and the Liberals.
The Greens and People's Alliance are unchanged at 6% and 1%, respectively.
The number of undecideds continues to reduce, and is now at 20% of the electorate.
David Alward has reached his own personal high, with 32% of New Brunswickers saying he is the best man for the premiership. That's up three points from yesterday, and represents about 47% of decideds. Shawn Graham, meanwhile, is down two points to 24%, or 35% of decideds.
Roger Duguay is at 6%, up one, while Jack MacDougall is at 5%, also up one. Kris Austin is unchanged at 1%.
Now the poll from Abacus, which shows the race as being far closer than what CRA has found recently.
Abacus has the Progressive Conservatives at 42%, four points ahead of the Liberals at 38%. The New Democrats are at 11%, while the Greens are at 6% and the People's Alliance is at 2%. Abacus found that 17% of the electorate is undecided.
This poll also looked at the opinions of New Brunswickers on Shawn Graham's now abandoned idea of selling NB Power. Fully 61% disagreed (either somewhat or strongly) with the decision, compared to only 28% who agreed. Abacus also looked at whether this was a factor in their decision on how they would vote, and it was for about a third of New Brunswickers. So, undoubtedly it is one of the things driving the Liberal struggle.
As for the projection, I have given Abacus Data an accuracy weight of 0.50, as they are a new pollster (CRA has a weight of 1.21). After the New Brunswick election, I will be able to give them a rating based on how close they end up calling the vote.
For the popular vote, the Progressive Conservatives are unchanged at 44.5%, but the Liberals are down 0.6 to 39.5%. The New Democrats are up 0.3 points to 10.0% and the Greens are up 0.1 to 4.3%. The People's Alliance and independents are up 0.1 to 1.6%.
Without another poll from Abacus to determine a trend, we can't say that the Abacus poll refutes the findings from CRA, who show a significant lead for the PCs and one that is relatively stable. Abacus shows a lead outside of the MOE for David Alward, but a closer race. What Abacus does confirm is the level of support for the second and third tier parties and that the Liberals are well below where they need to be to avoid being the province's first one-term government.
I have to say that I'm shocked at the sheer volume of polling in this NB provincial election. When you consider how small a province it is and how low the stakes are - its odd to have a daily tracking program the entire duration of the race, plus 10 riding polls, plus a couple of stand alone polls by CRA and Abacus...There was nothing like this in the Nova Scotia election last year and that was a three way race in a larger province. Even the BC election last year had no where this amount of polling. I just don't get it. A daily tracking program costs major money and i find it hard to imagine that cash-strapped newspapers in NB would be willing to shell out that kind of coin.
ReplyDeleteApparently they are. But I think this is a sign of things to come. When you look at how much polling was done in the past, there is just so much more being done today. Just look at the success of sites like FiveThirtyEight or Real Clear Politics or, I humbly suggest, ThreeHundredEight.
ReplyDeleteI don't think it is a coincidence that newspapers and other media outlets are commissioning more polls. People want to read them, and they are usually the most read articles on a newspaper website.
For example, on the Telegraph-Journal website three of the five most popular stories are poll-related.
It helps to remember that the owners of the T-J are not disinterested observers in this campaign.
ReplyDeleteFor example, the T-J's online edition curiously doesn't carry stories that show the Tories well out ahead (like today). They are available only in the print edition. Moreover, today's paper carried two poll stories, one about their poll, the other about the CBC poll. However, when the T-J's poll focused on decided voters (showing the Tories 10% ahead) the story about the CBC poll included undecided voters, allowing the T-J to say the Tories were only 5% ahead. In fact, both polls had similar undecided levels (T-J 43%, CBC 40%). But in both polls, the Tory-Grit spread among decided voters was the same, 10%.
You'll just never get the T-J to admit it.