Justin Trudeau is more unpopular than ever before
According to recent polls, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Liberal Party of Canada are facing unprecedented levels of unpopularity, which could lead to significant challenges for the party in the upcoming election.
The latest polling findings from Abacus Data showed only 22% of those surveyed by the public opinion firm still intended to vote for the Liberal Party in the next federal election.
National Post’s Tristin Hopper reported the Liberal Party’s latest vote share is the lowest that has been uncovered by Abacus Data since Justin Trudeau was elected PM in 2015.
Things aren’t looking good for Trudeau across Canada, but it is Québec that appears to be his party’s biggest problem following a large surge in support for the Bloc Québécois.
Pierre Poilievre’s Conservative Party is leading Trudeau’s Liberals in every other province and territory in the country by substantial margins, which does not bode well for the Liberals following the collapse of their supply-and-confidence deal with the New Democratic Party.
The Conservatives led the Liberals by 12 points in British Columbia, 17 points in Atlantic Canada, and 21 points in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Ontario according to Abacus Data's latest polling results.
The Conservatives found the most support in Alberta where they led the Liberal Party with a 46-point margin. The two parties were virtually tied in Québec at 23% and 24% of support.
The Conservative lead grew to 26 points ahead of the Liberals based on vote intention among those who are certain they will vote, which increased by 4 points from August.
The new polling also showed that Conservative support appeared to be strong with 62% of Conservative backers stating they would vote for the party “no matter what happens.”
In terms of leadership impressions, Trudeau’s negative impression grew to 61% and his positive sunk to 22%, putting his net score at -39, which Abacus Data noted was a new low for the Prime Minister.
Jagmeet Singh’s negative impression grew to 38% and his positive impression dropped to 29%. Singh's -9 net score was better than Trudeau’s but worse than Poilivere’s score.
Poilievre’s numbers remained largely unchanged. He dropped down to a 39% positive impression with Canadian voters and remained steady at a 35% negative impression, earning him a +4 negative score.
When it came to positivity about the country, survey respondents weren’t very optimistic and noted they did not want to reelect Trudeau and wanted a change in government.
Only 24% of people approve of the job that Trudeau’s government is doing while 62% of those surveyed disapproved, a figure that Abacus Data noted was a new all-time high.
An overwhelming majority of Canadians (86%) want overall change while 56% of people surveyed said that they believed there is a good alternative to Trudeau’s Liberal Party.
Abacus Data noted in a report on its latest polling findings that “only 14% of Canadians believe that Justin Trudeau and the Liberals deserve to be re-elected.” So according to the latest polling, Trudeau and the Liberals really could be in serious trouble.
“The Prime Minister and the Liberals come back to Parliament facing a population who wants change, is deeply unhappy with their performance, are no more optimistic about the direction of the country than when the summer started, and have never had as negative a view of the Prime Minister as it does today.” wrote Abacus Data CEO David Coletto.