Government has exited highway hell and hopes to pass on the right.
by Bill Tieleman
"The consequences of our actions are so complicated, so diverse, that predicting the future is a very difficult business indeed."
– JK Rowling, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
Polling provides a political roadmap to all parties but there's no guarantee the streets it shows now will even exist by the May 2013 provincial election. Nonetheless, the BC Liberals appear to have finally exited the highway to electoral hell they have been zooming down for months.
The BC New Democrats under leader Adrian Dix are still racing on the political equivalent of the no-speed-limit Autobahn, but have started glancing in their rear view mirror to see if Premier Christy Clark has any chance of catching up.
The poll gives Clark a faint hope clause of winning, but with a disapproval rating of 60 percent versus an approval of just 29 percent and a momentum score of negative 36 percent, there’s no champagne on ice.
And the BC Conservatives' early jackrabbit start towards opposition party contender status with new leader John Cummins has ended with their vehicle in the ditch, while BC Greens' leader Jane Sterk's eco-hybrid silently follows.
Those conclusions are drawn from Angus Reid Public Opinion's latest BC poll, which puts Clark’s BC Liberals up three points at 29 percent, the BC NDP down two at a still lofty 47 percent, the BC Conservatives fading four to 12 percent and the Greens up one to nine percent.
The poll gives Clark a faint hope clause of winning, but with a disapproval rating of 60 percent versus an approval of just 29 percent and a momentum score of negative 36 percent, there's no champagne on ice.
Dix holds a commanding 48 percent approval rating against 34 percent disapproval, a clear lead in every BC region and a momentum score of positive seven percent, but the poll shows he has reasons to be concerned about fading in the final stretch.
Angus Reid pollster Mario Canseco said in an interview with this reporter that with 21 percent of respondents saying they don’t see any of the four party leaders as making the best premier and another 27 percent not yet sure, voters are volatile.
Canseco said that even a battered BC Conservative Party drawing eight percent of the vote in several northern and interior ridings could mean NDP victories over incumbent BC Liberals in close races.
"The fact that we're six months from a campaign and people who say they don't know or none of the above totals 48 percent — that's problematic," Canseco says.
But this and previous polls show the NDP with a significant advantage over the struggling Liberals, he added.
"The NDP have premier-in-waiting approval levels for Dix," Canseco said. "There's a level of commitment for an opposition party that we don't see anywhere else in the country. That's what makes it compelling and unique."
Canseco says the NDP must resist the temptation to believe the election is "in the bag" and say nothing about what it would do in government.
"They need to provide a vision consistent with what people expect of you but keep the centrist votes," he said.
And while Canseco warns that the NDP's challenge to maintain its big lead is still significant, he says the Liberals' situation is daunting.
"The problem the BC Liberals have is one of connection. You can't just say, 'We don't want to go back to the 1990s,'" Canseco says. "It's not the way to win the election."
"New voters, younger voters, those from outside BC or Canada don't know about when the NDP was in power in the 1990s."
But Canseco also says the Liberals have one big advantage — incumbency. The Liberals can actually do things while the NDP can only make promises.
"It's a matter of engagement — when you're in government you can do that," he said.
To add to the NDP worries, the BC Liberals have also narrowed the gap in Metro Vancouver — the region with 38 of the province's 85 seats — to nine percent, with the NDP at 42 percent the Liberals at 33 percent, Conservatives at 13 percent and Greens at 9 percent plus 3 percent independent or other.
And Dix only has a one percent margin over Clark as the leader best suited to deal with the economy — which the poll says BC voters believe is the most important issue facing the province, ranked at 26 percent versus 17 percent for health care, 12 percent for leadership and 10 percent for the environment.
Lastly, in what could be a funny punch line, the BC Liberals hold a solid lead in just one of the large range of demographic statistics used to analyze public opinion — they are clearly the choice of the "rich."
Those earning over $100,000 a year in household income favour the BC Liberals by a 47 percent to 34 percent for the NDP.
But Canseco makes a fascinating point: $100,000 plus households make up about 27-28 percent of the total sample in the poll. That's not a small category. And of course, two professionals making $51,000 each puts them into that demographic.
Nonetheless, the BC Liberals are in serious trouble, with a massive 24 percent gender gap with women voters.
What's more, Canseco says, both the NDP and the BC Conservatives are equally stealing the BC Liberals' former voters.
While the NDP is retaining a huge 89 percent of their 2009 election voters, the Liberals are only keeping 62 percent of their supporters, with 16 percent going to the NDP and 16 percent to the Conservatives.
So Christy Clark's urgent pleas to restore the "free enterprise coalition" under the BC Liberal banner has fallen on deaf ears.
Canseco says the simple math of adding the BC Conservatives' votes to the BC Liberals to re-elect Clark is faulty.
"It's not at simple as that," Canseco said, making a point that Martyn Brown, former premier Gordon Campbell's chief of staff, has also written about.
In fact, adding the Conservatives' entire current 12 percent to the Liberals 29 percent equals 41 percent to the NDP's 47 percent. And John Cummins doesn’t plan to close their doors and give up.
Still, the big question facing the BC Conservatives isn't a merger with the BC Liberals they have already rejected — but whether they have bottomed out after a brutal two months of defections, insurrection and bad press.
"You can't even pretend to be the official opposition with all of this happening," Canseco says, referring to the damage done by ex-Liberal cabinet minister John van Dongen's loud departure after a few months as the only BC Conservative MLA, followed by other party members quitting the party, some to join the BC Liberals.
But Canseco says even a battered BC Conservative Party drawing eight percent of the vote in several northern and interior ridings could mean NDP victories over incumbent BC Liberals in close races.
And John Cummins continues to tour the province, going to ridings like Peace River South, where despite its troubles the party has a strongly contested nomination battle this week between two notable candidates.
So while the poll gives measures of both hope and fear to all parties, it's what they do with that road map to correct their course that really matters on May 14, 2013.
© Copyright 2012 Bill Tieleman, All rights Reserved. Written For: StraightGoods.ca
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