Selinger poor choice to keep as Manitoba NDP leader, poll finds - Action News
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Manitoba

Selinger poor choice to keep as Manitoba NDP leader, poll finds

The recent Manitoba NDP leadership contest did little to boost Premier Greg Selinger's popularity and the party's fortunes among the general public, according to a new poll.

Selinger poor choice to keep as Manitoba NDP leader, poll finds

10 years ago
Duration 1:56
The recent Manitoba NDP leadership contest did little to boost Premier Greg Selinger's popularity and the party's fortunes among the general public, according to a new poll.
The recent ManitobaNDP leadership contest did little to boost Premier Greg Selinger's popularity and the party's fortunesamong the general public, according to a new poll.
A significant number of Manitobans are questioning the collective wisdom of New Democratic Party members to keep Greg Selinger as leader and premier, according to a Probe Research poll. (Mark Blinch/Canadian Press)

Twoin five, or 40 per cent, of Manitoba adults think the New Democratsmade the wrong decision by voting tokeepSelinger as leader and premierin the March 8 leadership election, according toProbe Research, which conducted the poll.

Another 33 per cent think the party made the correct decision, seven per cent believe the choice of leader makes no difference on the party's fortunes, and20 per centhad no opinion or refused to say.

"This, as we all know, was an extraordinary leadership contest, and it really did nothing to help the NDP or elevate them in the public's eye," Probe Research president Scott MacKay said Monday.

Thepollalso found 42 percent of Manitobans believe the NDP is less likely to win the next election,which will be held April 19,2016,with Selinger as partyleader.

Only one in 10(11 per cent) believe the NDP islikely to defeat the Progressive Conservatives and Liberals.

The poll results suggestthe New Democrats are trailing in some must-win constituencies in suburban Winnipeg, including seatscurrently held by high-profile NDP MLAs such as Theresa Oswald, Erin Selby and Nancy Allan.

"It's a recent thing that they've done well in these suburban seats, and what it's starting to look like is that support is maybe crumbling or it's certainly threatened at this point," MacKay said.

Tories, Liberals gaining ground

Results of the survey showthe Progressive Conservatives are well ahead provincewidewith 44 per cent support of the 1,005 people surveyed.The NDP took 29 per cent and the Liberals are at 20 per cent.

Despite plenty of media interest at the NDP convention, the Conservatives are in the driver's seat when it comes to popularity, said Curtis Brown, a vice-president at ProbeResearch.

"The Tories still have a significant gap over the NDP and they would be likely to win the next election based on the numbers today," he said.

Party support withinWinnipeg alone pegs the Tories at 35 per cent, with the NDP close behind at 34 per cent and the Liberals at 24 per cent, according to the poll results.

"The Liberals, at 24 per cent in the city, is a new factor and that will be enough in many cases I think to act as a spoilerand to defeat NDP candidates who were elected last time when there was little Liberal support in the city,"MacKaysaid.

Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari says she realizesnot everyone knows her name yet, but she and the party are working on raising their profile.

"They may not see me in the media all the time, but where I am is on the ground," she said Monday.

"I focus on community events, I focus on meeting people on the ground. It's that grassroots approach, but it takes time."

The provincewide survey was conducted via telephone interviews conducted between March 17 and April 1, 2015, among a random and representative sampling of 1,005 adults.

The poll, commissioned by the Winnipeg Free Press, results havea 95 per cent certainty rate within+/- 3.1 percentagepoints of what it would've been if every adult in Manitobaweresurveyed.