Posted on 02/18/2017 11:23:04 AM PST by SouthernerFromTheNorth
Kellie Leitch is now the first choice for over one-fifth of Conservative party members, passing Maxime Bernier and nipping at the heels of an increasingly polarizing Kevin OLeary campaign, according to the latest iPolitics CPC Leadership Tracker powered by Mainstreet Research.
Mainstreet reached 804 members between February 9 and 12 and found with a margin of error of +/- 3.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20 that Kevin OLeary was the first choice for 22.01 per cent of members, followed by Leitch (20.90 per cent), and Bernier (17.54 per cent).
The first leadership poll, conducted between January 5 and February 3, sampling 5,487 Conservative members, had OLeary at 24.5 per cent, Bernier at 16.55 per cent, and Leitch at 10.83.
At the same time, the number of undecided members is up from 10.6 per cent to 11.8.
Even taking into account the margin of error, Leitch has surged. Mainstreet Research president Quito Maggi thinks Leitchs rise could have to do with the heated debate over the Liberals Islamophobia motion and President Donald Trumps travel ban.
Having stood firm despite the backlash against her policy proposal to screen every immigrant and visitor to Canada for Canadian values, Leitch is now benefiting from the support of members who are most worried about immigration.
As iPolitics reported earlier this week, almost seven in 10 Leitch supporters are in favour of a Canadian version of Trumps embattled executive order banning citizens from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States.
Because she has been the one to plant her flag firmly on that (values) policy, anyone whos now of like mind is returning to Kellie Leitch, Maggi said. This is a seismic shift. This is now a three-way race.
Arguably a more a troubling finding for the OLeary campaign, however, is the rise in the number of Conservative party members who rank him as their last choice.
The most dramatic number out of this is in the least likely, where OLeary now leads. This really represents a turning point. Kellie Leitch has led that number from the beginning of January all the way to February 3, when we stopped the initial sample, Maggi said.
Now, for OLeary to be leading this category, its huge. Hes still the frontrunner, but its more the implication of what does it do to his growth possibility? This is a common frontrunner phenomenon.
OLeary is now the last choice for 22.09 per cent of members, whereas Leitch is the last choice for 21.12 per cent.
This poll, however, was conducted before the leadership debate Monday night in which OLeary declared the new Conservative party was going to be pro-choice, pro-marijuana legalization and an ardent defender of the LGBTQI community.
God only knows what the next numbers are going to reflect after Conservatives have had time to digest OLearys positions whether ideologically hes now pushing away more Conservative members than attracting, Maggi said.
Maggi added that hes been told the final membership is likely to be somewhere between 150,000 to 180,000 60,000 to 90,000 of them new members.
Leaderships are not big-tent campaigns. Leaderships are small-tent campaigns, Maggi said.
For OLeary to have chance of winning this on one of the first couple of ballots, hes going to have to sell an overwhelming majority of those new memberships, because it looks for now like the existing membership base is turning against him.
Since the Conservative leadership race allocates 100 points to each riding, regardless of its number of members, that overall member support number does need to be considered along with the first-ballot preference as a percentage of points.
This polls smaller sample size did not allow for that, but subsequent polls will.
The iPolitics CPC Leadership Tracker, powered by Mainstreet, will be tracking the Conservative leadership race until members pick the next leader on May 27. For additional information on methodology and to subscribe to in-depth updates, click here.
Leitch (particularly on nationalism) and O'Leary (particularly on anti-elitism) are considered the most Trump-like candidates. Bernier is considered the libertarian in the race, somewhat like Rand Paul.
Wonder if the Canadian polls are as bad as ours
It will be interesting to see which way Canada turns. I hope they opt for security, sovereignty, and keeping Canada for Canadians rather than having it invaded by third-worlders.
I think the rash of Islamic illegals from the US have strengthened the hand of the nationalist wing.
Steven Blaney also has views of nationalism, but he’s overshadowed by Leitch and I expect he will drop to her for the second ballot (he’d likely get a top cabinet post under a future PM Leitch in 2019 if things go that way though).
How I would classify the candidates:
Compromise candidates: Andrew Scheer, Chris Alexander, Erin O’Toole
Libertarian: Maxime Bernier
Red Tories (think RINOs): Deepak Obhrai, Lisa Raitt, Michael Chong
Social conservatives: Brad Trost, Pierre Lemieux
Trump-ish nationalists: Kellie Leitch, Steven Blaney
Wildcard outsier: Kevin O’Leary
Fringe candidates: Andrew Saxton, Rick Peterson
Kevin O’Leary? Mr. Wonderful from Shark Tank?
Oh, I was thinking “E-lec-tric-al Ba-na-na.”
Correct!
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