What with the provincial election in New Brunswick, I thought it would be interesting to look at the current provincial scene.
The Liberals form government in 4 provinces:
British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec, Prince Edward Island
The Conservatives (or one of their aliases) form government in 4:
Alberta, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador
The NDP form government in 2:
Manitoba, Nova Scotia
Five provinces are going to the polls next year:
Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador.
According to the polls, after these elections, Ontario and Manitoba will fall to the Conservatives.
That brings the government count to 6 Conservative, 3 Liberal, and 1 NDP.
However, also according to the polls, the Liberals are behind the NDP in British Columbia and the PQ in Quebec. According to public opinion, then, the provinces stand at 6 Conservative, 3 NDP, and 1 Liberal - which is, incidentally, the province with the least population.
The provincial Liberals - relevance is SO overrated.
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Well that was embarassing...
The last polls of the New Brunswick campaign actually had the PC lead narrowing somewhat...ranging from 4 to 10 points. My rolling average had the PC lead on 7.44 points. David Alward's PCs actually ended up winning by 14.44 points. My projection called for 35 PCs, 19 Liberals, and 1 NDP. The actual result was a PC landslide, 42 to 13, with no NDP candidate elected.
In my defence, the polling conducted was wildly off.
In their defence, the last poll finished a week before election day.
Shawn Graham was the author of his own defeat. Proposing to sell the provincial power company to the separatist province was always going to be popular. Just ask Shawn.
Seriously, it wasn't so much that Alward ran a good campaign, as Graham shooting himself in the foot. Multiple times. All Alward had to do was demonstrate that he had at least normal intelligence. He already had an almost unbeatable advantage - he wasn't Shawn Graham.
Mr. Alward shouldn't drink too much in the coming days. He already has a provincial hangover to deal with, with the nearly $1 billion in debt Graham's government accumulated. He doesn't need a physical hangover on top of that.
Also, with 42 MLAs, Alward's going to have a hard time picking the cabinet. But then again, it's one of those problems you WANT to have, as opposed to the problem of whether to resign or not. Hi Shawn - er, rather - bye Shawn!
In my defence, the polling conducted was wildly off.
In their defence, the last poll finished a week before election day.
Shawn Graham was the author of his own defeat. Proposing to sell the provincial power company to the separatist province was always going to be popular. Just ask Shawn.
Seriously, it wasn't so much that Alward ran a good campaign, as Graham shooting himself in the foot. Multiple times. All Alward had to do was demonstrate that he had at least normal intelligence. He already had an almost unbeatable advantage - he wasn't Shawn Graham.
Mr. Alward shouldn't drink too much in the coming days. He already has a provincial hangover to deal with, with the nearly $1 billion in debt Graham's government accumulated. He doesn't need a physical hangover on top of that.
Also, with 42 MLAs, Alward's going to have a hard time picking the cabinet. But then again, it's one of those problems you WANT to have, as opposed to the problem of whether to resign or not. Hi Shawn - er, rather - bye Shawn!
Thursday, September 23, 2010
NB rolling average: 7.44 point PC lead
I've finally bothered to stick the polling figures into the rolling average calculator, with all the proper weighting for date, accuracy, repeats, and sample size, so these will hopefully be more representative of New Brunswick opinion. The gap seems to have narrowed somewhat in recent days, but the PCs are still comfortably ahead:
PC - 44.85% - 35 seats
Lib - 37.41% - 19 seats
NDP - 10.47% - 1 seat
Green - 5.53%
Alliance - 0.87%
Other - 0.86%
Politically Uncorrect is still projecting a
PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE MAJORITY
PC - 44.85% - 35 seats
Lib - 37.41% - 19 seats
NDP - 10.47% - 1 seat
Green - 5.53%
Alliance - 0.87%
Other - 0.86%
Politically Uncorrect is still projecting a
PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE MAJORITY
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
NB rolling average: 9 point PC lead
The rather unsophisticated simple 5-poll rolling average has sent both major parties downwards some, but the story is pretty much the same:
PC - 46% - 36 seats
Lib - 37% - 18 seats
NDP - 10% - 1 seat
Green - 5%
Alliance - 1%
It's still a
PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE MAJORITY.
PC - 46% - 36 seats
Lib - 37% - 18 seats
NDP - 10% - 1 seat
Green - 5%
Alliance - 1%
It's still a
PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE MAJORITY.
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Triple Crown update
It's election day in Sweden and the final polls have been released...so one final update:
The Alliance - 49-52% (175-189)
Red-Greens - 43-46% (153-167)
Sweden Democrats - 3-6% (0-21)
Since the Alliance's confidence interval lies completely above the majority line (175 seats), Politically Uncorrect projects an
ALLIANCE MAJORITY.
The Alliance - 49-52% (175-189)
Red-Greens - 43-46% (153-167)
Sweden Democrats - 3-6% (0-21)
Since the Alliance's confidence interval lies completely above the majority line (175 seats), Politically Uncorrect projects an
ALLIANCE MAJORITY.
Friday, September 17, 2010
NB rolling average: 10 point PC lead
Minor changes to the 5-day rolling average:
PC - 48% (+1)
Lib - 38% (-1)
NDP - 9% (=)
Green - 4% (=)
PA - < 1% (=)
This incremental move serves to move the seat projections incrementally:
PC - 37
Lib - 17
NDP - 1
PC - 48% (+1)
Lib - 38% (-1)
NDP - 9% (=)
Green - 4% (=)
PA - < 1% (=)
This incremental move serves to move the seat projections incrementally:
PC - 37
Lib - 17
NDP - 1
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
New Brunswick 2010
Now for something closer to home: New Brunswick is renewing its legislature on Monday the 27th, and CRA has been kind enough to grace us with a daily tracking poll ever since the campaign began.
New Brunswick's legislature is composed of 55 members, and the main parties are the governing Liberals and the opposition PCs. The NDP lies a distant third, and the Greens almost a non-factor. A new party, the People's Alliance, has yet to break out of 0% in the CRA polls, so this will be their last mention on this blog, for now.
The election began very very close, with the two major parties exchanging the lead, and the first 4 days, the gap was never bigger than 1%. The Liberals then managed to hang on to this razor-thin lead for a few days, until on September 7, the PCs tied it up. Immediately a day after, the PCs regained the lead, and after that the wheels fell off the Liberal bus.
There was a leader's debate last night, but since people need time to evaluate leader's performances, we'll probably get a sense of how the debate influenced voting intention tomorrow or Friday. Currently, though, the figures stand at:
PC - 49%
Lib - 37%
NDP - 10%
Green - 4%
The 5-poll average is:
PC - 47%
Lib - 39%
NDP - 9%
Green - 4%
The projection for these numbers:
PC - 36 seats
Lib - 18 seats
NDP - 1 seat
Usual caveats apply: the projection can only be as good as the poll numbers plugged in, but for now, Politically Uncorrect projects a PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE MAJORITY.
New Brunswick's legislature is composed of 55 members, and the main parties are the governing Liberals and the opposition PCs. The NDP lies a distant third, and the Greens almost a non-factor. A new party, the People's Alliance, has yet to break out of 0% in the CRA polls, so this will be their last mention on this blog, for now.
The election began very very close, with the two major parties exchanging the lead, and the first 4 days, the gap was never bigger than 1%. The Liberals then managed to hang on to this razor-thin lead for a few days, until on September 7, the PCs tied it up. Immediately a day after, the PCs regained the lead, and after that the wheels fell off the Liberal bus.
There was a leader's debate last night, but since people need time to evaluate leader's performances, we'll probably get a sense of how the debate influenced voting intention tomorrow or Friday. Currently, though, the figures stand at:
PC - 49%
Lib - 37%
NDP - 10%
Green - 4%
The 5-poll average is:
PC - 47%
Lib - 39%
NDP - 9%
Green - 4%
The projection for these numbers:
PC - 36 seats
Lib - 18 seats
NDP - 1 seat
Usual caveats apply: the projection can only be as good as the poll numbers plugged in, but for now, Politically Uncorrect projects a PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE MAJORITY.
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