Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Canada: "The Progressives", a Fiction

A green maple leaf, recoloured from Image:Cons...Image via Wikipedia
So I'm looking at the newest EKOS numbers - they have a few extra parameters this week. I've been considering a particular fiction that crops up every now and then: the idea that more unity existed on the left side of the spectrum. I'm not talking about some grand coalition or merger between the Liberals and the NDP; considering the Liberals to be what Trudeau once called the 'radical middle', I consider the three mainstream parties that have left-of-centre platforms (regardless of the political alliegances of their supporters): the NDP, the Bloc Québécois and the Green Party.



Let's consider a particular fiction: that these three parties somehow merged and shed no support to other parties. Would it affect the political landscape? Wow, would it ever:

  • Nationwide, the Progressives have a slight lead over the Conservatives at 35.5% to 34.4%. The Liberals trail at 27.8%.
  • In BC, the Conservatives have a slight lead, at 40.9% to the Progressives' 38.7%. The Liberals are far behind at 16.3% (though British Columbians are to pollsters as Samoans are to anthropologists).
  • 'Fortress Alberta' remains firmly in Conservative hands with an amazing 61.8%. The Progressives and the Liberals are far behind at 19.9% and 15.0%.
  • The Prairies are also safe for the Conservatives, with 45.0%. The Progressives are in second at 30.7%, with the Liberals trailing at 20.2%.
  • Ontario is a tight race between the Conservatives at 37.8% and the Liberals at 37.3%. The Progressives trail at 23.8%.
  • 'Fortress Québec' remains firmly in Progressive hands, with a remarkable 59.8%. The Liberals and the Conservatives trail at 24.0% and 13.7% respectively.
  • Atlantic Canada has the Liberals out front at 37.0%, but it's a rather tight race, with the Progressives polling second at 33.7% and the Conservatives at third at 26.9%.
  • Urban centres look like the following:
    • Vancouver: CPC 43.6%, Prog 34.0%, Libs 16.5%
    • Calgary: CPC 57.6%, Libs 22.0%, Prog 16.0%
    • Toronto: Libs 44.4%, CPC 35.8%, Prog 17.9%
    • Ottawa: Libs 37.5%, CPC 35.0%, Prog 27.5%
    • Montréal: Prog 62.6%, Libs 27.2%, CPC 8.1%
  • The gender gap is strong.
    • Nationwide, the Conservatives lead among men at 40.0% to the Progressives' 32.4% and the Liberals' 25.8%.
    • Women, on the other hand, put the Progressives ahead at 38.6% with the Liberals in second at 29.9% and the Conservatives in third at 28.5%
  • Huge gaps surround age too.
    • Under 25s have the Progressives at 45.1 to the Liberals' and Conservatives' 26.5% and 25.4%.
    • The 25-44 age group also has the Progressives in the lead at 38.6%, but the Conservatives overtake the Liberals 31.8% to 27.1%.
    • In the 45-64 group, the Conservatives overtake the Progressives 36.3% to 34.8%. The Liberals trail at 26.7%.
    • In the 65+ group, the Conservatives are well in the lead at 41.8%. The Liberals pass the Progressives 32.4% to 24.1%.
  • Country of birth matters as well.
    • Canadian-born Canadians have the Progressives ahead at 38.0%, with the Conservatives at 32.8% and the Liberals in the basement at 26.2%.
    • Foreign-born Canadians put the Liberals in the lead, however, with 38.1% to the Conservatives' 31.4%. The Progressives trail at 27.8%.
  • Education also makes a significant difference.
    • People with no post-secondary education put the Conservatives and the Progressives almost exactly equal, at 38.3% and 38.0% respectively. The Liberals trail at 20.7%.
    • People with a college or CEGEP education are similar, though they push the Progressives ahead at 36.4% to the Conservatives' 34.5%. The Liberals again trail at 25.7%.
    • Among university grads, though, the split is effectively three-way, with the Liberals at a slight lead with 33.8% over 33.2% for the Progressives. The Conservatives keep it tight at 31.9%

Quite interesting, no? Considering it this way shows a rough three-way split nationwide but all kids of variation across demographics. Looking at these stats a little more graphically, in each case I'm forgetting the numbers and just looking at the one-two-three positions, colouring them blue for Conservatives,  red for Liberals and green for the theoretical Progressives:
  • #1, #2, #3: Nationwide
  • #1, #2, #3: BC
  • #1, #2, #3: Alberta
  • #1, #2, #3: Prairies
  • #1, #2, #3: Ontario
  • #1, #2, #3: Québec
  • #1, #2, #3: Atlantic
  • #1, #2, #3: Vancouver
  • #1, #2, #3: Calgary
  • #1, #2, #3: Toronto
  • #1, #2, #3: Ottawa
  • #1, #2, #3: Montréal
  • #1, #2, #3: Men
  • #1, #2, #3: Women
  • #1, #2, #3: Under 25
  • #1, #2, #3: 25-44 years old
  • #1, #2, #3: 45-64 years old
  • #1, #2, #3: 65+
  • #1, #2, #3: Canadian-born
  • #1, #2, #3: Foreign-born
  • #1, #2, #3: High school
  • #1, #2, #3: College / CEGEP
  • #1, #2, #3: University grads
Or, what is probably a better way to view this whole mess:

  • #1, #2, #3: Nationwide, 25-44 years old, Canadian-born, College / CEGEP
  • #1, #2, #3: BC, Alberta, Prairies, Vancouver, Men, 45-64 years old, High school
  • #1, #2, #3: Ontario, Calgary, Toronto, Ottawa, 65+, Foreign-born
  • #1, #2, #3: Québec, Montréal, Women, Under 25
  • #1, #2, #3: Atlantic, University grad
There is no demographic ranking Liberals first, Conservatives second and Progressives third.

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