panem-et-circenses
In the garden
- Joined
- May 26, 2021
- Messages
- 6,056
- Reaction score
- 9,314
“Two new polls by the Angus Reid Institute (ARI) and Abacus Data show that the Liberals would lose power if a general election were held today. The ARI poll indicates that the Conservatives lead the Liberals by 39% to 28%, a gap that has widened from 7 percentage points a year ago.”
“Worryingly for Mr Trudeau, the responses to the Abacus poll suggest that he is not especially disliked, but that voters are just tired of him.”
Eiu
Reuters
What seems not too long ago, possibly within the past ten or so years, Trudeau was a so-called media darling. Puff piece after puff piece, and generally favorable opinions of him, made it seem like the train would keep rolling forever. Today, however, the future looks bleak for the political powerhouse.
A.) Should his party consider a plan b?;
B.) if you voted Trudeau in the past, will you not be supporting him come next election time?;
C.) How can Justin combat political burnout?
I think the last question is a general question people ask. Usually the answer has to do with who you’re running against, which doesn’t bode well for Trudeau.
At the heart of the Liberals’ woes is public opinion of the prime minister, Mr Trudeau. He has had a net disapproval rating with the ARI since 2021, but this has widened from about 15 percentage points at the time of the last election to 33 percentage points in the most recent poll. Every province and every age cohort has a net negative view of Mr Trudeau, according to Abacus.
“Worryingly for Mr Trudeau, the responses to the Abacus poll suggest that he is not especially disliked, but that voters are just tired of him.”
Eiu
Reuters
What seems not too long ago, possibly within the past ten or so years, Trudeau was a so-called media darling. Puff piece after puff piece, and generally favorable opinions of him, made it seem like the train would keep rolling forever. Today, however, the future looks bleak for the political powerhouse.
A.) Should his party consider a plan b?;
B.) if you voted Trudeau in the past, will you not be supporting him come next election time?;
C.) How can Justin combat political burnout?
I think the last question is a general question people ask. Usually the answer has to do with who you’re running against, which doesn’t bode well for Trudeau.