Campaign notebook: they’re going to lose. Then what?
What if the Conservatives lose?
Every poll, just about, now suggests they will. The seat projections are worse. Even the polls that describe a very tight race – like Mainstreet – project a Mark Carney Liberal majority.
Polls are a snapshot in time, the saying goes, and they are. So, politicos pay attention instead to the trendline: that is, what a number of polls – over a longish period of time and asking substantially the same groups of people substantially similar questions – have to say. That’s the trendline.
The trendline, for Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives, has been very grim indeed. Since the departure of Justin Trudeau, and the return of Donald Trump, the Poilievre Tories have presided over one of the most astonishing polling freefalls in living memory.
In January, not so long ago, the Conservatives were enjoying extraordinary popularity. Their lead over the Liberals seemed insurmountable: 26 points with Ipsos, 24 with Angus Reid. Abacus and Innovative, 21 points. Leger – the outfit that was the most accurate in recent federal elections – pegged their lead at 18 points.
It was the stuff of political fairytales. It meant that Poilievre was on track to win one of the biggest – if not the biggest – Parliamentary majorities in Canadian history.
And then, everything changed.
As in all things political, it’s never one thing that kills you. It’s a multiplicity of things: Trump hello, Trudeau goodbye, 51st state, tariffs. Add to that the ascension of Mark Carney to the Liberal throne – and the Conservatives’ stubborn refusal to adjust their strategy accordingly – and you have a formula for disaster.
From the heady days of a near-30-point lead to now: the Liberals ahead three points with Ipsos, and five points with Reid. Abacus, three points. Leger showing four points – and Reid showing the Grits with crushing leads in the seat-abundant cities of Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal.
How did this happen? Poilievre and his chief strategist, Jenni Byrne, have a run a tight, disciplined campaign. They had candidate bimbo eruptions, yes, but so did everyone else. Truly, Poilievre and Byrne didn’t make many big mistakes. At all.
It is easy to understand, then, the crushing disappointment the Tories now feel: they have effectively lost 30 percentage points in a matter of weeks. That has never really happened before, as noted.
So, what happens now?
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