Provincial Uprising


Angus Reid has updated their Premier approval numbers from November and it’s not rosy – only 2 of the 10 Premiers crack the 30% approval barrier.

And suddenly, Stephen Harper’s underwhelming poll numbers start looking a lot more whelming by comparison. The man has struggled of late and may spend his life chasing an unobtainable majority, but at a time when voters are P.O.’d at governments coast-to-coast, he’s still Canadians’ top choice for Prime Minister.

The Premiers

Danny Williams 80% approve, 11% disapprove
Brad Wall 56% approve, 24% disapprove
Greg Selinger 27% approve, 28% disapprove
Darrel Dexter 23% approve, 53% disapprove
Gordon Campbell 23% approve, 60% disapprove
Jean Charest 22% approve, 53% disapprove
Dalton McGuinty 21% approve, 52% disapprove
Ed Stelmach 16% approve, 62% disapprove
Shawn Graham 15% approve, 62% disapprove

Despite his American vacation, Danny Williams towers over the field. 80%? Crap, I’m not sure Sidney Crosby could get that. The scary thing is, 80% is on the low side compared to other recent polls.

More and more, Danny is looking like this generation’s Ralph Klein – he could choke 101 puppies to death in the Legislative Assembly and voters would shrug and say “that’s just Danny being Danny“. Because, after all, even puppies don’t get 80% approval ratings, no matter how cute they are.

What’s remarkable is that Williams has done it without the same partisan foundation Klein stood on – it’s not like Newfoundland is an ultra-Conservative province, after all. I don’t know how he does it, but if you could bottle Danny Williams, a teaspoon of him a day would turn anyone into a contender.

The news is less good for Danny’s fellow Atlantic Canadians, who could certainly use a teaspoon or two of the Williams magic.

The biggest loser since November is Nova Scotia’s Darrell Dexter, who has seen a 20 point swing in his numbers, most likely due to a series of expense claim scandals. Let this be a cautionary tale to all you kids out there on the dangers of experimenting with NDP governments.

Shawn Graham is now less popular than Ed Stelmach, which tells you all you all you need to know about how the New Brunswick Hydro sale has gone over. The weird thing is, you can’t count Graham out in the upcoming election (likely this September) – a recent poll has him just 6 points down. The same holds true for equally unpopular McGuinty, Charest, and Stelmach.

No matter how cruddy the job of “Premier” has become, it still beats “opposition leader”.

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