British Columbia

B.C. NDP well ahead of its rivals, poll suggests

The B.C. NDP is holding a comfortable lead with 41 per cent support among those polled, while the B.C. Conservatives follow with 30 per cent. Kevin Falcon’s rebranded B.C. United have 16 per cent support while the B.C. Greens have 11 per cent.

Official Opposition B.C. United in third place: Angus Reid Institute

A composite image of four portraits: three white men and one white woman.
Composite illustration featuring B.C. NDP Leader David Eby, left, B.C. United Leader Kevin Falcon, centre left, B.C. Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau, centre right, and B.C. Conservatives Leader John Rustad. A new Angus Reid poll puts Eby's B.C. NDP well ahead of its rivals. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press, Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press, Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press, Dirk Meissner/The Canadian Press)

On the heels of failed merger talks between British Columbia's two right-of-centre parties, a new Angus Reid poll puts the governing B.C. NDP well ahead of its rivals, and the Official Opposition, B.C. United, in third place. 

The B.C. NDP is holding a comfortable lead with 41 per cent support among those polled, while the B.C. Conservatives follow with 30 per cent. Kevin Falcon's rebranded B.C. United have 16 per cent support while the B.C. Greens have 11 per cent.

"So on the surface, the NDP continues to hold a strong, comfortable lead, 11 points over their next place challenger, the B.C. Conservatives," said Shachi Kurl, president of the Angus Reid Institute.

B.C. United, however, is "continuing to just absolutely bleed support to the B.C. Conservative Party," Kurl said.  

The online survey polled a representative randomized sample of 1,203 British Columbians between May 24 and 27. The margin of error of is +/- 3 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

Despite the popularity surge for the B.C. Conservatives, party leader John Rustad remains a bit of an unknown to a wide swath of the electorate, Kurl said. More than half of those surveyed, or 54 per cent, could not identify Rustad in a photo.

A middle-aged man stands at a podium wearing a black suit and black-framed glasses.
An Angus Reid poll found more than half of those surveyed, or 54 per cent, could not identify B.C. Conservative Party Leader John Rustad in a photo. (Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press)


By contrast, 59 per cent of those surveyed successfully identified Falcon while 70 per cent recognized Premier David Eby as the leader of the B.C. NDP. 

"So from a branding perspective, from a voter recognition perspective, if you're two people [Rustad and Falcon] more or less fighting for a significant chunk of the same voter base and people don't know that guy from that guy, that's going to be a problem," Kurl said.

The Angus Reid poll showed 54 per cent of those surveyed had an unfavourable view of Falcon while 44 per cent had a negative impression of Rustad. Eby, meanwhile, had a 45 per cent approval rating.

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Falcon has faced criticism for the party's sagging polling numbers following last year's decision to rebrand from the B.C. Liberals to B.C. United.

A new website, resignkevin.ca, is urging Falcon to step down, calling him the "biggest impediment to a free enterprise co-operation agreement."

Asked about the polling results Thursday, Falcon reiterated that he believes recent polls are unreliable and do not reflect the real political landscape.

"As people start to pay more attention to the choices coming up in the next election, they're going to have a choice between a mainstream party with a track record of governance that delivered great projects and great fiscal outcomes for British Columbia … against the party of the extreme left led by David Eby and the extreme right social conservative party led by John Rustad," Falcon said. "And I think given those choices, I like our odds."

The latest poll follows news last week that backroom merger talks between B.C. United and B.C. Conservatives had collapsed.  

Rustad rejected B.C. United's offer of a non-competition agreement, which would have seen the parties agree not to run candidates in key ridings to avoid splitting right-of-centre voters. 

Once a deal was off the table, Falcon went on the attack, saying last week that the B.C. Conservatives have assembled a "clown car of candidates that aren't ready to govern."

This week, the B.C. Conservative's candidate for Courtenay-Comox, Damon Scrase, stepped down after criticism over since-deleted social media posts.

Scrase said Pride parades have become a place where "perverts expose themselves to children for kicks."

In a statement shared on social media, Scrase said: "Like many of us I have made posts on social media years ago that make me wince, which don't reflect what I think or who I am today."

Scrase offered his resignation and the party accepted it, said Rustad. He said the party has dramatically improved its vetting process.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Katie DeRosa

Provincial affairs reporter

Katie DeRosa is the provincial affairs reporter for CBC British Columbia. She is based in Victoria. You can contact her at [email protected].

With files from The Canadian Press