Liberals Surge to the Lead
The Liberals are projected to win a strong minority, but the Conservatives still have a shot.
Note: 10 means election day.
1. LPC: 37.5%
2. CPC: 31.2%
3. NDP: 21.2%
4. BQ: 4.8%
5. GPC: 4.5%
6. Others: 0.8%
Regional Model
Atlantic: Clear Liberal Lead
1. LPC: 49.3%, 22-27 seats
2. NDP: 22.9%, 3-5 seats
3. CPC: 22.4%, 2-5 seats
4. GPC: 3.7%, 0 seats
5. Others: 1.6%, 0 seats
Quebec: Close Race between Liberals and New Democrats
1. LPC: 30.1%, 29-34 seats
2. NDP: 27%, 23-25 seats
3. BQ: 20%, 12 seats
4. CPC: 19.5%, 10-13 seats
5. GPC: 2.6%, 0-1 seats
6. Others: 0.8%, 0 seats
Ontario: Liberals Lead the Tories
1. LPC: 44.6%, 70-81 seats
2. CPC: 33.6%, 35-40 seats
3. NDP: 17.7%, 5-11 seats
4. GPC: 3.6%, 0 seats
5. Others: 0.6%, 0 seats
Manitoba and Saskatchewan: Conservatives Maintain Lead over Liberals
1. CPC: 41.5%, 15-17 seats
2. LPC: 32.9%, 9 seats
3. NDP 20.9%, 2-4 seats
4. GPC: 4.1%, 0 seats
5. Others: 0.6%, 0 seats
Alberta: Strong Conservative Lead
1. CPC: 51.9%, 25-29 seats
2. LPC: 26.5%, 4-6 seats
3. NDP: 16.6%, 1-3 seats
4. GPC: 4.1%, 0 seats
5. Others: 0.9%, 0 seats
British Columbia: Liberal or Conservative Toss-up with NDP in Strong Third
1. LPC: 31.5%, 15-16 seats
2. CPC: 31.4%, 15-16 seats
3. NDP: 26.1%, 9-10 seats
4. GPC: 10.5%, 1-2 seats
5. Others: 0.4%, 0 seats
The Territories: Incumbents Keep Their Ridings
CPC: 2 seats
NDP: 1 seats
LPC: 0 seats
GPC: 0 seats
Others: 0 seats
Canada: Strong Liberal Minority with the Possibility of a Slim Majority
1. LPC: 151-171 seats
2. CPC: 110-114 seats
3. NDP: 46-57 seats
4. BQ: 10-13 seats
5. GPC: 1-3 seats
6. Others: 0 seats
Atlantic: Clear Liberal Lead
1. LPC: 49.3%, 22-27 seats
2. NDP: 22.9%, 3-5 seats
3. CPC: 22.4%, 2-5 seats
4. GPC: 3.7%, 0 seats
5. Others: 1.6%, 0 seats
Quebec: Close Race between Liberals and New Democrats
1. LPC: 30.1%, 29-34 seats
2. NDP: 27%, 23-25 seats
3. BQ: 20%, 12 seats
4. CPC: 19.5%, 10-13 seats
5. GPC: 2.6%, 0-1 seats
6. Others: 0.8%, 0 seats
Ontario: Liberals Lead the Tories
1. LPC: 44.6%, 70-81 seats
2. CPC: 33.6%, 35-40 seats
3. NDP: 17.7%, 5-11 seats
4. GPC: 3.6%, 0 seats
5. Others: 0.6%, 0 seats
Manitoba and Saskatchewan: Conservatives Maintain Lead over Liberals
1. CPC: 41.5%, 15-17 seats
2. LPC: 32.9%, 9 seats
3. NDP 20.9%, 2-4 seats
4. GPC: 4.1%, 0 seats
5. Others: 0.6%, 0 seats
Alberta: Strong Conservative Lead
1. CPC: 51.9%, 25-29 seats
2. LPC: 26.5%, 4-6 seats
3. NDP: 16.6%, 1-3 seats
4. GPC: 4.1%, 0 seats
5. Others: 0.9%, 0 seats
British Columbia: Liberal or Conservative Toss-up with NDP in Strong Third
1. LPC: 31.5%, 15-16 seats
2. CPC: 31.4%, 15-16 seats
3. NDP: 26.1%, 9-10 seats
4. GPC: 10.5%, 1-2 seats
5. Others: 0.4%, 0 seats
The Territories: Incumbents Keep Their Ridings
CPC: 2 seats
NDP: 1 seats
LPC: 0 seats
GPC: 0 seats
Others: 0 seats
Canada: Strong Liberal Minority with the Possibility of a Slim Majority
1. LPC: 151-171 seats
2. CPC: 110-114 seats
3. NDP: 46-57 seats
4. BQ: 10-13 seats
5. GPC: 1-3 seats
6. Others: 0 seats
Extreme Ranges
LPC: 22%-43.1%; 38-292 seats
CPC: 26.3-38.8%; 66-213 seats
NDP: 14.9-35.2%; 0-159 seats
BQ: 0-9.6%; 0-12 seats
GPC: 0-10%; 0-12 seats
Others: 0-5.5%; 0-4 seats
Analysis
This election will be very close. Anything can happen. While the polls show the Liberals with a healthy lead, the question remains whether or not the Liberal supporters will actually show up to vote. Conservatives tend to have the most committed voters and are good at getting out the vote. Combining the fact that incumbents and right-leaning parties tend to get underrepresented by polls adds another factor this race that cannot be ignored. The Liberals may win a minority or majority, but a Conservative minority or even a second majority is not out of the equation yet. The New Democrats will likely become relegated to third place status, but still have a shot at forming a minority government. The Bloc Quebecois will rebound slightly. Both the Bloc and the Green Party have a shot at gaining official party status, but it is possible that the Bloquistes and Greens may disappear from the House of Commons altogether. Independents and other parties (including the Quebec-based Strength in Democracy) may gain as many as four seats this election.
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