IPSOS Public Affairs Datasets

The Ipsos Canadian Public Affairs Dataverse is a repository of over 60 Ipsos Canada surveys that shed light on Canadian culture, politics, and society. All data is open access. This resource has been graciously donated to LISPOP and Wilfrid Laurier University by Ipsos Canada.

Poilievre’s Trump knock-off campaign: a toxic blend of pixie dust and snake oil

(hold for arrival) Rt. Hon. Pierre PoilievrePrime Minister of CanadaRideau Cottage1 Sussex DriveOttawa, ON  K1A 0A1 Dear Prime Minister Poilievre, This may be presumptuous, but I want to be among the first to congratulate you on your imminent ascension the position you so richly deserve: 24th prime minister of Canada. […]

When guns are more important than children

“To some people — to people with money, to people who fund political campaigns — guns are more important than children”  You could have heard a pin drop when Kimberly Rubio, whose 10-year-old daughter, Lexi, was one of 19 schoolchildren and two teachers slaughtered by an 18-year-old boy with an […]

Doug Ford won again but 400,000 lost votes warn of trouble ahead

Doug Ford has reasons to be pleased. Overjoyed. He accomplished what he set out to do – he led his Ontario Progressive Conservatives to a second majority government on Thursday. He even increased his majority, winning seven more seats, 83, up from 76 in his first election in 2018. To […]

Rooting for the home team (usually): Partisan voting in Ontario

Welcome to the fourth in an installment of blog posts by LISPOP affiliates on different aspects of the Ontario provincial election. Our last post is by Wilfrid Laurier political scientist Andrea Perrella. A lot of attention on election campaigns focuses on “swing” voters or toss-up seats, suggesting a volatile electorate. When […]

Let’s not write Andrea Horwath off just yet

Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his Progressive Conservatives are cruising to victory on Thursday, to a second term they have not earned and do not deserve. Elected in 2018 with no experience in government, they made a bollox of many issues in the early going. Because they did not trust […]

The Ontario Election and the Strategic Vote Option

There has been much talk of “strategic” or “tactical” voting in this spring’s Ontario election.  While definitions vary, political scientists usually reserve the term for situations in which a voter supports a party that is not his or her most preferred, but one thought to have a better chance of […]

This isn’t your granny’s Ottawa

Early in my career, I spent 15 years in the Parliamentary Press Gallery, fishing for news and column material on the Hill. I got to know the place reasonably well. Although I’ve been back and forth to Ottawa many times, it wasn’t until last week that I had occasion to […]