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Nova Scotia Conservatives appear safe with tight battle for second place between Liberals and NDP
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Nova Scotia Conservatives appear safe with tight battle for second place between Liberals and NDP

He said the result was a lack of “interest, anger or motivation” from the electorate. “I think it ultimately benefits the Progressive Conservatives,” Marland said.

A Narrative Research poll released Wednesday puts conservatives comfortably in the lead with 44 percent support. The NDP was second with 28 percent and the Liberals third with 24 percent. The poll of 800 adult Nova Scotians conducted between November 4 and 17 is considered accurate to within 3.5 percentage points, 95 times out of 100.

Tom Urbaniak of Cape Breton University said the campaign was “perhaps the quietest I’ve seen in Nova Scotia.”

“It seems less intense on the field,” Urbaniak said. “There are fewer signs and fewer materials arriving at the doors, and there seems to be less conversation in the cafes. »

He said the lack of a longer preparation period leading up to the set date also contributed to a general lack of attention, and that the 30-day campaign is the shortest allowed by law. “So that was also a factor.”

Issues such as the cost of living, the lack of affordable housing and the province’s struggling health care system were at the center of the campaign, but no single issue dominated the way the Progressive Conservatives managed to make health care the main issue in 2021.

Marland said what the polls suggest is that the Progressive Conservatives should “move in” to many rural areas outside of Halifax.

“In the Halifax area, they’re in much closer competition with the NDP and that’s a real problem for the Liberals because it suggests they’re not competitive anywhere,” he said. “So the real issue here… is how much of the Liberal vote will be retained? »

Urbaniak said NDP Leader Claudia Chender has become a strong campaigner with strong debate performances that helped raise her profile in her first election as party leader.

With advance voting numbers indicating possible low voter turnout on Tuesday, Urbaniak believes the battle between the Liberals and NDP will depend on who can attract the most voters in ridings where they are competitive. “This (the result) will favor whoever has strong mobilization on the ground,” he said.

Liberal Leader Zach Churchill agrees. “We need to get people to vote,” Churchill said, while noting that Elections Nova Scotia did not send voter information cards because of the postal strike. “A lot of people don’t know where they’re voting, so it puts a lot more pressure on candidates, on their volunteers and on the core campaign team to inform people,” he said Friday.

Churchill said he was proud of his party’s campaign. “You only control what you can control. We are putting a lot of effort into developing the right plan for this province…and we are running a campaign built around ideas,” he said.

Chender believes his party’s message was conveyed through hard work on the ground.

“We’ve been crisscrossing the province over the last 24 hours and we’re going to continue to visit as many candidates as possible in communities leading up to election day,” she said Friday.

She also believes that voter turnout will be crucial at a time of year when people aren’t necessarily focused on politics. “For us as New Democrats, it’s one door at a time, giving people the information on where to go and vote,” she said.

Houston, for his part, said he was confident his campaign reached enough Nova Scotians to allow his party to secure a second term in government.

“There is work to be done, but overall I think Nova Scotians recognize the efforts that have been made,” he said Friday. “I’m optimistic, for sure, but we’re going to spend the next few days continuing to work hard and traveling around the province.

At the time of the dissolution, the Progressive Conservatives held 34 seats of the 55 seats in the Legislative Assembly and the Liberals held 14, while the NDP had six and one independent.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published November 24, 2024.

Keith Doucette, The Canadian Press