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OTTAWA, Jan. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- Canada's Conservative
Party was in a clear lead across the country over the Liberals led by Prime
Minister Paul Martin for the first time since the federal election campaign
began in late November last year, said a new poll published on Thursday.
The EKOS poll, done for the Toronto
Star and La Presse, shows the Conservatives led by Stephen Harper with a lead of
nearly six percentage points over the Liberals.
The Conservatives had the support of 36.2 percent of
the people surveyed, while 30.4 percent said they would vote for the Liberalsin
the Jan. 23 election.
That lead is larger than the poll's margin of error -
2.7 percentage points, 19 times out of 20 - indicating a clear lead.
The poll also shows the New Democratic Party had the
support of 17.9 percent, and the Bloc Quebecois had 10.4 percent of support
nationally.
The Liberal's support in the province of Ontario,
Liberal's traditional stronghold, had also slipped, where the Conservatives have
to make significant gains. Ontario, with 106 of 308 parliamentary seats, is
considered to be the decisive battle groundfor the election.
The results are based on a sample of 1,386
respondents who were questioned Tuesday and Wednesday.
Other recent polls have shown the Conservatives
gaining on the Liberals, who went into the campaign with the lead.
The Conservatives and Liberals are in an actual tie
nationally and statistically tied in Ontario, indicates a poll made by the
Strategic Counsel for the CTV and the Globe and Mail on Wednesday.
The poll shows the Liberals and Conservatives have
the same 32 percent of support while the New Democrats have 17 percent.
The momentum surge for the Conservatives comes after
the Royal Canadian Moungted Police (RCMP) announced last week that it was
conducting a criminal investigation to see if there was a leak of a Nov. 23
announcement on income trusts that allowed some insiders to profit. Enditem¡¡
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