Tuesday, December 7, 2010

question

can someone please help me find the liberal party saskatchewan . Why is the media not carrying anything that we are saying.? Is it because we are not saying anything? Or the media are to tried up in the 2 party system.And That is only thing they can handle?

please tell me someone or anyone?

One year before election, big lead for Premier Wall and Sask. PartyANGELA HALL, Leader-Post: Friday, November 5, 2010

With a general election just 12 months away, Premier Brad Wall and his Saskatchewan Party government are riding a wave of popularity, according to the results of a Sigma Analytics poll conducted for the Regina Leader-Post.
Photo Credit: Bryan Schlosser, Saskatchewan News NetworkRELATEDDaylight time referendum still under considerationREGINA — With a general election just 12 months away, Premier Brad Wall and his Saskatchewan Party government are riding a wave of popularity, according to the results of a Sigma Analytics poll conducted for the Regina Leader-Post.

Wall and his party would dominate if an election were held now, with the support of 57.3 per cent of decided voters, compared with 29.4-per-cent of support for Dwain Lingenfelter's New Democrats.

While the Sask. Party numbers have slipped slightly from 59.5 per cent a year ago and the NDP's number have increased from 26.4 per cent in 2009, the governing party remains well above its 51-per-cent showing in the 2007 general election that ended 16 consecutive years of New Democratic dominance.

"If you look at the Opposition's story it's not many rays of sunshine," said Cam Cooper with Sigma Analytics.

Cooper noted the "massive approval" of Wall, with 73.3 per cent of respondents seeing him as the party leader who is the best choice for premier — a marked contrast from Lingenfelter who is seen as premier material by only 16.7 per cent of the 802 respondents surveyed between Oct. 22 and Nov. 2.

Lingenfelter, chosen NDP leader in 2009, was also selected by 60 per cent of respondents as the leader they would not want as premier. Wall was rejected by 19.9 per cent.

The NDP is "led by a person whose negatives are growing, not going the other way, so it's very positive for the government and not strong for the main opposition," Cooper said.

The premier's positive poll results were undoubtedly aided by potash, the pollster added.

Conducted just as Wall was turning up the heat on Ottawa, but before Wednesday's decision by federal Industry Minister Tony Clement to reject BHP Billiton's hostile takeover of PotashCorp, a large majority of voters polled say they supported the province's stance against the bid.

"(Wall) was the national champion of something that was massively popular here so it had to have been a lift," Cooper said. "It's very uncommon for a government that's well into its term of office to get a higher percentage of popular support than it actually got in the election when it took office. So you've got to think that's a large factor."

Cooper said the results indicate the government's position was a success on the home political front, even if there is some confusion about what PotashCorp is — three in 10 respondents identified the publicly traded company as a government owned Crown corporation.

Almost 82 per cent said they believe that Wall and the Sask. Party are better able to secure the best result for the province versus the NDP, which also opposed the takeover bid.

If an election were held today, Ryan Bater and the Liberal Party would have the support of 8.2 per cent of decided voters, followed by 4.8 per cent for Larissa Shasko and the Green Party, the poll found.

Just under 18 per cent of respondents were undecided.

* The sample size would yield a margin of error of plus or minus 3.46 per cent, 19 times out of 20

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