The Liberals have expanded their advance on the two -digit conservatives among the voters while Federal electoral campaign Enter his third week, a new survey shows.
The Ipsos survey conducted exclusively for Global News and published on Sunday, 46% of the Canadians questioned voted their ballots for the Liberals, up two points compared to last week.
The Conservatives, on the other hand, fell from four points to 34% among the voters questioned.
“This level of national support firmly places the liberals in the territory mainly of the government if the elections took place today,” said Ipsos.
Ten percent of the Survey Canadians chose the New Democratic Party, three percent chose the Green Party and the 26% support for Quebec Bloc in Quebec resulted in six% nationally. The three parties increased a point from last week.
Seven percent of the voters remain undecided about the party for which they will vote, suggests the survey.
The difference in 12 points between the Liberals and the Conservatives is twice the size of the difference indicated in Ipsos survey during the first week of the campaign.
He also continued the thrust of the Liberals of the years of two -digit survey deficits to the conservatives of former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

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Liberal chief Mark Carney was forced to suspend his campaign twice last week to meet the new prices imposed by US President Donald Trump.
Carney held several meetings with his Canadian cabinet and ministers and announced new countermeasures in his capacity as a guardian of Prime Minister.
He also spoke with Trump for the first time On March 28, leading to a softer tone of the American president. Canada has also seen no new price when Trump announced his radical “Liberation Day” pricing policy Wednesday.

The Sunday Ipsos survey noted that 45% of voters consider Carney as the best choice for the Prime Minister, up from a point compared to last week, while the support of the conservative chief Pierre Hairyre fell from a point to 32%.
The leader of the NPD, Jagmeet Singh, saw the biggest boost of support, jumping four points at 12%. The leader of the Quebec Bloc, Yves-François Blanchet, also had an increase of two points to five percent, while the co-leader of the Green party, Jonathan Pedneault, was held stable at three%.
The new survey suggests that Canadians are no longer uncertain to know whether or not the Liberals should obtain a fourth term in the government, against four percent undecided last week.
Forty-seven percent of those questioned said that the liberals deserve a re-election, while 53% said it was time for a new part to take over.
Ipsos also found that 53% of voters say they are “absolutely” some of the party they will support on election day, while 16% said that their choice of voting had changed compared to what it would have been only four weeks ago.
More than two -thirds of Canadians interviewed – 69% – said they hoped for a majority government “so that we don’t have to have another election for a while,” said Ipsos. Almost 90% agreed that this election is “critical” for the future of Canada.

Trump’s prices and threats to Canadian sovereignty dominated the electoral campaign, all parties committing to strengthen and diversify the Canadian economy far from the United States
The Ipsos survey last week revealed that Canada’s relationship with the United States has been identified as the second most important problem for election voters, behind affordability and the cost of living.
This survey revealed that voters are massively seeing the liberals as the best party to manage American relations, beating the conservatives on the question of 40 points.
These are some of the conclusions of an Ipsos survey carried out between April 1 and the 3rd 2025, in the name of Global News. For this survey, a sample of n = 1,000 Canadians aged 18 and over was interviewed online, via the Ipsos I-Say panel and non-panel sources, and respondents obtain nominal incitement for their participation. Quotas and weighting were used to balance demographic data to ensure that the composition of the sample reflects that of the adult population according to census data and to provide results to approximate the universe of the sample. The accuracy of IPSOS surveys which include the non-probability sampling is measured using a credibility interval. In this case, the survey is precise at ± 3.8 percentage points, 19 times out of 20, if all Canadians had been interviewed. The credibility interval will be wider among the sub-assemblies of the population. All sample surveys and surveys can be subject to other sources of error, including, but without limiting itself, a coverage error and a measurement error. Ipsos complies with the disclosure standards established by the CRIC, found here: https://canadianresearchinsightscil.ca/standards/
& Copy 2025 Global News, A Division of Corus Entertainment Inc.