72% of Canadians are dissatisfied with his government
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has had a difficult few weeks. However, the sudden resignation of his closest political ally and its disastrous fallout has not had a major impact on how Canadians intended to vote during the next election.

The latest polling data from the Canadian market research firm Leger found that a large portion of Canadians still plan to vote for The Conservative Party (43%) while 20% would cast their ballot for the Prime Minister’s Liberal Party and 19% for the New Democratic Party (NDP).

According to the new Leger survey, Trudeau’s recent scandals haven’t hurt him with voters, but the right-leaning National Post pointed out that the lack of effect on the Canadian electorate is mostly due to the fact that Trudeau’s support is near the lowest point it’s ever been.

Leger found nearly three-quarters (72%) of the Canadians that it surveyed between December 20th and the 22nd reported they were dissatisfied with Justin Trudeau’s government according to the market research firm.

“This represents an increase of three points compared to the previous measurement,” Leger wrote in a report on its latest survey. However, this finding wasn’t the worst that Leger discovered with its latest research.