Anglade Appeals to the Undecided

Anglade Appeals to the Undecided |

(Fatima) After a five-week election campaign in which the needle didn’t move in his favour, Dominique Anglade on Sunday is urging undecided voters to choose his option.

Posted 7:20am Updated 8:58am

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Fanny Levesque

Fanny Levesque The press

Dominique Anglade is undeterred by opinion polls that show no sign of a recovery in Liberal troops after 36 days of campaigning.

“The campaign is coming to an end, this is democracy, I see a lot of people who are still undecided, who can still decide where they want to go,” reacted Dominique Anglade before flying to Kuujjuaq on Sunday, where she ended her campaign.

What I can tell you is that we want to make our voice strong, the voice of Quebecers, and there is another way, another style of leadership that we need to see in Quebec.

Dominique Anglade, Head of PLQ

Dominique Anglade fought in Gaspésie and on the Îles-de-la-Madeleine on Saturday. She flies to Kuujjuaq on Sunday, where she will end her campaign with her candidate in Ungava, the former mayor of the northern village of Tunu Napartuk.

When the elections were called, Dominique Anglade’s Liberal Party also had 17% of the voting intentions. The leader of the Liberals will therefore not have been able to move the needle in her favor in the 36 days of the election campaign, according to a recent poll by Léger, which puts her on the same level.

“The actual poll is on October 3, I appeal to everyone who wants to see a different style of leadership, to everyone who sees that what’s happening doesn’t reflect what they want,” he said – pleading her in the press crowd on Sunday.

According to a Léger poll published in Quebecor media on Sunday, Dominique Anglade gained a percentage point in voting intentions to return to 17%, giving him two points ahead of Québec solidaire and the Parti Québécois, who have 15% are equal. The Quebec Conservative Party won 14%.

It also appears that the CAQ leader has managed to slow his descent as he gets 38% of voting intentions, according to the probing conducted September 28-30. The statements of François Legault and Jean Boulet would therefore not have harmed the CAQ.