Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian attachment to monarchy dropping: poll

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2023 04:17 PM
  • Canadian attachment to monarchy dropping: poll

MONTREAL - New polling results suggest Canadians are largely indifferent to King Charles, and more than half believe his May 6 coronation is the right time for the country to reconsider its ties with the monarchy.

The web survey of 1,544 adults released Tuesday by market research firm Leger indicates many Canadians are greeting the ascension of Charles to the throne with a shrug.

Only 12 per cent of respondents said it was good news that Charles is now King, compared to 14 per cent who said it was bad news and 67 per cent who were indifferent.

Only 13 per cent of those surveyed said they felt a personal attachment to the monarchy, compared with 81 per cent who didn't.

The survey found the level of attachment to the monarchy has dropped since the days immediately following Queen Elizabeth's death last September, when 19 per cent said they felt an attachment and 77 per cent said they didn't. Indifference to Charles has also risen in the same period.

A majority of respondents said it's the right time for Canada to reconsider its ties with the monarchy, with 56 per cent in favour and 44 against.

Anti-monarchy sentiment was strongest in Quebec, where 71 per cent said it was time to reconsider ties.

Indifference to Charles' ascension to the throne spanned all age groups and regions of the country, although the new monarch was viewed more favourably in Manitoba and Saskatchewan and among Canadians aged 55 and older. Once again, the lowest level of positive reviews was in Quebec, where only seven per cent agreed it was a good thing that Charles is King.

King Charles' coronation will take place May 6 at Westminster Abbey and will be marked by a procession, a concert at Windsor Castle and other events.

While 44 per cent of respondents said they were aware of the event, 73 per cent said they weren't interested. Twenty-seven per cent of respondents expressed interest, but only six per cent said they were very interested.

Sixty per cent of respondents said they were not going to watch television or video coverage, compared to 17 per cent who said they would and 23 per cent who weren't sure.

Polling was done between March 10 and March 12. A margin of error can't be assigned to the survey because it was conducted online and not at random, but Léger says the margin of error for a comparable random, or probability, sampling would be 2.49 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

MORE National ARTICLES

Man allegedly assaulted several strangers before brandishing a weapon: VPD

Man allegedly assaulted several strangers before brandishing a weapon: VPD
Witnesses told police the man slapped a woman, assaulted a cyclist, then tried to attack someone who was walking amongst a group of people outside Nester’s Market. He also allegedly tried to start a fight near the Metropole Pub and brandished a weapon before being confronted by police.

Man allegedly assaulted several strangers before brandishing a weapon: VPD

Trudeau: Chinese protesters deserve free speech

Trudeau: Chinese protesters deserve free speech
Crowds in China angered by the anti-virus controls have called on leader Xi Jinping to resign in the biggest show of public dissent in decades. The regime has eased some of its strict controls after demonstrations in at least eight mainland cities as well as Hong Kong.  

Trudeau: Chinese protesters deserve free speech

Amanda Todd's harasser returned to the Netherlands

Amanda Todd's harasser returned to the Netherlands
Canada's Justice Department says Aydin Coban was taken back to his home country on Nov. 24, where he will continue serving a nearly 11-year sentence imposed by a Dutch court in 2017 for similar crimes involving more than 30 youth.

Amanda Todd's harasser returned to the Netherlands

BoC posts first quarterly loss in its history

BoC posts first quarterly loss in its history
The Bank of Canada's aggressive interest rate hikes this year have raised the cost of interest charges it pays on settlement balances deposited in the accounts of big banks. That's while the income the central bank receives from government bonds it holds remains fixed.  

BoC posts first quarterly loss in its history

Use of plastic straws, grocery bags already down

Use of plastic straws, grocery bags already down
The Canadian government is looking to curb domestic plastic pollution by the end of the decade as negotiations toward a formal plastics management treaty begin this week in Uruguay. Canada is one of nearly three dozen countries lobbying heavily for an international agreement that would end global plastic pollution by 2040.

Use of plastic straws, grocery bags already down

Forecast predicts snowy, front-loaded winter ahead

Forecast predicts snowy, front-loaded winter ahead
But for those lamenting the season ahead, chief meteorologist Chris Scott says January and February will offer some respite from a front-loaded winter as spells of milder weather transition between Western and Eastern Canada.

Forecast predicts snowy, front-loaded winter ahead