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 Proposed Sale of NB Power
 
 
  NB Power deal finds stiff opposition: poll
Posted November 26 2009

The Liberal government is running into stiff opposition to its plan to sell NB Power, according to a new Leger Marketing poll.

The first public opinion poll on the deal was released on Monday and showed the deal is seen unfavourably by 60 per cent of New Brunswick residents, while only 22 per cent of respondents like the agreement.

Christian Bourque, vice-president of research at Leger Marketing, said the government is running into difficulty pitching the proposal to people.

The poll's margin of error is plus or minus 4.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

The poll was conducted Nov. 19-21 and included phone and internet surveys.

The Liberals held out the NB Power deal as the centrepiece in its throne speech on Nov. 17.

The proposed deal would sell the majority of NB Power's assets to Hydro-Quebec for $4.8 billion and then freeze residential rates for five yeas and cut electricity prices for large industrial customers to the levels enjoyed in Quebec.

There was a large rally of people opposed to the deal on the legislature's lawn on Nov. 17 before the throne speech and a group of approximately 50 people protested outside of the constituency office of Natural Resources Minister Wally Stiles in Petitcodiac on Monday.

More anglophones opposed

While opposition to the proposed power pact is higher among anglophones, a large majority of francophones are against the deal, too.

Bourque said the data suggest each group has its own reasons.

The poll also suggested that the opposition Progressive Conservatives are ahead of the governing Liberals by a margin of 45 per cent to 33 per cent of decided voters.

The NDP is at 19 per cent, while the Green Party is at four per cent.

 
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