
Alberta NDP leader Naheed Nenshi's approval ratings climb while Premier Danielle Smith's drop slightly: Leger poll
Alberta NDP leader Naheed Nenshi's approval ratings have climbed back up, with just three percentage points separating him and Premier Danielle Smith who continues to lead, according to a May 2025 Leger poll.
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The poll released on Thursday said Smith's approval ratings have dropped by 2 percentage points since January, but continues to be the provincial leader with the highest approval ratings, at 44 per cent. On the other hand, Nenshi who was sitting at a 37 per cent approval rating at the beginning of the year, is now at 41 per cent.
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'While approval ratings for other Alberta party leaders continue to lag significantly behind the top two candidates, ratings for Liberal leader Roggeveen and Alberta Party leader Amantea are up significantly,' the poll notes.
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Smith saw the largest net negative change of any provincial political leader, dropping 22 percentage points in the past six months.
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Nenshi had the second largest net negative change, dropping 11 percentage points in the past six months.
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The poll was conducted among 1,040 Albertans 18 years of age or older from May 23-25. Leger said a probability sample of the poll's size would have a margin of error of +/- 3.04 per cent, or 19 out of 20.
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For the second wave in a row, the Alberta Liberals are seeing an increase in voting intention jumping to nine per cent, up from five per cent in January. According to the poll, the increase in support is likely due to its federal counterpart's success during the April election.
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The party is up six percentage points since August 2024.
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Where the Alberta Liberals have increased, the UCP and Alberta NDP have seen a slight decrease but continue to hold their ranking in voting intentions.
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If a provincial election were held tomorrow, 48 per cent of Albertans would vote for the UCP — a three percentage point drop from January 2025. The Alberta NDP would receive the second highest share of votes with 34 per cent, down from 36 per cent in January.

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