<p>Article content A new survey that looked at attitudes toward multiculturalism, and the PQ's charter of values, found that nearly one-third of Quebecers would like to see the Parti Quebecois's ban on religious symbols on employees in the public sector extended to the private sector. https://milnevang0396.livejournal.com/profile </p>
<p>Article content The Forum Research poll for the National Post found that plans for the charter have split the public roughly in the middle with 45% of respondents supporting the plan while 49% opposing it and 6% undecided.
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<p>Article content These data show a decrease in support for the charter. It was previously supported by 58% of Quebec according to an Forum Poll conducted on August. 24 2012.
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<p>According to the survey, 32% of Quebecers are in favour of a ban on religious symbols that are prominently displayed such as yarmulkes and burkas which is extended to private sector services like taxi drivers and servers.
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<p>Although 75% of respondents agreed that immigration has made the province "strong," half of Quebecers disagreed with the concept of multiculturalism, calling for new immigrants to Quebec to give up their customs and attire in a bid to be "more like Quebecers." Just less than half of respondents agreed the belief that multiculturalism breeds strife and almost 4-in-10 stated that Quebec should only accept immigrants from French-speaking countries.
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<p>Article content "All Canadians know that francophone Quebeckers are viewed as a minority linguistic group on an English-speaking continent," Lorne Bozinoff, Forum President, said in an announcement. "But the degree of xenophobia seen in these findings, especially in rural Quebec, is truly troubling."
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<p>The charter's support, however it may not translate into political gain or the PQ, a second Forum poll suggests. https://inchgrain55.werite.net/post/2022/09/15/Blizzard-Legal-Targets-Private-Servers </p>
<p>The poll found that support for Liberals in the province has jumped to 42% - an increase of more than 10 points since the election of 2012. According to the survey, these gains could suffice for the Liberals to achieve an "hair thin majority".
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<p>Support for the Parti Quebecois sits at 35 percent, according to the poll. Coalition Avenir Quebec (CAQ) was third in the poll with 12% support.
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<p>Content of the article is not a factor for non-francophone voters, the Liberals have 87 percent support, according to a poll.
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<p>The survey found that if the results were projected to seat the province's National Assembly (125-seat), the Liberals would "be in the right position to win an one-seat majority." The results show that the Parti Quebecois (currently forming a minority government) would lose only one seat, which means that the majority of Liberals gains stem from former CAQ supporters. CAQ was able to win 19 seats in the 2012 election, but the poll results suggested that the third party would only win four seats "if an election were called today."
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<p>The polls were conducted with 1,179 Quebeckers who are over 20 years old old and are believed to be accurate by a margin of +/-3 19 times out. The results were released on Saturday as protestors marched through downtown Montreal demanding that the premier Pauline Marois' to increase the proposed charter which would prohibit employees of the public sector from wearing conspicuously visible religious symbols. https://blogfreely.net/whalebeard88/do-you-want-to-be-your-very-own-internet-host </p>
<p>According to the poll according to the poll, Ms. Marois's current approval rating is just over 30%..
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<p>National Post with a file of the Canadian Press
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