With just a week left before election day, the Liberals and Conservatives are once again in a statistical tie for first in Mainstreet Research’s federal poll numbers released Monday.

According to these latest results from the firm’s daily tracker phone, which captured the opinions of 2,150 voters between Oct. 11-13, 32.3 per cent of leaning and decided respondents said they’d vote for the Conservatives if the election was held today, while 30.7 per cent said they’d cast a ballot for the Liberals and 16.6 per cent said they’d vote for the NDP. Another 8.3 per cent opted for the Greens, 7.8 per cent backed the Bloc, 3.4 per cent favoured Maxime Bernier’s People’s Party and 0.9 per cent said they’d vote for another party.

Compared to the results released Friday, the Conservatives, the Bloc and Liberals are all up, while the NDP is stagnant and the Greens and People’s Party are down. All this movement, though, falls within the poll’s margin of error, which Mainstreet reported as plus or minus 2.11 percentage points.

In Friday’s results, 31.7 per cent of leaning and decided respondents said they’d vote for the Conservatives if the election was held today, while 28.9 per cent said they’d cast a ballot for the Liberals. Another 16.6 per cent said they’d vote for the NDP, while 9.4 per cent opted for the Greens, 7.6 per cent backed the Bloc, 4.2 per cent favoured Maxime Bernier’s People’s Party and 1.5 per cent said they’d vote for another party.

More results from the poll, including provincial and regional numbers and leader favourability ratings, are available exclusively to Premium Election Package subscribers here.

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For the full methodology statement, please click here.