The Canadian Press Quebec Premier Francois Legault received a strong approval rating in the Angus Reid Institute's latest ranking of the most and least popular premiers, while Alberta's Rachel Notley saw a slight uptick in her score.

It seems the shine hasn't worn off some of the country's newest provincial leaders. The Angus Reid Institute's latest ranking of Canada's most and least popular premiers has found that Quebec's Francois Legault and Saskatchewan's Scott Moe are the only two leaders with majority approval ratings. Legault, who led his Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) to a stunning victory in October, won a majority mandate that gave the province its very first non-Liberal or Parti Quebecois-led government in almost half a century. Earlier On HuffPost: Legault Wastes No Time Delivering On Campaign Promises. Story Continues Below: Though he's not that far into his term, Legault has made some moves in the time between the election and the holiday break. His government has moved to reduce immigration to the province and has demanded the federal Liberals cough up $300 million to cover the cost of refugees arriving in Quebec. The CAQ has also followed through on a campaign promise to increase the legal age to consume and purchase cannabis in Quebec to 21. Check out the rest of the premier rankings in the slideshow below:

Moe, meanwhile, seems to have held on to the solid support enjoyed by his predecessor Brad Wall since he took over the job in January. The leader has become a vocal critic of the federal government's carbon pricing plan and helped kickstart a bloc of premiers fighting it. His government also launched a legal challenge to the pricing program, which the feds plan to impose on any province that doesn't have an emission reduction plan of its own. The carbon price outlined by Ottawa starts at a minimum of $20 per tonne and rises by $10 annually until 2022. Saskatchewan asked its Court of Appeal to rule on whether imposing that plan on provinces is constitutional. The province believes its own climate change plan, which doesn't include a carbon tax, is enough to reduce emissions.

Angus Reid Institute