Thursday, July 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canadians still edgy about U.S. visitors: poll

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Mar, 2021 04:50 PM
  • Canadians still edgy about U.S. visitors: poll

A new poll suggests Canadians remain deeply wary about the prospect of allowing visitors from the United States.

The online Léger poll was conducted last week for the Association for Canadian Studies to mark one full year of restricted travel at the Canada-U.S. border.

It found 70 per cent of 2,200 Canadian respondents were either very or somewhat worried about allowing cross-border travel.

Only 26 per cent said they were either not very worried or not worried at all.

In the U.S., Léger found the opposite: only 31 per cent of the 1,968 Americans surveyed were very or somewhat anxious about lifting restrictions.

Online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey Homelessness & Housing Society Grants $600,000 for Local COVID-19 Response

Surrey Homelessness & Housing Society Grants $600,000 for Local COVID-19 Response
The swift response addresses the emerging needs of people experiencing homelessness, or who are at risk of homelessness in Surrey related to impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Surrey Homelessness & Housing Society Grants $600,000 for Local COVID-19 Response

Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October

Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October
October's increase compared with a year-over-year rise of 0.5 per cent in September. The increase was almost entirely driven by rising food prices, particularly lettuce and fresh or frozen chicken, Statistics Canada said Wednesday.

Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October

B.C. premier wants national COVID-19 travel policy

B.C. premier wants national COVID-19 travel policy
Horgan says he wants to see the same travel rules for Canadians regardless of where they live in the country.

B.C. premier wants national COVID-19 travel policy

Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau

Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau
Federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Wednesday that Canada will impose different requirements than the U.S. before it lifts the grounding orders for the plane, including additional procedures on the flight deck and pre-flight and differences in training for flight operators.

Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau

Canada to get 1st vaccines in January: Elliott

Canada to get 1st vaccines in January: Elliott
Christine Elliott said the country is set to get four million doses of the Pfizer vaccine between January and March as well as two million doses of Moderna’s vaccine.

Canada to get 1st vaccines in January: Elliott

No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO

No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO
Kevin Page makes the argument in a paper publicly released Wednesday that the government should move away from spending to stimulate the economy as conditions improve following the shock of COVID-19.

No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO