EDMONTON -- The Conservatives have opened up an advantage as Liberal support declined over the past three days of the campaign, according to nightly tracking conducted by Nanos Research for 麻豆影视 and the Globe and Mail.

In the latest nightly tracking data, ending Friday and released Saturday morning, ballot support for the Conservatives sits at 33.3 per cent, while the Liberals are at 30.8 per cent support.

鈥淟ast night was a terrible night for the Liberals in the tracking, they鈥檙e down more than two points in one day,鈥 Nik Nanos, founder and chief data scientist at Nanos Research, told 麻豆影视 Channel Saturday.

鈥淲hat was a tie early this week, it looks like the Conservatives are now gaining the upper hand and there is definitely negative pressure on the Liberals right now.鈥

The result shows a continuing of Conservative gains during the campaign, which kicked off on Aug. 15. The parties began the week in a statistical dead heat, where Liberal support stood at 32.5 per cent, compared to 31.4 per cent for the Conservatives, leaving a 1.1 percentage-point difference, well within the poll鈥檚 margin of error of ± 2.8 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

SUPPORT FOR O鈥橳OOLE

Meanwhile, the gap between Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and Conservative Leader Erin O鈥橳oole continues to narrow, as support for Trudeau declined for the past three nights of election tracking, according to the Nanos data.

O鈥橳oole has seen his support as the preferred candidate rise from 24 per cent on Aug. 23 to 27.2 per cent in the most recent tracking. Trudeau鈥檚 support has declined from 32.7 per cent on Aug. 23 to 29.9 per cent.

鈥淸O鈥橳oole鈥檚] personal brand has been the big winner in the first part of this campaign, while we鈥檙e seeing fewer and fewer Canadians believe that Justin Trudeau would be their preferred choice as prime minister,鈥 said Nanos.

Meanwhile, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh continues to make inroads, with 20.1 per cent support as the preferred candidate, up from 19.4 per cent on Aug. 23.

鈥淭he New Democrats are starting to pick up steam. So, what we鈥檙e seeing is Liberal-New Democrat switchers right now. That can鈥檛 be good for Justin Trudeau, but it is good for Jagmeet Singh.鈥

DEFINING ISSUES

The unfolding crisis in Afghanistan continued to dominate the campaign trail this week as Canada marked the end of its evacuation efforts in Kabul 鈥 a big ticket issue that may be driving Conservative support.

鈥淎fghanistan is one of those key defining issues. It鈥檚 not likely to drive actual votes, but it is likely to drive the brands of the different party leaders, and in this particular case, the controversy and crisis in Afghanistan coincidentally happening with, what I鈥檒l say, declining numbers for Justin Trudeau,鈥 said Nanos.

鈥淎t the same time, O鈥橳oole鈥檚 come out with his counter plan to Justin Trudeau on Afghanistan and his numbers are on the rise.鈥

Vaccine passports also remain top of mind for Canadian voters, but Nanos believes the issue has so far been overshadowed by other big ticket items, like housing affordability and health care.

鈥淭he campaign has been overcome with issues related to Afghanistan, health care, mental health, homelessness, housing affordability. So, [it鈥檚] still an important issue that I would expect the Liberals will try to drive home to their advantage against O鈥橳oole, but not as much as a driver compared to a lot of these other firefights that are happening on a wide diversity of policy issues,鈥 he said.

NANOS鈥 METHODOLOGY

A national random telephone survey (land- and cellular-line sample using live agents) of 1,200 Canadians is conducted by Nanos Research throughout the campaign over a three-day period. Each evening a new group of 400 eligible voters are interviewed. The daily tracking figures are based on a three-day rolling sample comprising 1,200 interviews. To update the tracking a new day of interviewing Is added and the oldest day dropped. The margin of error for a survey of 1,200 respondents is ± 2.8 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

The respondent sample is stratified geographically and by gender. The data may be weighted by age according to data from the 2016 Canadian Census administered by Statistics Canada. Percentages reported may not add up to 100 due to rounding.鈥