I find
this interesting. The Globe & Mail runs daily polls (some of which get skewed by fanatics who think that voting more often makes them right), and it's often fairly easy to predict which way G&M readers will vote. They tend to be socially left-of-centre, and fiscally centre-right.
On the question of national security vs. personal privacy (literally, "Which is more important to you, national security or personal privacy?"), the vote was split by 41 votes out of nearly 20,000.