logo
Expect Doug Ford to use Windsor as campaign backdrop, political scientist says

Expect Doug Ford to use Windsor as campaign backdrop, political scientist says

CBC29-01-2025
Ontario Progressive Conservative leader Doug Ford will launch his election campaign in Windsor Wednesday.
And a political scientist at the University of Windsor says she expects him to make the border city a prominent backdrop for his campaign.
Ford has called it a "campaign to protect Ontario" as he attempts to position himself as the best candidate to defend the province's interests in the face of American tariff threats and steer its economy through the potential devastation to follow.
He has benefited from being able to "fill the vacuum" in national leadership left by Justin Trudeau's resignation at a time when Canada is facing economic threats from south of the border, said Lydia Miljan.
"He's in the biggest economy of the country, and he's the chair of the premiers' caucuses," Miljan said.
"A lot of the meetings have happened in Ontario, so he's really been at the centre of a governmental response to the potential tariffs. And so his battles with Danielle Smith, his disagreements with Alberta, played well to a local audience."
PCs could look to Windsor West seat
At the same time, Miljan said, the auto sector is vulnerable to the Trump administration's decision to back away from its commitment to electrification and to battling climate change, so the snap election seems like an attempt by Ford to prevent the fallout from those actions from affecting his reelection prospects.
Ford will hold a roundtable with Unifor Local 444 and visit workers at Harbour Technologies, a local manufacturer, during his stop in Windsor.
He has said he needs a strong mandate to lead the province through the uncertainty brought by the potential U.S. tariffs.
And there's one way to strengthen his mandate in Windsor-Essex, Chatham-Kent and Sarnia: by targeting Windsor West NDP MPP Lisa Gretzky, the only non-PC MPP in the region.
"I think she is vulnerable in part because the NDP's leader, Marit Stiles, really hasn't gotten great name recognition in Ontario," Miljan said.
"Election campaigns tend to be leader-focused," she added. And Doug Ford "really is sort of taking all the oxygen out of the room."
But Gretzky came out swinging at a news conference Tuesday morning, accusing Ford of spending up to $200 million on an election that could be used to pay for services people need.
"We have a mental health and addictions crisis, a homelessness crisis," Gretzky said.
"We have record numbers of people going to food banks," she said. "We have tariff threats coming from the United States and the only premier in the entire country who thinks that now is the good time [to] go to an election."
On Tuesday evening, the Ontario PC website listed Tony Francis as the candidate in Windsor West.
Francis is a director of the Windsor West PC riding association who has a background as a steel mill engineer.
The 2022 election saw the lowest voter turnout in Ontario history, Miljan said, and the winter election will only make it more challenging to get people to the ballot box.
"You want people who are willing to go through a snowstorm … to get out and cast their ballot," Miljan said. "It's kind of early to tell what the dynamics of this campaign are going to be."
People tend to be less engaged with provincial politics than federal politics even though provincial politics is "closer to the people," she added, and they're more likely to vote when they want change.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Time to press leaders to act quickly
Time to press leaders to act quickly

Winnipeg Free Press

timean hour ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Time to press leaders to act quickly

Opinion When I first sat down to write this, the Air Quality Index (AQI) was 259. Think of the most polluted place anywhere in the world, and we were worse. Even Toronto was less than half. Looking at a world literally on fire, I have to confess that my first thought was not 'let's build a pipeline.' Nor to spend money on any other project that supports fossil fuel consumption (and thus adds to the fire). No doubt this is one of many reasons why I am not prime minister of Canada, or premier of Manitoba, or mayor of Winnipeg. Apparently, taking the oath of office somehow erodes your ecological understanding (or, in Mark Carney's case, his 'values'), blinding you to common-sense reasoning about the state of the Earth and its creatures. Nor does even the fate of your own children and grandchildren seem to matter any more. Because of the foolish choices made by politicians, those young people will soon have to live in a world where AQI 259 is the norm. Going forward, our two seasons in Manitoba will not be winter and construction, but winter and smoke. The vast northern boreal forests will continue to burn as long as there is dry wood and a spark – warming winters, hotter summers, increasing drought and lightning create a perfect (fire) storm. Now, because Premier Wab Kinew offered a pipeline to Churchill as a good idea for northern Manitoba, he has apparently been called a 'climate change denier,' prompting others to rise to his defence. He has also eagerly lined up with the federal government, whose 'big ideas' always seem to mean more pipelines, cross-country to Alberta, and little else. There is no point to me slinging mud here, however. I would just say that climate change denial is, as climate change denial does. Two years into his term – halfway to the next election – Kinew has (incredibly) made ecological action even less of a priority than former PC premier Brian Pallister. Granted, much of what Pallister attempted was pointless, even perverse. But however laughable that 2017 'Climate and Green Plan' was, in all its multi-pillared splendor, Kinew has not even attempted anything better on his own. So, I hope Kinew will be honest, talking to the climate refugees from our north, telling them that he has done (and intends to do) nothing to change their situation. They will likely be back, again and again, until they give up and just stay in the south. While Kinew and his crew are more politically savvy than their predecessors in government (not a high bar to clear!), there are still limits to how far they can go on a smile and shoeshine. Along with ecological inaction, critical issues in health care remain much as they were, and new concerns have come to light. It took a Free Press article to expose the shocking fact that personal care homes are receiving the same budgets for feeding their residents now as they did in 2009. Where are the whistle-blowers? Or do we, as a society, value our elders so little, that no one objected? There always seems to be money for road construction, or sports events, or local hoorah of some kind, to distract voters from the important issues. 'Bread and circuses' (panem et circenses) has been a political maxim since ancient Rome – feed and distract the masses, and you can do what you want the rest of the time. Except, here in Manitoba, our leaders seem to think they need more bread than our elders. Wednesdays A weekly dispatch from the head of the Free Press newsroom. I looked up the difference between MLA salaries in 2009 and 2025. They are receiving more than 20 per cent higher base salary today. To quickly solve the problem, I think we should roll back their salaries (and those of senior management in the WHRA and Shared Health) to 2009 levels. Then, take that extra money to improve the food at personal care homes, until our political leaders can figure out another way to pay the bill. Looking at Winnipeg, Mayor Scott Gillingham was elected, it seems, by those who wanted nothing much to change. He has delivered on that expectation, but in a world on fire, doing nothing is almost as bad as starting another one. We could be working toward an accessible, climate resilient and sustainable city, but that would require foresight totally missing right now in City Hall, which is myopically focused on wasting money we don't have on yet more road construction. From the first shovel to its opening, the Winnipeg Floodway took six years and was bigger than the Suez Canal. Want a big project? How about one that has been talked about for too long? Move the rail lines outside the city, put in an LRT and rework transit to provide electric bus service to neighbourhoods. The local economy would boom, emissions from transportation would plummet, quality of life for everyone would improve – and so would the air. Do it in six years. Or less. Peter Denton writes from his floodway-protected home in rural Manitoba.

Netanyahu's new Gaza campaign draws backlash at home and abroad
Netanyahu's new Gaza campaign draws backlash at home and abroad

Canada News.Net

time4 hours ago

  • Canada News.Net

Netanyahu's new Gaza campaign draws backlash at home and abroad

JERUSALEM, Israel: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week forcefully defended a newly expanded military campaign in Gaza, describing it as essential to "finish the job and complete the defeat of Hamas" despite mounting criticism both domestically and internationally. The plan, he revealed, goes beyond earlier announcements and targets not only Hamas strongholds in Gaza City but also the "central camps" and the coastal area of Muwasi. A source familiar with the operation, speaking anonymously because they were not authorized to brief the media, confirmed that both areas are included in the military's objectives. The "central camps" house more than half a million displaced Palestinians, according to United Nations estimates, and had not been previously identified as targets. The reasons for the omission remain unclear, though over the weekend, Netanyahu faced pressure from members of his governing coalition, who argued that focusing solely on Gaza City was insufficient. Netanyahu has promised the creation of "safe zones" for civilians, but human rights groups note that such areas have been hit in previous strikes. He also spoke by phone with U.S. President Donald Trump over the weekend, thanking him for what his office called "steadfast support" for Israel's actions. Speaking to foreign journalists just before an emergency United Nations Security Council session — a forum that has so far generated more outrage than action — Netanyahu rejected allegations of starvation in Gaza and condemned what he called a "global campaign of lies." He insisted Israel's aim is not to occupy the enclave but to "free Gaza" by dismantling Hamas's military capacity, maintaining Israeli "overriding security control," and installing a non-Israeli civilian administration. Netanyahu said Israel would expand the number of aid distribution points in Gaza, but in a separate briefing to local reporters, he denied there was any famine. "There is no hunger. There was no hunger. There was a shortage, and there was certainly no policy of starvation," he claimed. He also ordered the military to allow "more foreign journalists" into Gaza — a significant change, as the territory has mainly remained closed to international media except during tightly controlled military embeds. Netanyahu again accused Hamas of bearing responsibility for Gaza's civilian casualties, destruction, and aid shortages, claiming the group still has "thousands of armed terrorists" and that many Palestinians are "begging" for liberation from its rule. Hamas dismissed Netanyahu's statements as "blatant lies" in a lengthy rebuttal. The United States, meanwhile, defended Israel's right to determine its security measures and rejected accusations that Israeli actions amount to genocide. With its veto power at the Security Council, Washington can block any resolutions aimed at curtailing Israel's military operations. Other council members and U.N. officials expressed alarm. China called the "collective punishment" of people in Gaza unacceptable. Russia warned against a "reckless intensification of hostilities."

US-China tariff truce renewed, avoiding near trade embargo
US-China tariff truce renewed, avoiding near trade embargo

Canada News.Net

time7 hours ago

  • Canada News.Net

US-China tariff truce renewed, avoiding near trade embargo

WASHINGTON/BEIJING: The United States and China have agreed to extend their current tariff truce for another 90 days, sidestepping sharp duty increases that were set to take effect this week and giving both sides more time to negotiate on trade disputes. U.S. President Donald Trump said on his Truth Social account that he had signed an executive order delaying higher tariffs until November 10 at 12:01 a.m. EST. China's Commerce Ministry announced a matching pause early on August 12, postponing additional tariffs and delaying trade and investment restrictions on certain U.S. firms announced in April. Without the extension, U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods would have surged to 145 percent and Chinese tariffs on American products to 125 percent, levels analysts said would have amounted to a near trade embargo. For now, the truce keeps U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports at 30 percent and Chinese duties on U.S. goods at 10 percent. The agreement comes just before the seasonal rush of imports for the holiday shopping period, covering goods from electronics to toys. Trump said at a news conference that he has a "good relationship" with Chinese President Xi Jinping and told CNBC last week that if a broader deal is reached, he hoped to meet Xi before year's end. Beijing called the extension "a measure to further implement the important consensus" reached during a June 5 call between the two leaders and said it would support stability in the global economy. Wendy Cutler, a former senior U.S. trade official now at the Asia Society Policy Institute, described the move as "positive news" and a sign both sides are exploring a possible deal that could pave the way for a Xi-Trump meeting this fall. The tariff truce was first announced in May after talks in Geneva, with negotiators meeting again in Stockholm in late July. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has argued that the triple-digit duties imposed earlier this year were unsustainable. Kelly Ann Shaw, a former White House trade official, said the last-minute nature of the extension fit Trump's negotiating style, noting he likely pushed for extra concessions. Over the weekend, Trump urged China to quadruple soybean purchases, though he dropped that demand at the beginning of this week. Ryan Majerus, a former U.S. trade official, said the delay "will undoubtedly lower anxiety on both sides as talks continue" toward a potential framework agreement in the fall. U.S. Commerce Department data show imports from China spiked early in the year to beat tariffs but plunged in June, cutting the U.S. trade deficit with China to US$9.5 billion—its smallest since 2004. Over five months, the gap has narrowed by $22.2 billion, a 70 percent year-on-year reduction. Washington has also pressed Beijing to curb purchases of Russian oil as part of efforts to pressure Moscow over the war in Ukraine, with Trump warning of possible secondary tariffs if those imports continue.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store