Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario's Kathleen Wynne Says She's Not Giving Up Despite Poor Showing In Polls

The Canadian Press, 25 May, 2018 12:47 PM
    TORONTO — Facing a barrage of poor polling numbers for her Ontario Liberals, a subdued Kathleen Wynne said on Friday she would keep doing what she can to push her party's accomplishments in government.
     
    Recent surveys suggest Wynne's Liberals trail both the Progressive Conservatives under Doug Ford and a surging New Democratic Party under Andrea Horwath, who polls now suggest has jumped into the top spot in voter preferences ahead of the province's June 7th election.
     
    "Am I going to give up? Absolutely not," Wynne said at a campaign stop on Toronto's waterfront. "This is way too important that we continue to talk at the doors across this province about what we have done and what we can do going forward."
     
    Her government has helped ensure strong business, a strong economy and a fairer society — accomplishments too important to abandon, Wynne said.
     
    For her part, a campaigning Horwath said people are becoming excited by the fact they don't have to settle for either of the two parties that have led the province since 1995, when voters tossed out the governing New Democrats under Bob Rae in favour of the Progressive Conservatives under Mike Harris, who was in turn shown the door in 2003 by the Dalton McGuinty Liberals.
     
    "This campaign is about change for the better, it's about a future in Ontario where people can start building a better life again," Horwath said at a stop in east-end Toronto. "People feel like there's something exciting that can happen in our province, that we don't have to settle for the same thing we've settled for the last two and a half decades."
     
     
    The NDP's rise in the polls has also brought added scrutiny. On Friday, the Tories alleged an NDP candidate in east Toronto — Tasleem Riaz — had made offensive comments online, including a post from 2013 quoting Adolf Hitler.
     
    Riaz was quick to issue a statement saying she was "horrified" the post had appeared on her Facebook page, stressing that she did not understand how it had happened and would never have shared it intentionally. Asked about the allegations, Horwath highlighted Riaz's years of work as an interfaith advocate.
     
    "I'm looking into this particular issue but it certainly doesn't match with what I know about Tasleem and her history of activism," Horwath said as she touted party plans to invest $1.6-billion a year for 10 years for school repairs.
     
    Ford, who only recently took over the party after his predecessor Patrick Brown resigned amid allegations of sexual misconduct, said he paid no attention to polls — which had for the longest time suggested the election was his to lose.
     
    However, the most recent polls suggest the party has begun slipping — falling behind the NDP.
     
    "People want change (but) they don't want an NDP government," Ford said in Toronto. "For 15 years, the Liberals have been partying with the taxpayers' money and the NDP wants to keep the party going, just with a different tune."
     
    Horwath and Ford both planned relatively light campaign days Friday, while Wynne, who had planned a more frantic pace, shortened her day in light of Thursday evening's bombing of a restaurant in Mississauga, Ont., that left three people seriously hurt. Wynne called the attack a horrific crime.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Introduces Anti-SLAPP Legislation To Protect Public Interest Debates

    Earlier this year, former B.C. premier Ujjal Dosanjh, attorney general Wally Oppal and numerous civil rights and environmental groups publicly called on the government to introduce anti-SLAPP legislation.

    B.C. Introduces Anti-SLAPP Legislation To Protect Public Interest Debates

    Small Forest Fire Breaks Out In Popular Hiking Area North Of Vancouver

    Small Forest Fire Breaks Out In Popular Hiking Area North Of Vancouver
    PARKSVILLE, B.C. — A small wildfire has broken out on in a popular hiking destination north of Vancouver.

    Small Forest Fire Breaks Out In Popular Hiking Area North Of Vancouver

    Survivor Of Gun Violence In Afghanistan Says She Wants To Be 'Voice Of Women'

    Survivor Of Gun Violence In Afghanistan Says She Wants To Be 'Voice Of Women'
    A bullet from a rifle she said was fired by her husband shattered her cheek bone, collapsed her eye socket and took half her nose with it.

    Survivor Of Gun Violence In Afghanistan Says She Wants To Be 'Voice Of Women'

    Owners Of Multimillion Dollar Vancouver Home Owners Say They Can't Stomach Tax Bump

    Owners Of Multimillion Dollar Vancouver Home Owners Say They Can't Stomach Tax Bump
    VANCOUVER — Lynne Kent says owning a home in Vancouver that's valued at $4 million isn't the blessing it may appear to be.

    Owners Of Multimillion Dollar Vancouver Home Owners Say They Can't Stomach Tax Bump

    Southern B.C. Bracing For Round 2 Of Flooding As Snowpacks Melt

    Southern B.C. Bracing For Round 2 Of Flooding As Snowpacks Melt
    GRAND FORKS, B.C. — Flood weary residents in southern British Columbia are being told to brace for round two as rising temperatures accelerate the melting of high elevation snowpacks. 

    Southern B.C. Bracing For Round 2 Of Flooding As Snowpacks Melt

    No One On Watch As Track Worker Injured At Delta, B.C., Rail Yard: TSB

    No One On Watch As Track Worker Injured At Delta, B.C., Rail Yard: TSB
    The Transportation Safety Board has determined inadequate safety training contributed to the injury of a track worker at a rail yard in Delta, B.C.

    No One On Watch As Track Worker Injured At Delta, B.C., Rail Yard: TSB