Ontario election 2022: Doug Ford and the PC Party’s plan for 4 more years

Why Doug Ford is channeling John Diefenbaker and how his nephew and Toronto's former police chief are faring in their election races. Cynthia Mulligan explains.

The Progressive Conservatives and leader Doug Ford have been smooth sailing for the majority of this campaign and most polls have them holding onto their majority, but what are they offering to the province’s residents?

This is Ford’s second campaign to form a majority government and it has been framed as his to lose. Despite now having a record to back up, he has been left relatively unscathed from Liberal, NDP and Green Party attacks.

The blue tide in 2018 led to the PCs picking 76 seats in the 2018 election. However, there were only 67 MPPs left in the caucus when the legislature was dissolved due to multiple representatives being removed.

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Pollster and the president of Forum Research Lorne Boznioff said despite Ford’s popularity going back and forth during the height of COVID-19 pandemic, “you could say there were a number of missteps during the COVID times that the Tories were responsible for, but people seem to be forgetting that.”


RELATED: Is this Doug Ford’s election to lose?


Campaign experts said the lack of a key issue rallying the other parties and finger-pointing between the Liberals and NDP have left Ford pretty much unscathed so far during the campaign.

“There’s doesn’t seem to be a key issue that’s riling people up … and so the public isn’t really moved by anyone’s real platform in that area. So I think they’re looking more at the personality,” explained Bozinoff.

“Doug Ford has a very amenable, friendly, folksy personality. It’s not super slick, I would say, and I think that’s just resonating with people.”

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Ontario Liberal Party leader Steven Del Duca, Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath and Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner did get some digs into Ford during the debate, focused on education and health care cuts. 

“Have you talked to a nurse about how disrespected they feel, how overworked and underpaid and underappreciated they are…?” asked Schreiner. While Del Duca commented, “He’s here tonight, bragging like he deserves a medal or a pat on the back about supporting public education. Your record on public education, Mr. Ford, is an embarrassment.”

But it hasn’t seemed to be enough to cut into the PC lead this election. They have been regularly polling around the 38 per cent mark, the rough threshold needed to form a majority government once again.

CityNews has been reviewing all of the four major parties’ platforms. PC Party members have been campaigning on their 2022 budget alone, announced right before the dissolution of the Ontario legislature, and the party hasn’t released a full platform.

Key promises from the Progressive Conservative party

Economy, jobs and taxes

Education and child care

 

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Environment and climate change

Health care and COVID-19

Housing and affordability

Transportation and infrastructure

Advanced voting will occur until May 28 and the general election date is June 2. You can find full coverage of the 2022 Ontario election here.

To read the full PC Party Ontario budget, click here.

Read more on the other three major party leaders and their platforms here:


With files from Nick Westoll