Doug Ford heads into Ontario's election year with a lead, but much uncertainty - Action News
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TorontoOntario Votes 2022

Doug Ford heads into Ontario's election year with a lead, but much uncertainty

Ontario's election campaign officially begins in little more than four months, and the political parties are ramping up their preparations.

In the battle to unseat Ford, NDP's Andrea Horwath, Liberals' Steven Del Duca face opposite challenges

Doug Ford will seek a second term as Ontario's premier in 2022, with a provincial election scheduled for June 2. (Cole Burston/The Canadian Press)

As winter takes hold in Ontario, the spring election undoubtedly feels a long way away but with campaigning officially beginning in little more than four months, the province's political parties are ramping up preparations.

Premier Doug Ford will seek re-election during the month-long campaign that culminates in voting day on June 2. His rivals for the job, NDPLeader Andrea Horwath and Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca, are each vying to position themselves as the only person and party who can defeat Ford and his Progressive Conservatives.

Meanwhile, Green Party Leader Mike Schreineracknowledges he won't form government but wants to boost the number of Green MPPs. If there's a slim minority, there's even a chance he could holdthe balance of power.

Take Ford's roller-coaster high-profile term as premierand throw inall the variables of the COVID-19 pandemic including the impact of the Omicron variant or whatever comes next and Ontario has the makings of a profoundly politically interesting 2022.

The NDP's Andrea Horwath is heading into her fourth campaign as party leader. The party's total seat count has increased in each successive election so far under her leadership. (Sue Goodspeed/CBC)

A Progressive Conservative lead is the chief consistency in publicly available Ontario polling conducted since the federal election in September. Polls have been released by polling firms EKOS, Leger Marketing,Mainstreet Researchand the Angus Reid Institute

"As the second and third wave of the pandemic dissipated, we saw things actually not too bad for Premier Ford and the Progressive Conservatives, down a little bit from what got him elected premier (in 2018) but still in strong shape," said Andrew Enns, executive vice president of Leger Marketing.

"But we've seen that lead erode over the fall period, and it's actually tightened up a bit," added Enns.

Greg Lyle, president of Innovative Research Group, a Toronto-based polling firm, says key to a PC party victory will be attracting voters who don't identify as PC supporters but who do want Ford to be premier.

"There are a lot of Ontarians who think that whatever mistakes he makes, he owns up to them and he's trying to do his best,said Lyle. "There are many Ontarians that think he's horrible, but more than enough that think he's doing a good job."

Lyle says Ford's personal approval ratings have improved since sagging in the spring over his handling of the third wave of the pandemic. For 2022, a big unknown is how the Ford government's response to the Omicron variant will factor into the voter mood.

Liberal leader Steven Del Duca made a slate of announcements today aimed at members of the LGBTQ community. (Haydn Watters/CBC)

As the official opposition, the NDPis in theory at least best positionedto pitch themselves to voters as the natural alternative toFord's PCs. However, the party's polling numbers tend to lag behind their leader's approval ratings, posing a challenge for the New Democrats to build on their 40-seat total in the last election. In Ontario, 63 seats are needed to win a majority.

The NDP's campaign director, Michael Balagus, sees opportunity among the 60 per cent or more of Ontarians who tell pollsters they want a new government.

"The challenge for us now is toshow the people that we can be thatgovernment," said Balagusin an interview. "From the research that we're doing, and from the anecdotal evidence, just talking to folks out there, I think there's real openness like never before to us."

Horwath is heading into her fourth campaign as leader. While she has increased the party's total seat count in each successive election so far, this time around, anything short of forming government would likely be perceived as a failure.

In an interview, she saidshe believes many Ontarians are looking for 2022 to bring them hope for the future.

"I think my job over the next several months is to not only talk about the fact that they can have a government that really does take care of what they think is important, but that I can be that premier and the NDP can be that government," said Horwath.

Ontario's Legislature is pictured on a winter day.
The Ontario Legislature is on its winter break until Family Day in February, but behind the scenes the parties are busily preparing for the 2022 election campaign. (Mike Crawley/CBC)

For Del Duca and the Liberals, the challenge is a mirror image of the one facing Horwath and the NDP: the Liberal Party's polling numbers are tending to outpace approval of Del Duca, who has struggled to gain recognition among voters.

"I understand as a first-time-out opposition party leader that some people in the province don't know who I am, but I look at that as an opportunity," Del Duca said in an interview.

"I think people are looking for responsible leadership that is truly competent, that actually knows how to get the job done," Del Duca added.

Despite the strength of the Liberal brand in Ontario likely buoyed by the federal Liberals theprovincial party faces some real logistical challenges heading into the 2022 campaign, chief of which is that it has such a long way to go from the mere seven seats it won in 2018.

Liberal fundraising totals lagbehind both the NDP's and PCs'. TheLiberal party chose notto spend any money on advertising this fall when their rivals were running significant campaigns, including attack ads targeting Del Duca.

Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner unveiled his party's platform in Toronto on Monday. (CBC)

"We've tested all the ads, and both the NDP and the Conservative ad are effective at pulling votes away from the Liberals and driving down Del Duca's favourables," said Lyle. He believes the way voters feel about the leaders could be a decisivefactor in the election.

Ennssaid Ford can be an "effective weapon" for the PCs when he gets out among voters as a "frank, call-them-like-I-see-them type of political leader."

For the Green Party, Schreiner says his election goal is to win a few more seats, with an eye to the progress made by his provincial counterparts in British Columbia, Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick.

"I'll be honest with people, we're not going to go from one seat to being premier," said Schreiner. "But if we can go from one seat to three seats to five seats, we can increase our influence at Queen's Park."