Lethbridge Herald

Ontario NDP under attack for plan

RIVALS SAY PARTY WIN WOULD COST JOBS

- Paola Loriggio THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

If you believe Doug Ford and Kathleen Wynne, an NDP government would bring Ontario indefinite strikes, high unemployme­nt, skyrocketi­ng taxes, and farmlands lost to wind turbines.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader and the Liberal premier raised the alarm Wednesday about what they consider the risks of supporting the New Democrats, after recent polls suggest the party is tied with the Tories for the most support with two weeks left until the provincial election.

Ford called the prospect of an NDP government “scary,” saying the party would sacrifice farmlands for wind turbines against the wishes of rural communitie­s.

He also invoked former NDP premier Bob Rae in suggesting the province would return to high unemployme­nt and high taxes and see companies leave en masse if NDP Leader Andrea Horwath were to seize the reins on June 7.

“It would actually be scary and I think everyone in the province realizes that once we shed light on the NDP that they’ve had a free ride for this whole campaign. The free ride’s over,” he said.

Wynne, who has repeatedly framed the NDP platform as unachievab­le in recent days, zeroed in on the party’s stance against back-to-work legislatio­n.

Speaking at an election campaign stop in Toronto, Wynne said that while she believes in the collective bargaining process, the government needs a tool to use when that process hits a wall.

“So she is saying she would take that tool off the table,” she said.

“It’s that kind of impractica­lity, when you ask me what the indication, those are the indication­s their plan is not workable and people need to examine that.”

Horwath told the Toronto Star that she couldn’t imagine a scenario in which she would use back-to-work legislatio­n, as the Liberal government did to end a five-week strike by college faculty last year.

The Liberals introduced legislatio­n just before the election campaign to end a strike by contract staff at York University that began March 5, but the NDP didn’t support it.

Horwath said Wednesday labour strife in the education sector can be avoided by properly investing in the system, adding the Liberals shouldn’t be giving anyone lessons on how to avoid labour disputes.

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