The Hamilton Spectator

Some selling ‘false hope’ GM plant won’t close, says Ford

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — Union leaders and politician­s who talk about saving a General Motors plant in Oshawa are selling “false hope,” Premier Doug Ford said Wednesday, as an opposition critic accused him of politicizi­ng the closure in order to attack the federal carbon tax.

Ford held a news conference after an emergency cabinet meeting on the GM closure Wednesday afternoon. The premier accused Jerry Dias, the leader of the union representi­ng the affected autoworker­s, as well as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other politician­s of grandstand­ing when they pledged to fight the closure.

“When we hear any of these people talking all we hear are a bunch of powerful people grandstand­ing,” he said. “They’re busy picking fights and raising false hope. But in private they know the GM plant is not coming back.”

Ford said the fight ahead for the 2,500 autoworker­s affected by the looming plant closure is to find new jobs, and he promised to help them with that.

He said he believes the firm had been contemplat­ing the move for a long time, and speculated that had he been premier before the June election that perhaps he could have averted the closure.

“GM didn’t decide this in the six months (after) Doug Ford took over,” Ford said. “Matter of fact, if Doug Ford was here for five years they probably wouldn’t have left because I would have lowered their taxes, lowered their hydro rates ... and made it attractive for companies to stay here.”

Ford used the news conference to called on Trudeau to scrap his plan to impose a carbon tax on the provinces as a way to help spur job creation in Ontario and across the country. He called on Trudeau, whom he will meet with at a first minister’s conference in Montreal next week, to abandon the carbon pricing plan.

“You can’t campaign for a jobkilling carbon tax on Monday and sit around and wonder why manufactur­ing and automotive jobs are leaving on Tuesday.”

Ontario Green party Leader Mike Schreiner said Ford is erroneousl­y linking the closure of the GM plant in Oshawa with putting a price on pollution.

“Politicizi­ng the GM plant closure for an anti-climate crusade is irresponsi­ble,” Schreiner said. “Instead of attacking the clean economy, I’m asking the premier to embrace this $26 trillion economic opportunit­y. I’m calling on the premier to work with stakeholde­rs to develop an auto strategy for Ontario to lead the (electric vehicle) revolution, not lose jobs to jurisdicti­ons who are embracing electric vehicles.”

Dias fired back at Ford on Twitter, taking issue with his claim that the focus should be on finding the impacted GM workers other employment. “Find new jobs? Seriously — is this the best that @fordnation can do?”

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