The Niagara Falls Review

Ontario’s Liberals ‘stealing’ NDP’s ideas again: Horwath

- JESSICA SMITH CROSS

TORONTO — Ontario’s Liberals “tend to steal” her party’s ideas, and with one year left until the next provincial election, NDP Leader Andrea Horwath says they’re doing it again.

In the 2014 election, Horwath faced criticism from her party’s rank and file that her platform wasn’t left enough, and that her campaign ran to the right of Premier Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals, who ended up winning a majority government.

But despite the criticism — and her party’s disappoint­ing third-place finish — the 54-year-old politician managed to survive.

Nothing has changed, a defiant Horwath said in a recent interview.

“We know what we stand for and we know what we believe in,” she said. “Those things haven’t changed, ever.”

Horwath is not deterred by the governing Liberals’ recent announceme­nts, including a $15 minimum wage, union-friendly labour reforms and free tuition for low- and middleinco­me students — measures that fall right into traditiona­l NDP territory. Another Liberal promise — a pharmacare program to make drugs free for Ontarians under age 25 — was announced mere days after the NDP unveiled its universal pharmacare plan earlier this year.

“It’s a funny thing about the Liberals,” said Horwath. “They tend to steal our ideas and then really fumble the ball when it comes to implementa­tion or getting it right. So they like to take our ideas and then mess around with them so that they don’t actually come out to be exactly what we would hope.”

Many observers believe there is an appetite for change in the Ontario electorate — the Liberals have been in power for 14 years — which bodes well for Horwath’s party and the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves.

However, some New Democrats acknowledg­e that having the governing Liberals on their ideologica­l ground could pose a problem for their party.

Author and activist Judy Rebick warns the NDP will find itself in the same squeeze as last time around, particular­ly as the Liberals have the backing of organized labour.

Rebick was one of 34 long-time NDP supporters who wrote Horwath a letter in the middle of the 2014 election campaign, accusing her of trying to win Conservati­ve votes while abandoning the party’s progressiv­e base.

She now believes the party has learned its lesson, citing some of the very ideas that the Liberals have adopted, such as the $15 minimum wage and pharmacare — as evidence the NDP is on the right track.

“I think the NDP’s only chance for success is to be bold, on the left of the Liberals,” said Rebick.

But a former top NDP official thinks that’s a dangerous game.

Getting into a “bidding war” with Liberals to see who can go farthest left will end up with the NDP losing credibilit­y in the eyes of voters, who have held former premier Bob Rae’s unpopular NDP government against the party since the 1990s, said Karl Belanger, a former national director of the federal New Democratic party.

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