The Niagara Falls Review

No matter what the experts claim, this election isn’t over yet

- MARTIN REGG COHN Martin Regg Cohn is a columnist based in Toronto covering Ontario politics. Follow him on Twitter: @reggcohn

The 2018 election was over before it began: Wednesday was merely the formal campaign kickoff to kicking the Liberals out of power and electing Doug Ford to the premier’s office.

So say many pundits, pollsters, and politician­s pursuing power. But beware people in the know, for no one really knows how the votes will add up on June 7.

Public opinion polls cast the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader as the front-runner, Liberal Leader Kathleen Wynne as a dead duck, and New Democratic Party Leader Andrea Horwath as a dark horse on the move.

But be skeptical of anyone selling certainty in a closely-watched campaign. If politics is broken, polling is beyond repair.

Campaigns matter. Campaigns are also maddening.

Politician­s make implausibl­e promises or unsupporte­d accusation­s. Their pitches rely on hype and hope, fear and frustratio­n.

By all accounts, this is a change election. But be careful what you wish for — change can be unpredicta­ble, and a fresh face isn’t always unfamiliar.

While Ford feels new and unblemishe­d, he is arguably as much of a retread as his rivals. Ford ran and lost for mayor in 2014, and bears the scars of his years as a controvers­ial city councillor alongside his brother Rob as mayor (imposing new taxes and collecting a rebuke from the integrity commission­er along the way). He stunned the Tories by coming from behind to win the leadership, suspended the party’s platform, renounced its core promises, and is reverting to the PC formula of cutting programs to achieve prosperity — details to come.

Wynne bears the baggage of five years as premier, weighed down by a further 10 years of Liberal rule that makes her an easy target for decisions good, bad and ugly — from the gas plants boondoggle to privatizin­g half of Hydro One. But her unpopulari­ty has prodded her party to propose a slate of progressiv­e policies — from a $15 minimum wage to expanded pharmacare and free child care for preschoole­rs — provided people overlook their surging debt projection­s (as voters usually do).

Horwath hopes to leapfrog from last place into government as the default choice among voters disaffecte­d with the other two parties. Untested in government, she benefits from the other two leaders attacking one another. But Horwath has been around as leader far longer than her two rivals, having assumed the NDP mantle nearly a decade ago without making much of a mark in provincial politics (apart from her disastrous 2014 election gambit, when she tried to lure PC voters but lost loyalists along the way). Now she is reverting to a progressiv­e platform that promises expanded child care, pharmacare and denticare.

Green party Leader Mike Schreiner gets the least exposure, having been excluded from the televised debates.

Ford is a flashpoint, Wynne a lightning rod, and Horwath is offering shelter in a storm. Yet beyond their bitter personal rivalries, their competing promises don’t add up:

Ford promises to find $6 billion in painless cuts; Wynne plans a deficit of $6.7 billion; Horwath pledges to buy back more than $6 billion in Hydro One shares.

All three leaders’ political ambitions are exceeded by their policy ambitions.

It’s easy enough to pick holes in each party’s plan (the Tories haven’t yet presented one). Tempting as it is to write them all off as incoherent or untrustwor­thy, that would be a campaign cop-out.

Elections require careful comparison­s, even if that means deciding on the lesser of three or four evils. The alternativ­e is apathy and abdicating your vote — which means letting others decide for you.

Tune in and stay tuned. No matter what people say, the campaign has just started — and with four long weeks still to go, it is far from over.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada