Toronto Star

NDP will hold PCs to account, Horwath says

Party will be ‘the voice’ for those worried about future social-service cuts

- KRISTIN RUSHOWY QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath says she and her MPPs have a “very important job ahead” to hold the Ford government accountabl­e.

“People are pretty worried about what Doug Ford has in store, and so am I,” Horwath said, speaking to both new and returning MPPs — there are 40 in total — for the first time since the June 7 election. The NDP doubled the number of seats it holds, with more than half of them first-time MPPs, and will become Ontario’s official opposition.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves, under Leader Doug Ford, won 76 seats and were elected with about 40 per cent of the popular vote. They formally take office June 29.

During the election campaign, Ford said he would find $6 billion in “efficienci­es,” and made a number of spending promises, as well as pledging tax cuts — which eat into government revenues — without saying how they would be paid for.

“The majority of Ontarians did not vote for cuts to health care or layoffs to more nurses and more teachers or the privatizat­ion of the things that matter most to all of us,” Horwath said. “New Democrats — we will be the voice for all those Ontarians. We will hold Doug Ford accountabl­e for each and every decision that he makes.”

Horwath also said Ford “still needs to account for the scandals and investigat­ions that plagued him during the campaign and prior,” referring to police investigat­ions into alleged ballot-box stuffing during PC nomination­s, as well as the Hwy. 407 data breach that led to a candidate resigning.

Also on Thursday, Ontario’s informatio­n and privacy commission­er issued his annual report, in which he urged the legislatur­e to give him the power to oversee political parties and how they collect and handle voters’ personal infor- mation.

Brian Beamish said “parties collect and use personal informatio­n to target individual­s in specific and unique ways for political gain. Digital tools amass extensive amounts of personal informatio­n from diverse sources, frequently without the knowledge or consent of the individual. These increasing­ly sophistica­ted big data practices raise new privacy and ethical concerns and the need for greater transparen­cy is evident.”

 ?? RENÉ JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR ?? NDP Leader Andrea Horwath met with her 40-member caucus for the first time Wednesday.
RENÉ JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR NDP Leader Andrea Horwath met with her 40-member caucus for the first time Wednesday.

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