Windsor Star

Ford wants new extension in PC leadership vote

Candidate says many party members haven’t yet received election materials

- DAN BROWN AND PAUL MORDEN

Frustrated that so many party members haven’t been able to vote, Doug Ford wants the Ontario Progressiv­e Conservati­ves to scrap electronic voting in favour of a paper ballot and extend the voting in their leadership race — due to end Friday — by another week.

Ford, one of four candidates in the hurry-up race triggered by the resignatio­n of former leader Patrick Brown, called for the paper ballot during a London stop Monday on a Southweste­rn Ontario swing where he vented about the party’s electronic voting system for a new leader.

There has been widespread confusion and complaints about the electronic process.

“I’m frustrated as anything the way our party has handled this voting system,” Ford said earlier during a Sarnia stop.

“I found out this morning over 100,000 (party) members have paid their $10, haven’t received their envelopes to vote yet, across the province.”

The former Toronto city councillor and failed 2014 mayoral candidate said his own campaign team hasn’t been able to get answers from the party about his voting concerns.

“I just want a fair, democratic race,” Ford said.

“Right now, I’m very, very concerned with the situation we’re facing.”

But the chairperso­n of the PCs’ leadership election organizing committee said the party doesn’t share Ford’s concerns.

“We have a high degree of confidence in the system,” Hartley Lefton said. “The system is very resilient.”

Switching to a paper ballot would require rewriting the rules for the race between Ford, former Oshawa-area MPP Christine Elliott, businesswo­man and philanthro­pist Caroline Mulroney and political activist Tanya Granic Allen, whose campaign is focused on scrapping Ontario’s updated sexeducati­on curriculum.

“The rules as passed by the executive do not contemplat­e a paper ballot,” Lefton said.

To one veteran Queen’s Parkwatche­r, the voting flap is just the kind of trouble he saw coming after Brown resigned in late January amid unproven sexual misconduct allegation­s, triggering the abbreviate­d leadership race with just three months to go before a provincial election.

“I was predicting weeks ago this thing would be a big mess. So far, it’s living up to expectatio­ns,” said Nelson Wiseman, a political scientist at the University of Toronto.

Voting for the new leader by card-carrying Tories began last Friday.

Over the weekend, registrati­on to vote was extended a second time — until noon this Wednesday, after previously being extended until Monday from March 2.

The party also extended the voting deadline, from this Thursday at noon until this Friday.

The PCs are to announce their new leader Saturday. Wiseman said there’s no way of knowing which candidate would benefit most from going back to a paper ballot, something that fell

I found out this morning over 100,000 (party) members have paid their $10, haven’t received their envelopes to vote yet, across the province.

out of use when parties switched to one-member, one-vote elections of leaders from convention­s with delegates.

He said he also agrees with interim PC Leader Vic Fedeli, who has said the party’s membership list is “rotten.”

Lefton wouldn’t give a number for the party’s membership, but conceded there have been delays in the voting which is why the deadlines have been changed already.

The deadline for verificati­on is 8 p.m. Wednesday. The deadline for voting is noon Friday. Adding to the voting hiccups, the bonds between leadership rivals Elliott and Ford — they often talk about how they ’ve been friends and political allies for years — seemed to be fraying rapidly Monday. Elliott’s campaign co-chair accused Ford of “erratic” and outof-control behaviour, after the businessma­n claimed Elliott had forged a secret deal with former leader Brown to win over his supporters.

Ford had earlier blasted his longtime friend for alleged flip-flopping while a member of the legislatur­e, and taking a supposed patronage job from Liberal Premier Kathleen Wynne.

The spat underscore­s evidence the race has boiled down to a faceoff between the pair, and between starkly different political styles.

 ??  ?? Doug Ford
Doug Ford

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