Windsor Star

NDP’s platform figures don’t add up: Wynne

Liberal leader says Howarth’s promises are built on budgeting ‘miscalcula­tion’

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Ontario’s governing Liberals claimed to have found a costing error Monday in the NDP election platform, marking yet another attack on the third party that’s been gaining momentum, while the New Democratic leader ruled out the possibilit­y of a coalition. Liberal Leader Kathleen Wynne said just because the two parties have similar values, doesn’t mean she won’t ask questions about their platform.

“I think that there’s a strong consensus emerging that (Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader) Doug Ford does not have the path forward for the people of the province,” Wynne said.

“So that means that we have to have the same degree of scrutiny applied to all of our plans. That’s what this is about.”

The NDP countered that the figures in their platform were accurate.

Liberal attacks on the NDP have ramped up in recent days, as several polls suggest the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves have the most support ahead of the June 7 vote, and the Liberals are lagging behind the New Democrats.

The two left-leaning leaders were asked over the weekend about the possibilit­y of forming a coalition government if the Tories win a minority.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said Monday there is no way she would join forces with the Liberals. “I am unequivoca­lly saying I have no interest in partnering up with that party,” Horwath said. “They have consistent­ly made decisions that were in their own political best interest, decisions that were in the best interest of the well-connected Liberals and high-income earners that tend to be their friends.”

On the weekend, Horwath had said she wouldn’t work with a party that wants to make life harder for everyday families, but that it’s impossible to say anything definitive before she sees the election results.

Ford, meanwhile, said Ontarians don’t want a “backroom deal” that would keep the Liberals in power. “People want change in this province, they don’t want the NDP making a backroom deal to prop up the Liberals, they want comprehens­ive change,” he said at a stop in Niagara Falls.

The Liberals had Wynne, as well as the two candidates who were finance minister and treasury board president, at an event Monday to talk about the NDP’s budgeting “miscalcula­tion.”

“The NDP built their platform and their entire economic plan for the province on a major mistake — a significan­t, sizable and undeniable mistake,” said Charles Sousa. “As a result, they have defunded billions of dollars that flowed to valued programs. It’s a failure of basic competence that leads to real consequenc­es and renders their entire platform incoherent and unrealisti­c.”

The Liberals say the New Democrats didn’t factor in government spending announced between last year’s budget and this year’s fiscal plan, creating a hole of at least $3 billion in the party’s platform. The NDP’s miscalcula­tion would defund apprentice­ship programs, funding for women’s shelters and implementa­tion of the province’s legalized cannabis strategy, the Liberals said.

Horwath said the NDP plan was based on new spending programs the Liberals promised in their 2018 budget — substitute­d with the party’s campaign pledges.

The Liberals are being “pretty dishonest” with their criticism, she said, adding her numbers have been verified by a former parliament­ary budget officer.

“I want to assure people that the NDP numbers are in fact correct,” Horwath said.

The Liberals’ own deficit projection­s have been called into question by the financial accountabi­lity officer and the auditor general, though the Liberals chalk that up to a difference in accounting methods.

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