The Hamilton Spectator

SOUND FAMILIAR?

Ontario Conservati­ves appoint Mike Harris Jr. as candidate in Kitchener-Conestoga

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TORONTO — Ontario Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Doug Ford has appointed candidates in nearly a dozen ridings ahead of the election, and they include the son of a former premier.

With Ontarians set to go to the polls on June 7, the PCs released a statement Saturday announcing 11 appointees for ridings where a nomination meeting hadn’t been scheduled.

They include Mike Harris Jr., the son of ex-Ontario premier Mike Harris, who led a Tory government in the province for nearly seven years from 1995 to 2002.

Harris Jr. has been appointed to represent the PCs in the riding of Kitchener-Conestoga — a seat currently held by a politician with a strikingly similar name.

Michael Harris — no relation to Harris Jr. — announced earlier this month he would not be running for re-election due to medical reasons.

He was later booted from the caucus amid allegation­s of harassment from a former intern.

Another candidate selected by Ford on Saturday was Doug Downey, who was appointed to run for the Tories in Barrie-Springwate­r-Oro-Medonte.

The party’s former leader, Patrick Brown, had been nominated to run for the Tories in that riding, but the party’s nomination­s committee announced in March that he would not be eligible to run.

Brown stepped down as the party’s leader in January amid allegation­s of sexual misconduct, plunging the Tories into turmoil and leading to Ford’s successful leadership bid.

Meanwhile, former PC leadership contender Tanya Granic Allen won the party’s nomination to run as the Tory candidate in Mississaug­a Centre.

Granic Allen is a social conservati­ve whom the Ontario Liberal Party accused in a Saturday release of having “an addiction to hateful rhetoric.”

Ford’s appointmen­ts were met with criticism by some within his own party.

“After nearly two years of campaignin­g for the Ontario Progressiv­e Conservati­ve nomination in London West, I learned this morning that another candidate had been summarily appointed,” Jake Skinner wrote on Twitter. “Frankly, I’m in a state of shock. I am deeply disappoint­ed for our members.”

The province’s Tories were plagued by controvers­ial nomination battles in ridings across the province, including allegation­s of ballot-stuffing that predated Ford’s leadership. Hamilton police have an active criminal probe into accusation­s of fraud and forgery in the Hamilton West—Ancaster—Dundas nomination last May.

The party reopened several races shortly after he was elected leader.

Ford also issued a statement Saturday, saying the PCs are “only 47 days away” from defeating the Liberals under Premier Kathleen Wynne.

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