The Niagara Falls Review

Horwath kicks off campaign: ‘A lot at stake in this election’

NDP leader says housing, health and seniors’ care among topics of concern

- KRISTIN RUSHOWY TORONTO STAR

The NDP is in the best position to defeat Doug Ford and the Ontario PC Party, Andrea Horwath said Wednesday morning as she launched her election campaign in front of Queen’s Park.

Horwath said housing, the “increasing cost of everyday life, the health-care system and seniors’ care systems” are the topics that concern Ontarians and “those are the conversati­ons I’m going to be having with folks” before the June 2 election.

She spent Wednesday visiting locations around the GTA, including Mississaug­a and Scarboroug­h.

“We’re going to get to as many regions in this province as possible,” she told reporters as she stood in front of her campaign bus, the only one that will travel across the province with a party leader and reporters on board in this campaign. (Media outlets pay to ride on the bus.)

“There’s a lot at stake in this campaign, so we want to be as in as many places as possible,” she added.

In the 2018 election, the NDP won 40 of the legislatur­e’s 124 seats, becoming the Official Opposition to Doug Ford’s PC government, with the Liberals reduced to just seven seats and losing official party status. Ford was in Brampton early Wednesday and Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca was in Etobicoke.

Horwath noted that in 2018, the NDP came first or second in 100 ridings in the province.

“So if the job is to get rid of Doug Ford and not give him a chance to make things worse for people, to make life harder and further cut as

Conservati­ves always do, then the best shot we have of doing that is electing an NDP member in your riding,” said Horwath, who has led the provincial NDP since 2009.

“As the Official Opposition, we’re the team that has the strength, that has the experience, and that’s prepared to take over the reins and do that now.”

Horwath also said her party now has a full slate of candidates, and as with the last two provincial elections is on track to elect at least 50 per cent women.

Among NDP candidates, 55 per cent are women or non-binary, 33 per cent are racialized, and 12 per cent identify as LGBTQ+.

“People are feeling that life’s gotten tougher,” Horwath told reporters. “Things have gotten harder under Doug Ford. And of course we know that folks were disappoint­ed that the Liberals, after 15 years, left our health-care system in shambles. Our long-term-care system is so vulnerable to COVID that 40,000 people lost their lives in tragic ways.

“These things can be fixed, but you have to have a government that’s prepared to prioritize the cost of everything going up — except for people’s wages. What they need is a government that’s on their side. And I think clearly, that’s the message we’re bringing, you actually can have a government that’s going to be on your side.”

 ?? TIJANA MARTIN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Andrea Horwath kicks off her election campaign at Queen’s Park on Wednesday before hitting stops in Mississaug­a and Scarboroug­h.
TIJANA MARTIN THE CANADIAN PRESS Andrea Horwath kicks off her election campaign at Queen’s Park on Wednesday before hitting stops in Mississaug­a and Scarboroug­h.

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