The Niagara Falls Review

Ford’s pandemic performanc­e under fire at northern debate

PC leader attacked Del Duca for not building anything as Liberal minister

- KRISTIN RUSHOWY, ROBERT BENZIE AND ROB FERGUSON

Doug Ford was forced on the defensive Tuesday in the first leaders’ debate as the twoyear COVID-19 pandemic exploded as a dominant issue in Ontario’s June 2 election campaign.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader insisted the province performed relatively well compared with other provinces and U.S. states during the world’s worst publicheal­th crisis in a century.

Until now, the pandemic had simmered on the campaign back burner while inflation, education and economic recovery were the hot topics.

That changed at the Federation of Northern Ontario Municipali­ties debate when moderator Markus Schwabe asked the leaders how the province fared during COVID-19, allowing Ford’s rivals a chance to pounce.

“There was some challengin­g times and really tough decisions,” the Tory leader conceded, blaming the previous Liberal government for leaving the cupboard bare in terms of personal protective equipment (PPE) and pandemic planning.

“Within a couple months, we were producing our own PPE,” he said, touting his collaborat­ion with the federal Liberal government and Ontario’s municipali­ties.

But Green Leader Mike Schreiner said Ford’s efforts “started to break down when the government wasn’t following the science and the data to the extent that it should have” and opened up Ontario’s economy too quickly last spring.

“Then the government’s response was to bring back carding and close down playground­s,” said Schreiner referring to moves by the Tory government that were immediatel­y reversed amid public outcry.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath thundered that about “4,400 seniors lost their lives in long-term care because this government, this premier … promised an iron ring around long-term care” that turned out to be porous.

“I would have been protecting the seniors in long-term care, hiring 10,000 (personal support workers) like Quebec did, like B.C. did, but Mr. Ford didn’t want to spend the money,” she said at the debate attended by 300 people.

Horwath did not mention that Quebec has suffered 15,143 COVID-19 deaths — 2,128 more than Ontario’s 13,015 since March 2020, despite having just 57 per cent of this province’s population.

Ford was visibly seething at the accusation­s from Horwath and Schreiner that he hadn’t listened to medical experts. “Unbelievab­le,” he muttered, adding he was “shocked and disappoint­ed” at the attacks.

“While we were in a full battle, we were working collaborat­ively with all 444 municipali­ties. I went after (U.S. president Donald) Trump like no one ever went after him because he cut us off with PPE.”

That was a reference to Trump’s threat to withhold exports of American N95 respirator masks to Canada.

Tuesday’s event was a warm-up for a televised debate Monday evening in Toronto, where COVID-19 is again expected to take centre stage.

Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca, who was a cabinet minister in premier Kathleen Wynne’s government, criticized Ford for trying to shift blame to the previous administra­tion.

“I’ve stood here so far this afternoon and I’ve heard Mr. Ford talk as if he hasn’t served as Ontario’s premier for the past four years,” said Del Duca, who tried to stay above the fray on the pandemic.

“I listened closely as Mr. Ford talked about collaborat­ion amongst levels of government, which … is a very good thing and I think we can all afford to see more of that,” he said.

However, like the New Democrats, Del Duca said a Liberal government would hold “a public inquiry into the COVID response, not to lay blame … but to draw out the lessons that will help us collective­ly prepare for whatever challenge comes next.” Del Duca, who was the target of most of Ford’s salvos, came under fire for his performanc­e in Wynne’s cabinet.

“Mr. Del Duca, you had your opportunit­y and you failed. You were the minister of transporta­tion. You didn’t build absolutely nothing,” the PC chief chortled.

The Liberal leader, whose party is second behind Ford’s in most polls, countered that “virtually every highway project” that the Tory cited being built in northern Ontario was started when the Grits were in office. But Del Duca warned one project a Liberal government wouldn’t build is the controvers­ial Highway 413 between Milton and Vaughan.

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR ?? Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Doug Ford and NDP Leader Andrea Horwath shake hands after the provincial party leaders debated on matters of affordabil­ity, jobs and infrastruc­ture in northern Ontario at the first debate of the provincial election campaign at North Bay Capitol Centre in North Bay on Tuesday.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Doug Ford and NDP Leader Andrea Horwath shake hands after the provincial party leaders debated on matters of affordabil­ity, jobs and infrastruc­ture in northern Ontario at the first debate of the provincial election campaign at North Bay Capitol Centre in North Bay on Tuesday.

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