Toronto Star

Grits target rural votes

7 vying for Mcguinty’s job pull their punches in their first debate

- ROB FERGUSON QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

INGERSOLL, ONT.— A high-profile candidate for Premier Dalton McGuinty’s job warned that Saturday’s sedate leadership debate won’t prepare Liberals for the rumble ahead. “Our next election will not be like this, where all of us are sitting and getting along,” said Sandra Pupatello, the former MPP for Windsor West, as the event dubbed a “love-in” by one party stalwart wrapped up in this small town near London. The two-hour affair, which spotlighte­d rural issues, was the first of six to be held across the province as seven candidates — all former cabinet ministers — prepare for a leadership convention in Toronto on the last weekend of January. Toronto Centre MPP Glen Murray came the closest to swiping at rivals in talking about the minority Liberal government’s economic aid funds for businesses in southweste­rn and eastern Ontario, two regions where manufactur­ing was ravaged in the recession. “Wrong. Doesn’t work,” said Murray, 55, a former Winnipeg mayor who was McGuinty’s minister of training, colleges and universiti­es. “We don’t want to be in the business of picking winners.” Pupatello, 50, who sat out the last election to work on Bay Street, said the 2,500 delegates to the convention must size up candidates based on how they would play against Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Tim Hudak and NDP Leader Andrea Horwath in a provincial election widely expected for next spring. She touted her experience as McGuinty’s scrappy deputy leader before the Liberals came to power in 2003, suggesting it would help her run a smoother minority government than most of her rivals, who never served in opposition.

Gerard Kennedy, 52, the only other candidate who served in opposition, was one of several to acknowledg­e that the Liberals lost touch with rural voters — as evidenced by the loss of seats such as ElginMiddl­esex-London, which left the government in a minority. “We have to acknowledg­e we made some mistakes,” said Kennedy, who hails from a small Manitoba town and left Ontario politics in 2006 to run federally before losing his Parkdale—High Park seat in the Commons to the NDP in 2010.

He cited wind turbines, the feedin-tariff program for small-scale electricit­y production and the abrupt end to the revenue-sharing program for slots at racetracks, a move that infuriated the horse-racing community and breeders.

Don Valley West MPP Kathleen Wynne, 59, a former municipal affairs minister, said Liberals need to get back in tune with voters outside big cities — which she would do by serving as agricultur­e and rural affairs minister “for at least a year” in addition to being premier.

Eric Hoskins, a doctor and the MPP for St. Paul’s who was McGuinty’s youth services minister, called for a “rural-urban bridge” so that all government policies apply equally well to the countrysid­e, small towns and cities.

Calling for fresh thinking, Mississaug­a South MPP Charles Sousa, 54, a former banker and immigratio­n minister, criticized the centrally controlled nature of government and declared “not all good ideas come from the premier’s office.”

Harinder Takhar, 61, a former businessma­n and the last entrant into the race, proposed an export fund to help Ontario farmers and agricultur­al businesses to sell more of their products abroad.

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