Toronto Star

TRADING BLOWS

Ford didn’t have the best debate — that went to Green’s Schreiner — but the election is still his to lose, despite attacks from rivals on the left

- MARTIN REGG COHN

It’s rare for a rookie debater to come out of nowhere to win an election contest so decisively — speaking from the heart and head to touch voters in the gut.

But in his first televised debate, he pulled it off — showing empathy and humility, not to mention a mastery of Ontario’s greatest challenges: from entrenched poverty and education problems, to health care and climate change emergencie­s.

Yes, Mike Schreiner, the littleknow­n leader of Ontario’s lesserknow­n Green Party, won the debate hands down.

No, he’ll never reach all the way up to the pinnacle of power as premier of this province.

While the Greens might well improve upon the one seat Schreiner holds (his own), the math isn’t in his favour. Which means that most voters with the stamina and dedication to watch the one and only debate of this provincial campaign must now choose, realistica­lly, from a less inspiring election selection.

That’s democracy — and that’s debating — for better or for worse.

It’s hard to imagine Doug Ford’s uninspirin­g appearance — aided by the performanc­e-enhancing substance of a briefing book, brought onstage over the objections of the debate’s network organizers — changing many minds. But even if the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader didn’t move the needle, the fact is

that he didn’t have to — he’s the front-runner sitting on a handsome lead in every public opinion poll.

Critics will criticize Ford, and admirers will admire him, whether or not he looked down at his prepared notes while the others spoke off the cuff. He was still standing Monday night, while they were trying desperatel­y to catch up.

It’s difficult to fathom Andrea Horwath’s insipid rhetoric rallying many more Ontarians to the cause of her New Democratic Party, as she wages her fourth campaign in 13 years. She made the case, as best she could, that the NDP is bestplaced to oust Ford’s Tories from power.

But instead of shaking up the campaign, Horwath played the role of storytelle­r on stage — endlessly retelling tales of voters she’s connected with on the campaign trail over the past couple of weeks. Without seeming to resonate with viewers listening in real time on TV.

It’s impossible to envision Steven Del Duca’s debating debut uprooting the playing field that left his Liberal party stuck in a distant third after the 2018 election, now locked in a bitter battle for second place with Horwath’s NDP. Del Duca took more chances — hurling better attack lines at Ford while holding his ground against Horwath’s recurring attacks against him — but his party has a long road to recovery as the June 2 vote looms.

Whether viewers stuck it out for the full 90-minute contest — or are merely exposed to video clips that never quite go viral — the debate is unlikely to determine the outcome.

While these televised encounters are a democratic cornerston­e of modern elections, they are not as decisive as so many journalist­s imagine them to be — barring catastroph­ic blunders or exceptiona­l ripostes.

That is especially true of an Ontario election debate relegated to a suppertime slot by a consortium of television networks reluctant to cut into prime-time advertisin­g revenues. Whatever the true audience, and the actual impact, this debate is unlikely to dramatical­ly reset the pacing or prosecutin­g of this campaign.

No matter Ford’s shortcomin­gs Monday — relying on notes, flat on his feet, reciting platitudes, lapsing into faux folksiness — he seemed more self-assured than the shaky debater of four years ago. Which was enough to win him the last election.

Whatever Horwath’s successes Monday — reminding people of the legacy of a 15-year Liberal dynasty — she seemed less self-assured and nimble than in past clashes with then-premier Kathleen Wynne (whom Ford ousted while Horwath came a distant second).

Whatever Del Duca’s achievemen­ts Monday — trying to neutralize Horwath’s attacks while concentrat­ing his firepower on Ford — he held his own without leapfroggi­ng to where he needs to be.

There has been endless spinning and speculatio­n, based on interminab­le focus group research from the other parties, that Del Duca would turn off voters. How leaders come across on TV is a subjective question that rarely lends itself to hot takes from commentato­rs or spinners, but a case can be made that Del Duca was calm and confident, discipline­d and focused — without moving the needle in a big way.

Give him credit, however, for getting his prefabrica­ted attack lines out in well-timed sound bites and bursts that television stations can repackage into political conflict, like this sample from the final few minutes of the debate:

“Mr. Ford keeps dishing out empty words and slogans — by the way, slogans that other people write for him — instead of sharing what’s in his heart in his head,” Del Duca said. “And this is after he’s been in the job for four years.”

Whether those bits of bravado augur the beginning of the Liberal recovery we won’t know for another two-and-a-half weeks.

For her part, Horwath seemed both more serious and yet more listless than in past debates. She pitched a proposed tax freeze on Ontarians earning up to $200,000 based on the notion that “everyday folks in this province should be able to afford everyday life (earning scorn from Schreiner for the NDP’s tax-fighter tendencies). And she threw an old Ford promise back at him, insisting that “I would have made sure that an ‘iron ring’ was put around seniors in long-term care … how shameful.”

But she faced taunts from Ford about a handful of unions that are now supporting his PCs: “For years, unions supported you. Well guess what — you’ve lost touch,” Ford kept repeating. “You lost the unions.”

Given his lead at this stage in the campaign, the debate was Ford’s to lose. His task was to avoid losing his cool, while preventing his rivals from catching fire.

Del Duca’s smooth performanc­e won’t disrupt the trajectory of a Ford victory, nor win the day, unless he can persuade more people why his Liberals deserve their vote.

Schreiner’s debut was truly a new beginning, but it won’t change the ending of the campaign by leading to a change at the helm.

For all the media attention on the televised debate, stay tuned for what comes next. Brace yourself for a series of attack ads and negative advertisin­g that will take over your television screens and make Monday’s encounter look like merely the warm-up as the heat rises.

 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? In Monday’s 90-minute debate, Doug Ford defended his record on the pandemic while accusing the other three leaders of wanting to “hike your taxes.” He also attacked Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca, right, on his record in government.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS In Monday’s 90-minute debate, Doug Ford defended his record on the pandemic while accusing the other three leaders of wanting to “hike your taxes.” He also attacked Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca, right, on his record in government.
 ?? ?? Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner won the night hands down, Martin Regg Cohn writes.
Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner won the night hands down, Martin Regg Cohn writes.
 ?? ??
 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR ?? A member of SEIU, the union that represents nurses, lies injured on Yonge Street behind a police officer after union members tried to sit in the path that Doug Ford would have taken into the TVO building when Monday’s leaders’ debate was held.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR A member of SEIU, the union that represents nurses, lies injured on Yonge Street behind a police officer after union members tried to sit in the path that Doug Ford would have taken into the TVO building when Monday’s leaders’ debate was held.

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