Toronto Star

Ford to Crombie: ‘BRING IT ON’

Mississaug­a mayor exploring run for Liberal leadership

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

“Bring it on.”

That’s Premier Doug Ford’s message to Mississaug­a Mayor Bonnie Crombie as she gears up to run for the Ontario Liberal leadership.

“My question is, what took so long? She’s been campaignin­g for five years,” Ford told the Star on Tuesday.

“My other message to Bonnie is, bring it on. Bring it on,” the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve premier said.

Despite his bravado, Ford, who was re-elected last June 2 with an increased majority, emphasized that he has lots of work to do before the 2026 campaign.

“I take nothing for granted. We’re going to work hard and people will have that choice moving forward,” he said.

“I’m going to focus on what we’re doing. I’m not worried about what Bonnie’s doing to self-promote herself — and that’s it.”

Ford’s comments came after Crombie launched a leadership explorator­y committee of more than 40 prominent Liberals.

Among the notables urging her to run are former cabinet ministers Dwight Duncan, Dipika Damerla, Brad Duguid, Steve Peters and Reza Moridi, and veteran insiders Tim Murphy, Jack Siegel and Qasir Dar, co-author of a scathing postmortem on the party’s 2022 election defeat.

A popular three-term mayor who won 78.5 per cent of the popular vote in the Oct. 24 municipal election, Crombie spent Tuesday on a media blitz — by mid-afternoon she had already conducted 23 media interviews.

She was puckish when told of Ford’s throwing down of the gauntlet.

“If the Ontario Liberals place their confidence in me, then I would look forward to challengin­g the premier — if he’s still the Ontario PC leader,” the mayor said.

The Star reported Monday that the Tories privately consider a Crombie candidacy as an existentia­l threat to a party that has won the past two elections and ended almost 15 years of Liberal rule in 2018.

Crombie, a former Liberal MP who was never a part of the government­s of former premiers Kathleen Wynne or Dalton McGuinty, said the party “moved too far to the left” in recent years.

She believes her centrist approach and experience governing a big city can woo voters away from Ford’s Tories, especially in and around the Greater Toronto Area.

The Liberals, who lack the dozen seats required for official party status in the 124-member legislatur­e, are looking for a saviour after successive drubbings by Ford’s Tories.

New Democrat Marit Stiles is the official Opposition leader with 30 MPPs to seven for the Liberals and 81 for the Tories. There are also three Independen­ts, one Green and two vacancies.

So far, Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith (Beaches—East York) and Liberal MPP Ted Hsu (Kingston and the Islands) are the only registered candidates in the leadership contest, according to Elections Ontario. Erskine-Smith entered on May 16 and Hsu filed his paperwork last Saturday.

Others considerin­g bids are Liberal MP Yasir Naqvi (Ottawa Centre), a former provincial cabinet minister and one-time Ontario Liberal Party president, and MPPs Stephanie Bowman (Don Valley West) and Adil Shamji (Don Valley East).

The race will be decided Dec. 2 using a new one-member, onevote ranked-ballot system similar to how the Conservati­ves elect their leaders. To enter the race, candidates must pay a $100,000 fee plus a $25,000 refundable deposit.

Crombie will remain as mayor before making a final decision to enter the race this year.

 ?? RIZIERO VERTOLLI METROLAND FILE PHOTO ?? Mississaug­a Mayor Bonnie Crombie, second left, said she looks forward to taking on Premier Doug Ford, if she’s the Liberal standard bearer, and “if he’s still the Ontario PC leader.”
RIZIERO VERTOLLI METROLAND FILE PHOTO Mississaug­a Mayor Bonnie Crombie, second left, said she looks forward to taking on Premier Doug Ford, if she’s the Liberal standard bearer, and “if he’s still the Ontario PC leader.”

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