Toronto Star

Naqvi joins Liberal leadership race

Former Ontario attorney general believes his experience under Wynne makes him ideal for role

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

Yasir Naqvi is finally making it official — he’s a candidate for the Ontario Liberal leadership.

The Ottawa Centre Liberal MP will formally enter the contest Saturday with hopes of guiding the Grits back to power by toppling Premier Doug Ford’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ves in 2026.

A former provincial attorney general, he is mindful of the daunting task facing the next leader of a party that governed Ontario from 2003 until 2018 but now lacks official standing in the legislatur­e.

“I’m focused on transformi­ng our party in all 124 ridings,” Naqvi, a one-time Ontario Liberal party president, told the Star on the eve of his launch. “We need to get ourselves where Ontarians are. I don’t think it’s a matter of left or right.

I want to build a big-tent party … a party that is always listening and always learning.

“We need to be a practical party again. I didn’t get into politics to tell people how to live their lives. My aim is to make their lives easier.”

Haunted by the Tories’ effective attacks on previous leader Steven Del Duca as former premier Kathleen Wynne’s “righthand man,” some Liberals believe the party should downplay ties to the past.

Naqvi, who, like Del Duca, is a former key Wynne cabinet minister, doesn’t buy that.

“I’m the most experience­d candidate. I know how government works. I’ve helped to make big decisions. Experience matters,” said the Ottawa lawyer, a single father of two.

That means telling Ontarians about “the good things we did, but also the lessons learned,” he said of the Liberal dynasty of Wynne and her predecesso­r, Dalton McGuinty.

It will also entail reminding voters how things have been going since the Tories took office five years ago.

“Doug Ford is failing people on the promise of Ontario — on family medicine, crowded classrooms,” said Naqvi, who first broached his return to provincial politics in an interview with the Star last December.

“My mission is to defeat Doug Ford in 2026. Things can be better.”

Naqvi, who stepped down as a parliament­ary secretary in March, plans to remain an MP until the leadership race is decided on Dec. 2.

In contrast to the official opposition New Democrats, who acclaimed leader Marit Stiles in February, the Liberal field is getting crowded and generating buzz for a party with only seven seats in the 124-member legislatur­e, five shy of official status.

Liberal MP Nate Erskine Smith (Beaches—East York) and first-term Liberal MPP Ted Hsu (Kingston and the Islands) registered for the contest last month.

Both have touted the fact that they had no role in the Wynne or McGuinty government­s — and therefore no political baggage the Tories could exploit in 2026.

Mississaug­a Mayor Bonnie Crombie made headlines launching a leadership explorator­y committee two weeks ago.

Crombie, whose potential candidacy has preoccupie­d Ford, will decide soon whether to officially enter the race. A former Liberal MP, she also wasn’t at Queen’s Park in the Wynne-McGuinty era and has said the provincial Grits veered too far left in their final years in office.

Others considerin­g bids are rookie MPPs Stephanie Bowman (Don Valley West) and Adil Shamji (Don Valley East).

Candidates must pay a $100,000 entry fee plus a $25,000 refundable deposit.

 ?? ?? Yasir Naqvi, who represents the federal riding of Ottawa Centre, plans to remain an MP until the Liberal leadership race is decided on Dec. 2.
Yasir Naqvi, who represents the federal riding of Ottawa Centre, plans to remain an MP until the Liberal leadership race is decided on Dec. 2.

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