Wynne tries to walk away, but Ford won't let go of smile remark
Why a London riding could be anyone's game after years of being a Liberal stronghold
It's the first weekend of campaigning for the Ontario party leaders after a week of two debates that saw PC Leader Doug Ford twice comment on Liberal Leader Kathleen Wynne's smile and Andrea Horwath's New Democrats gain momentum on the trail.
Ford and Wynne are making stops in Toronto this weekend, while Horwath stays north of the city.
Here's where we are on day four of the campaign.
Headlines
- Political rivals slam Ford's 'take care of our own' comment on immigration
- Wynne called the comment "very disturbing" but Ford's team said his words were "gravely misconstrued."
- London's testing out new rules around election signs
- You might have noticed election signs popping up around your neighbourhood. But if they're too big, too high, too close to a road or propped up on a tree, they might be breaking the rules.
- Liberals launch northern platform
- Wynne's promising the north more personal support workers, year-round access to the Ring of Fire and twinning the highway between Sudbury and Parry Sound. The NDP released their northern platform last week.
The moment
It happened again. Ford said he liked Wynne's smile for the second time this week at the Northern Debate in Parry Sound on Friday.
Wynne went in for a handshake at the end of the debate and Ford held on for a little longer and said, "Still like that smile."
- Another debate, another Doug Ford comment about Kathleen Wynne's smile
- "Kathleen, you got a nice smile on your face there"
Ford didn't take questions after the debate, but Wynne did and she told reporters she has no clue what's behind the extended handshake and the "smile" comment.
Farrah Khan, co-chair of a provincial round table on violence against women, said Ford's behaviour is unacceptable.
"We want a premier that is actually going to recognize and listen to women's voices," she said in an interview with CBC Queen's Park reporter Mike Crawley. "This makes me really nervous when I see something like this."
Even Horwath has called the situation "awkward."
Riding to watch
London North Centre, population 125,360.
By Colin Butler
This riding has been solidly Liberal red since 2003 and with the retirement of political heavyweight Deb Matthews — it's anyone's game.
Filling Matthews' political shoes is Liberal Kate Graham, a city hall bureaucrat with 10 years in local government and a PhD in political science. This is Graham's first time in the political ring.
Progressive Conservative candidate Susan Truppe was a one-term parliamentarian, winning the riding in the 2011 federal election against then Liberal incumbent Glen Pearson before being unseated in the 2015 federal race that saw Justin Trudeau's Liberals form a majority.
With two politically formidable women to contend with, London teacher and union steward Terence Kernaghan likely has a tough fight on his hands as the New Democrat candidate in the riding, which has never elected an NDP candidate in its 67-year history.
Dispatch from the Northern Debate
By Chris Glover
If Andrea Horwath had a song playing as she left the Parry Sound debate Friday, it could have been Alicia Keys' This Girl Is On Fire. In the conservative heartland of Parry Sound (the PCs have held it since 1948!), Horwath had the audience eating out of the palm of her hand.
“My plan is one that is respectful of yours” Andrea Horwath gets the best reaction from the crowd at <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/onpoli?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#onpoli</a> debate in the north in her opening statement as she jokes folks have been fighting over who’s going to make the “worst premier” referring to Ford and Wynne.
—@chrisgloverCBC
Her showing in Parry Sound felt weird for two reasons.
First, Doug Ford — who barely seemed to know Horwath previously — was sticking it to her at every turn. Second, talking with mayors and councillors in the audience after the debate, some told me they were surprised they were even considering the NDP. The race is just beginning. There's still lots of time. And a few mayors laughing at your jokes does not make you premier, but it's a surprisingly good start.
Does <a href="https://twitter.com/fordnation?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@fordnation</a> feel there's something different about campaigning against two women? Radio-Canada's <a href="https://twitter.com/dthibeaultSRC?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@dthibeaultSRC</a> put the question to the Ontario PC leader. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/pnpcbc?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#pnpcbc</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/cdnpoli?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#cdnpoli</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/onpoli?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#onpoli</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/onelxn?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#onelxn</a> <a href="https://t.co/DBB4IHdINT">pic.twitter.com/DBB4IHdINT</a>
—@PnPCBC
Where are the leaders
- Ford: Campaign office opening York South-Weston (10 a.m.), campaign office opening in Scarborough Centre (11 a.m.), announcement in Etobicoke (2 p.m.), rally in Caledon (4 p.m.)
- Horwath: Event in Sudbury (10 a.m.), Simcoe-North campaign office opening in Orillia (3:15 p.m.), meeting with local candidates in Barrie (4:40 pm.)
- Schreiner: Campaigning in Guelph (10 a.m.), conversation with Guelph community (5 p.m.)
- Wynne: Announcement in Toronto (9:20 a.m.), visit to Muslim wellfare centre (12 noon), attending a barbecue in Hastings (6 p.m.)
For more Ontario election coverage
- Ontario Poll Tracker | The latest projections
- Vote Compass | See how your views compare with the party platforms
- Complete election coverage | Links to all our coverage
- Help CBC track political ads on Facebook | Learn how here
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