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Former Member
And they’re off! Election campaign officially begins

Rob Ferguson and Robert Benzie
Queen’s Park Bureau
Published On Wed Sep 07 2011
Source - The Star

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty met with Lieutenant Governor of Ontario David Onley at Queen's Park. Sept. 7 to formally ask for the dissolution of the legistlature.
BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR


The campaign for the Oct. 6 election got its official start today as Liberal Leader Dalton McGuinty visited Lt.-Gov. David Onley for the dropping of the writ.

“We had a good conversation and now we’re going to have a more important conversation with the people of Ontario,” McGuinty, who has been premier since 2003, said as he and wife Terri climbed into a waiting minivan.

“Hang on to your hats, folks, it’s going to be a fun one,” he told reporters on the way into the 9 a.m. meeting at Queen’s Park.

By that time, Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak was already on his way to Ottawa, while New Democrat Leader Andrea Horwath held a news conference at the Legislature before boarding a bus for a day of campaigning that will end with a stop in her hometown of Hamilton.

McGuinty was heading to a noon rally in Mississauga — an area where federal Conservatives scored major gains in the May 2 election — before driving west to London, where the Liberals are hoping to hold four seats.

McGuinty said he and Terri had “a short conversation with Onley.”

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With family front-and-centre, Hudak dodges ‘foreign-worker’ questions

STEVE LADURANTAYE
WILLOWDALE, ONT.— Globe and Mail Update
Posted on Wednesday, September 7, 2011 11:43AM EDT
Source - Globe and Mail

With wife Deb Hutton and daughter Miller looking on, Tim Hudak campaigns in Ajax, Ont., on Sept. 6, 2011.

Steve Ladurantaye/The Globe and Mail


There are three faces on the side of Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak's campaign bus – his own, his wife Deb Hutton’s and his soon-to-be 4-year-old daughter Miller’s.

It's not a mistake. One day into the month-long campaign, they are more a part of his routine than the busload of reporters who follow behind him everywhere he goes. There have been four official media events since the campaign started Tuesday, and his family has been at his side at every podium so far. That will change when his daughter starts kindergarten later this week, but it’s clear they will be front and centre as often as possible.

Mr. Hudak clearly adores Miller, and having her along could ease the day-to-day grind of a month-long campaign. Indeed, when he was asked why people who were challenged in a poll to come up with one word to describe him couldn't do it, he suggested the best word to describe him was “proud dad.” It may not have been his best mathematical moment, but the message is clear – his family is running the campaign with him.

On Tuesday night at a rally in the Toronto suburb of Ajax, his family even took a seat in the front row along with all of the regional candidates. Miller played and clapped and watched her dad, and eventually settled sown with her head on her mom's shoulder as the night wore on.

They were at it again Wednesday in nearby Willowdale. With his wife and daughter by his side, Mr. Hudak launched an attack on the Liberal tax-credit pledge that’s been the focus of debate on the hustings so far.

The PC Leader said the plan to provide a $10,000 tax credit to companies who hire an immigrant means that “as soon as [immigrants] come to Ontario they are given a $10,000 cheque to help them get a job.” However, the Liberal plan is to pay employers that hire skilled workers who have lived in Canada up to five years.

Mr. Hudak has steadfastly referred to immigrants as “foreign workers,” and one of his key campaign lines is that Dalton McGuinty would rather give a job to a so-called foreign worker than someone from Ontario. Here’s what he said when asked about his choice of words:

Question: Why do you keep calling immigrants foreign workers?

Answer: Oh, I’m not. Dalton McGuinty’s plan, and Greg Sorbrara was on the radio about it yesterday, is to bring more people to Ontario. Now listen, Ontario is a welcoming province. I’m proud to stand before you today to say I’m the Roman Catholic grandson of Slovakian immigrants who came to who came to Ontario not speaking a word of the language who climbed their way up the ladder. What they wanted a fair shake not special treatment. But Dalton McGuinty is playing favourites with his affirmative action program for foreign workers. I know some people agree with it, but I reject it and I think the vast majority of Ontarians reject the affirmative action idea by Dalton McGuinty to pay companies $10000 to hire foreign workers.

Question: You just called them foreign workers again. Is someone who came here five years ago not a citizen?

Answer: That's the way Dalton McGuinty put his plan on the table. Where's his cutoff? Yesterday on the radio Greg Sorbrara said this is going to help bring more people into Ontario. i guess as soon as they come to ontario they are a given a $10,000 cheque to help them get a job. I think that's wrong. Ontario a welcoming province because of values that we are all treated equally and get a fair shake and not special deal.
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Who Ontario residents pick as best premier in Nanos poll

Published Monday, Sep. 05, 2011 9:00PM EDT
Last updated Tuesday, Sep. 06, 2011 7:14PM EDT
Source - Globe and Mail

In a Nanos poll conducted last week for The Globe and Mail, 29 per cent of those surveyed picked Dalton McGuinty as the best premier.

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