Conservative incumbent in Canada's Ontario leads two weeks ahead of vote
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[May 19, 2022] By
Steve Scherer
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Incumbent Progressive
Conservative Doug Ford is leading the race to win a second term as
Ontario premier with promises of tax relief at the gas pump amid soaring
inflation and fixing clogged highways in Canada's biggest city, Toronto.
Ford, 57, swept to power in 2018, ending 15 years of Liberal rule in
Ontario - home to nearly 40% of Canada's 38.2 million people, and the
June 2 election could reflect voters' views on his handling of the
pandemic, which was often criticized.
He now leads in all polls, with the Liberals and New Democrats improving
from the start of the campaign though still far from putting Ford's
re-election in peril.
One analyst said that the desire for change in government was low.
Ford "is still in the driver's seat," said David Coletto, chief
executive officer of polling company Abacus Data. "Because it's not a
change election, people are not ... really looking to figure out which
of these parties has the best shot at beating Ford at this moment."
Ford's pre-election budget in April promised billions of dollars of
spending on infrastructure projects and outlined a tax credit for
low-income earners, resulting in a higher budget deficit in the current
fiscal year than the last.
Ford may win 35% of the vote, an Abacus Data poll published on Monday
showed. That compares with 28% for Liberal candidate Steven Del Duca and
24% for New Democrat Andrea Horwath. The desire for change is "far
lower" than it was before the previous election, according to Abacus.
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Ontario's Premier Doug Ford speaks at the Stellantis Research and
Development Centre in Windsor, Ontario, Canada May 2, 2022.
REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
With inflation at its highest level in more than
three decades, housing and cost of living issues are driving the
campaign and all three main candidates are promising some relief to
voters.
Ford is pledging to reduce taxes on gasoline and fuel if re-elected.
Del Duca is promising to reduce transit fees across the province to
C$1 ($0.78) a ride, while Horwath pledged to create an annual
speculation and vacancy tax on residential property to bring down
housing prices.
Factbox on key issues and candidate profiles:
If Ford does not win an outright majority, the two left-leaning
leaders could keep him out of office by joining forces. Federal
Liberals now are being supported by the New Democrats, a deal made
to keep Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in power until 2025.
"There's room there for the Liberals and the New Democrats to start
chipping away," said Coletto. But at the moment, "no one has
momentum," he added.
($1 = 1.2826 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Steve Scherer in Ottawa; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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