Ontario leader calls for snap election to fight Trump’s threatened
tariffs
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[January 30, 2025] By
JIM MORRIS
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — The leader of Ontario, Canada’s most
populous province, on Wednesday triggered a snap election, saying he
needs a strong four-year mandate to fight the tariffs threatened by U.S.
President Donald Trump.
Doug Ford, leader of the Progressive Conservative Party, said the 25%
tariffs threatened by Trump would devastate Canada’s economy and cost
Ontario thousands of jobs.
“The people of our province, like people across Canada, are facing
unprecedented times,” Ford said in Windsor, Ont. “I am asking the people
of Ontario for their trust. I’m asking (...) for a strong, stable,
four-year mandate to do whatever it takes to protect Ontario.”
The move would send Ontarians to the polls on Feb. 27, more than a year
before the June 2026 fixed election date. Ford already has a large
majority government, with 79 of the 124 seats in the Ontario
legislature.
Trump has threatened to introduce tariffs on Canadian goods starting
Saturday. His press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, told reporters at the
White House on Tuesday that the plan was “still on the books” for that
day.
“This is a game to the president,” said Ford, who is the equivalent of a
U.S. state governor. “He seeks to divide and conquer.”
Ford said the provincial government is prepared to spend “tens of
billions of dollars” to protect jobs and the economy of Ontario,
Canada’s manufacturing and automobile hub.
“We’ll fight these tariffs with every tool in our toolbox,” he said.
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Ford has said there would be a dollar-for-dollar tariff retaliation on
American goods entering Canada. He has also said that if Trump applies
tariffs, he will instruct Ontario’s liquor control board to pull all
American-made alcohol from shelves.
Trump has said that Canada can avoid tariffs if it becomes the 51st
state and he has incorrectly claimed that the U.S. has a $200 billion
deficit with its major trading partner.
Opposition parties accuse Ford of calling an early election before any
potential charges emerge from a police investigation into his
now-scrapped plan to develop lands under environmental protection.
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Ontario Premier Doug Ford dons a toque following a press conference
with Chief Sonny Gagnon of Aroland First Nation at Queens Park, the
provincial legislature, in Toronto, Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2025. (Chris
Young/The Canadian Press via AP)
 Elections Ontario, the independent
office of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario responsible for the
administration of provincial elections and referendums, said
Wednesday the election will cost about $189 million Canadian dollars
($131 million).
That money, said Bonnie Crombie, leader of the Ontario Liberal
Party, would be better spent on health care and affordable housing.
“This isn’t a necessary election,” Crombie told a news conference on
Wednesday. “He is trying to cling to power.”
Daniel Beland, a political science professor at Montreal’s McGill
University, said Ford is taking “a calculated risk.”
“The opposition is divided between the Liberals and the New
Democratic Party, which is very likely to allow him to stay in
power, at least if he runs an effective campaign,” said Beland.
The Ontario election is being held at the same time as the federal
Liberal Party is selecting a new leader to replace Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau who announced his resignation Jan. 6. Trudeau will
remain prime minister until a new Liberal Party leader is chosen on
March 9.
The next Liberal leader could be the shortest-tenured prime minister
in the country’s history. All three opposition parties have vowed to
bring down the Liberals’ minority government in a no-confidence vote
after parliament resumes on March 24 which would trigger a spring
election.
“We need a strong leadership that is prepared to do whatever lies
ahead despite the chaos we now see in Ottawa,” said Ford.
“Trump’s threats are not going away at a time when the federal
government has left Canada drifting, exposed and vulnerable. We need
a mandate that will outlive and outlast the Trump administration.”
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