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Star
 
What you didn’t hear in campaign

Ian Urquhart 
Oct 08, 2007 04:30 AM

The debate over public funding for religious schools has sucked the oxygen out of the 2007 provincial election, to the dismay of various interest groups
who hoped their issues would be front and centre in the campaign.

Environmentalists, nurses, professors, university students, poverty advocates, parent activists, parents of autistic children, and
property taxpayers, among others, have all seen their agendas overshadowed, to a
greater or lesser degree, by the faith-based schools issue.

And most are bitterly frustrated as a result.

Laura Kirby-McIntosh, an autism advocate who was at Queen’s Park last week distributing a meticulously prepared report card on the
party positions, says she is “devastated” by the lack of attention. “It’s been
very, very hard to get our issue on the radar screen,” she says.

Echoes Bob Topp of the Coalition After Property Tax Reform: “Our issue didn’t get much attention despite efforts by ourselves and others to bring it
forward.”

Annie Kidder, a parent activist and spokesperson for People for Education, laments that she has tried, without success, to get the media and the party
leaders to focus on issues like declining school enrolment.

“Probably the biggest concrete issue facing our schools is declining enrolment,” she says. “It affects everything, is going to have an effect far
beyond the school buildings, and we have no real strategy to deal with it.

“Other provinces have appointed whole commissions to look at it. In Ontario, for the most part, we are just looking the other way.”

Not everyone is dismayed by the lack of attention during the campaign, however. Take, for example, the environmentalists, whom one might suspect would
be furious.

Their issue scores high on the list of voters’ concerns in the polls; yet there was not a single question on the environment in the televised leaders’
debate, and an elaborate assessment of the party platforms by a coalition of 13
environmental groups sank without a trace in the mainstream media, besides the
Star.

But Rick Smith of Environmental Defence, one of the 13 groups in the coalition, says the ultimate goal was to ensure that green planks were included
in the platforms of all the parties.

“By and large, that has happened,” he says. “We have a stack of very specific responses from the parties, and we’ll be able to hold the parties to them, no
matter who wins the election.”

Doris Grinspun of the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario, is also pleased that many of her group’s planks made it into the party platforms,
including a commitment to a target of 70 per cent of nurses working full-time
(compared to 62 per cent today).

But in both cases the parties’ commitments might be more solid if the issues had been part of the province-wide election debate.

What is the solution to this problem? One idea is to add on more televised leaders’ debates, with each one focused on a specific basket of issues. If they
can do that in American presidential elections, surely it can be done in
Ontario.

Another would be for the federal government to lighten up on its rules regarding what constitutes “partisan activity”– a no-no for groups wishing to
retain their charitable status. The environmentalists, for example, were told
they could not grade the party platforms (“pass” or “fail”).

But in the end, campaigns take on lives of their own and head off in quite unpredictable directions. No institutional tinkering will change that
reality.

———————————————————————————————————————

Star

PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVES
 
The lawn of a new era?

Tory visits his childhood home in Don Valley West only to find its owners have put up
a Liberal sign

Oct 08, 2007 04:30 AM


STAFF REPORTER

Progressive Conservative Leader John Tory went to his childhood Toronto home yesterday and saw red.

On the front lawn of the Snowdon Ave. house was a sign for the Liberal candidate in Don Valley West, Education Minister Kathleen Wynne.

“This is an outrage,” Tory joked with an entourage of media types following him as he knocked on doors in the Bedford Park neighbourhood.

Undaunted, the 53-year-old Tory went to the door of the home where he lived until he was 6 years old, but he wasn’t able to persuade Ian and Ann Welsh to
change their allegiance. He still spent several minutes just out of earshot of
reporters talking to them about the neighbourhood and his policies.

The Welshes said later that while they respected Tory, they were turned off by his proposal to publicly fund religious schools, which he has since backed
away from, saying instead that if he wins it will be put to a free vote in the
Legislature. The couple also supported David Miller rather than Tory when he ran
for Toronto mayor.

Tory, accompanied by his wife Barbara Hackett, started off the day speaking to 1,500 mostly African-Canadians at a church service in northern Toronto.

Tory said Thanksgiving was a time to remember the less fortunate.

“I always think of Thanksgiving as a time when it’s also important to remember that in our midst there are fellow citizens who have less to be
thankful for.”

Later, Tory, who is trailing in the polls, made no apologies for a new Conservative television ad that essentially tells people that if they vote
Liberal they will regret it.

Tory said he saw no problem highlighting a Liberal record that he said includes broken promises, handing out $32 million to party friends
through a secret government slush fund, an inability to address the doctor
shortage, suing the parents of autistic children desperate to get care, and
forcing seniors to sit in urine-soaked diapers for hours on end.

“If it sounds negative, it’s because it has been and will continue to be if we stick with the present leadership,” he told reporters after the service at
the Rhema Ministries.

Tory said the Liberals have lost the right to govern because of their record of misleading voters, failing to help the most vulnerable people in Ontario and
general arrogance.

“Four more years of Mr. McGuinty is not going to produce honest, competent, fair government,” he said.

McGuinty told reporters in Markham the new Conservative ad was not the kind he would ever approve for the Liberals, and he didn’t think the ominous,
negative tone would play well over the holiday weekend.

McGuinty said Liberal online ads slamming the Tories and posted on sites like YouTube are out of his control. Some, however, feature Liberal staff
members.

Critics say the Liberals have been able to avoid using attack-style ads because the Working Families group of unions and activists, some with Liberal
ties, have been broadcasting them. “It was their cronies that were running the
ads that were the most negative I have seen in Ontario politics. They are still
on the air very specifically targeted at me,” Tory said.

The former Rogers Communications executive said he is in politics to stay even if he doesn’t win Wednesday. “I intend to continue in public life because
this is what I have chosen to do … to make the biggest difference I can,” Tory
said.

With files from Rob Ferguson 

————————————————————————————————————-

Globe

Hampton, Tory sharpen their attacks as vote nears

With reports from Steven Chase and The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Ontario Conservative Leader John Tory and the New Democrats’ Howard Hampton made last-gasp efforts yesterday
to derail another Dalton McGuinty Liberal majority.

Mr. Hampton was out campaigning hard against Mr. McGuinty, blaming the Liberals for the loss of thousands of jobs last year in the province’s
manufacturing sector.

And Mr. Tory was talking in upbeat tones despite polls that suggest the Liberals are on the road to an easy victory - and that he may even lose in his
own riding of Don Valley West.

“Many people are saying they are ‘powerfully motivated’ to change the government,” Mr. Tory said. “So they will be out to vote on Wednesday and a lot
of people will be joining them and we will do just fine.”

Mr. McGuinty quickly denounced the message as being too negative. “It’s never the kind of ad I would approve,” he told reporters yesterday.

But Mr. Tory said the only way he can describe the record of the McGuinty government is in negative terms.

“When we have autistic children who have not received aid and we have people who are paying tax who are among the poorest in Ontario, when
we have people without a doctor who are elderly and can’t get help, then
anything you say about it is bound to sound negative,” he said.

But, even if the ad catches the attention of voters, the question for both Conservatives and New Democrats is whether there is enough time to turn the tide
on a McGuinty majority. Late last week, one poll suggested the Liberals had an
11-point lead.

Peter Woolstencroft, a political science professor at the University of Waterloo, said there have been elections that saw major changes in voter support
in the final two or three days, and sometimes a well-executed advertising
campaign has been the deciding factor.

“But I don’t think we have this here,” Dr. Woostencroft said. “The people who are going to vote have already made up their minds.”

Others, however, were not ready to hand the majority to Mr. McGuinty just yet.

“Given the circumstances, I think the message in their current TV spots is the best bet,” said Greg Lyle, the managing director of the Innovative Research
Group, a public-opinion research and strategy firm.

“However,” he said, “for it to work, the Tories need to narrow the Liberal lead to about five points. That would need a movement of voters equal to the
biggest week of the last federal campaign - possible but not easy.”

Despite the size of the task, one senior Tory said the response at the doorstops this weekend suggests people are thinking twice about the casting
their ballot for the Liberals.

“Even though they might be comfortable with another Liberal win, a bunch of them are saying that McGuinty needs to be punished a bit and sending him a
majority is the wrong message,” he said.

“It might make things interesting after all. I definitely get the sense that our worst days are over and that we probably are making gains.”

And John Capobianco, who worked as an adviser for the former Ontario Conservative government of Mike Harris, said campaigning this weekend has
convinced him that people are more receptive to Mr. Tory than they were a week
ago.

As for the New Democrats, Mr. Hampton hinted Saturday he may re-evaluate his role after the election. After every election, he told Global TV, “you sit down
and think about it. I’m not making any promises either way.”

Henry Jacek, a political science professor at McMaster University in Hamilton, said a win for the New Democrats would be to increase their seat count
in the Ontario Legislature from 10 to 15.

—————————————————————————————————————————

Globe

ONTARIO VOTES: NEARING THE FINISH LINE: PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS

The final grades are in

Each day of the campaign, Globe and Mail editorial board member Adam Radwanski has been grading the party leaders at globeandmail.com. As voters
prepare to head to the polls on Wednesday, he offers an overall take on how each
one stacks up

There are few things I will claim over John Tory. He’s had a much more accomplished career than me. He was commissioner of the Canadian Football
League; I just turn up at the games. He’s running a provincial party; I’m
writing a daily report on how he’s doing. But if nothing else, let the record
show that I’m quicker at judging when something is too ambitious to work.

It took Mr. Tory three-quarters of the campaign to realize that he was not going to be able to convince Ontarians of the merits of his religious schools
plan. By contrast, it took me about half an hour to realize that I was not going
to be able to incorporate every single aspect of the campaign into a daily
report card.

My initial thinking was that the leaders would each be graded on a variety of factors. Who was running the best-staged events? Whose war room was responding
quickest to opponents’ attacks? Who was controlling the agenda? Which side was
proving the most Internet-savvy, using online media to reach out to younger
voters?

There were two problems with this approach. First, without being on each campaign bus all the time, it was impossible to track every movement by every
leader - let alone what his staff was up to. More importantly, I wouldn’t have
been able to see the forest for the trees. Tracking all that minutiae would have
meant that the report card bore little relation to how the election was actually
being decided.

So to understand who’s winning or losing the battles, that’s what you have to keep your eye on - the things you’d look at if watching the campaign wasn’t part
of your job description. And then you have to ask yourself three key
questions.

First, what message was each leader trying to get across that day to voters? Second, did he succeed in getting that message across? And third, was it the
right message in the first place?

The reason Mr. McGuinty scored the best day-to-day, and has the highest overall mark looking back, is that for the most part voters saw what he wanted
them to see. Owing both to self-discipline and to his campaign’s careful staging
of each event, he very rarely got thrown off message. That message - we’ve done
a lot of good things, especially on education, and John Tory will mess them up -
was exceedingly boring. But it was the right one under the circumstances,
because the province had little will for major change, and stability is Mr.
McGuinty’s best selling point. Mr. Tory, by contrast, spent most of the campaign
unable to control the message. The Progressive Conservative
Leader spent his days trying to get Ontarians talking about the Liberals’
health-care tax or their disdain for the parents of autistic children, but
coverage of him focused almost exclusively on religious schools. As that issue
swallowed him alive, nothing he did - interviews, public events, TV and radio
ads - was enough to change the topic.

NDP Leader Howard Hampton fared slightly better than Mr. Tory, in that the coverage of him generally focused on whatever issue he was trying to get across
that day. But in his case, the problem was that it wasn’t the right message.
With an unimaginative campaign, he wound up being marginalized - the one thing
he absolutely needed to avoid.

To be clear, each leader was judged solely on whether he achieved his own goals, not in relative proportion to the other two. Otherwise, Mr. Hampton -
whose party was sure to receive the lowest number of seats - would have been
guaranteed the lowest grade. And however ambitious his belief that he would be
able to make popular an unpopular policy, it was Mr. Tory who surely deserved
that distinction.

B+

DALTON MCGUINTY

Post-mortems on this race will suggest that, with his pledge on religious schools, John Tory handed the Liberals another four years in office. It’s hard
to dispute that was the biggest factor. But part of the reason Mr. Tory and his
ill-advised promise became the focal point of the campaign is that Dalton
McGuinty gave his enemies very little to fire at.

When he took over the Liberal leadership in 1996, Mr. McGuinty flustered so easily that he would have been hard pressed to remember his own name under
pressure. But he’s morphed into a remarkably adept politician. As we discovered
when he visited our editorial board last week, it’s impossible to get him
off-message. Ask any question, no matter how pointed, and he’ll give the
appearance of answering it while returning to his talking points within five to
10 seconds.

His opponents alleged, accurately, that he was operating inside a bubble - avoiding any uncontrolled situations in which he interacted with voters. But
with a lead in the polls, and his primary opponent busy self-destructing, his
main task was to stay out of trouble. And save for one extremely uncomfortable
encounter with an Ottawa cancer patient (see below), he did just that. Even in
the leaders debate, with Messrs. Tory and Hampton hammering him, he avoided any
slip-ups.

With most of the same players around from their 2003 win, the Liberals also had going for them the slickest of the three campaigns. Their TV ads were better
and their day-to-day operations ensured Mr. McGuinty stayed out of those
unscripted situations he was so desperate to avoid. They correctly identified
off the top that they could make the campaign about religious education. And
they adopted the time-tested strategy of having their leader stay positive -
talking about all the wonderful things he’d done in his first four years - while
his ministers and spin doctors conducted more aggressive attacks against Mr.
Tory.

For putting forward interesting policy ideas, Mr. McGuinty would be lucky to get a “D.” For providing those of us covering the election with fodder, he would
get an “F.” But he wouldn’t care about either of those; in fact, I’m not even
sure he cares whether Ontarians like him. Mr. McGuinty’s focus was on running a
smooth, disciplined campaign that would get him re-elected. And on that front,
he did an impressive job.

Best Day: Sept. 21, 2007

A- “The Premier did a good job of shaking off the effects of the tag-team assault on him the night before. Holding a big rally in front of cheering
Liberals was a nice way to look like a winner, and the line about Tory and
Hampton becoming a hot celebrity couple - ‘HoJo’ - was pretty clever.”

NOW: Mr. McGuinty’s campaign worked because he kept it even keel. But this was the day he cemented his hold on power. By shaking off the blows thrown at
him in the leaders debate the night before, he put an end to the perception that
he was on the ropes.

Worst Day: Sept. 26, 2007

D “Man, this was ugly. When someone with colon cancer accuses you of not doing enough to let them live, you don’t inform them in three words that they’re
wrong and shuffle off to find someone more friendly.”

NOW: Mr. McGuinty’s exchange in an Ottawa hospital with Mike Brady, captured on camera, could have derailed his entire campaign. It didn’t, but it made the
Premier’s handlers more determined than ever to avoid uncontrolled public
events.

C-

JOHN TORY

John Tory is a successful businessman, exemplary private citizen and all-around nice guy. But it appears he’s not an especially good politician.

That, at least, is the only conclusion to be drawn from his spectacular failure to anticipate how the public would respond to his pledge to publicly
fund religious schools, and his inability to do damage control once that
reaction became clear.

Mr. Tory says he knew from advance polling his promise would be a tough sell. But what he clearly expected was that, even if a majority opposed the idea, it
would be low enough on those voters’ list of concerns that it wouldn’t affect
their decision. Meanwhile, it would provide inroads into minority communities,
where it would be enough of a ballot question to help the Tories take a bunch of
extra seats. Instead, those opposed to it turned out to feel very strongly
indeed. Had Mr. Tory recognized this sooner, he could have softened or abandoned
the promise in the campaign’s first week, and after some initial ridicule it
might have blown over. Instead, he did the worst possible thing - painting it as
a matter of principle, then backing away with a week to go. By then, it was too
late to erase it as a campaign issue; all he did was make himself look less
principled.

That the religious schools pledge came to define Mr. Tory underscored another shortcoming - his inability to articulate a clear vision for the province that
differed from Mr. McGuinty’s. Even in the debate, in which he generally
performed well, he spent so much time criticizing the Liberal Leader that he
neglected to lay out his own policies. And when he did make promises, they were
scattershot.

A final problem was the way he was presented to voters. Mr. Tory is an inherently likeable guy. But that didn’t come through in his TV ads or on the
news. Instead, he looked angry and negative as he attacked Mr. McGuinty’s
record. The message should have been that he was no average politician; instead,
he came off like a mid-level U.S. congressional candidate.

Mr. Tory’s campaign was not without its moments, mostly when he showed his personable side talking to average voters. But when a campaign ends with the
leader hard pressed even to win his own riding, it has to be considered a dismal
failure.

Best Day: Sept. 20, 2007

A- “This was the John Tory that Conservatives thought - or at least hoped - they were getting when they picked him as leader. Well prepared and completely
at ease in the spotlight, he cut the most appealing figure during the
debate.”

NOW: The leaders debate was one of the few times that Mr. Tory was able to get away from religious schools, since the leaders were mandated to talk about
other issues. He made the most of it, striking the right tone in his attacks on
Mr. McGuinty. But he was never able to use it to build momentum.

Worst Day: Oct. 1, 2007

D- “There’s no way to view what happened on Monday in isolation, so call this one a cumulative grade. It’s official: He sabotaged his own campaign for no good
reason whatsoever.”

NOW: A bunch of people asked that day whether I’d be giving Tory an “F” for his climb-down on religious schools. I didn’t, because at least his actions
spared him a caucus mutiny. But by backtracking so late, he acknowledged that
he’d wasted the first three weeks on a matter of “principle” he was now willing
to drop.

C

HOWARD HAMPTON

Last Thursday I wrote that Howard Hampton appeared to be reaching the end of his rope. In the midst of a third straight futile campaign as NDP Leader, he had
openly speculated to The Toronto Sun’s editorial board on Wednesday that he
might be “the wrong person” for the job. It was in keeping with his tone in the
campaign’s latter stages; when he’d visited our own editorial board at the start
of the week, there was little pretense his party had much chance on election
day.

Still, I hadn’t quite realized the depths of his frustration. On Thursday afternoon, Mt. Hampton erupted. He lashed out at John Tory for allowing the
religious education debate to hijack the campaign, but saved most of his ire for
reporters, demanding to know why they weren’t paying more attention to his
campaign and his issues. “We’ve become the child poverty capital of Canada -
don’t any of you people care?” he bellowed. “Don’t you care that there are
seniors living in soiled diapers? Don’t you care about that? I’m asking you,
what do you care about?” After a campaign dominated by a single issue, Mr.
Hampton’s complaint wasn’t entirely without merit. But he can also blame a
couple of baffling errors in judgment for his inability yet again to gain
traction with voters.

The first, more minor mistake was the NDP’s lack of preparedness for the start of the campaign. Rather than trying to set the agenda, Mr. Hampton waited
several days before unveiling his platform. With the NDP needing a big splash to
avoid becoming an afterthought, that marginalized them from the outset.

The bigger problem was that Mr. Hampton declined to make the one pitch that could have increased the NDP’s support base. With polls showing the potential
for a minority government, he should have openly campaigned for the balance of
power - something Jack Layton, did in the last two federal elections. By
outlining all the progressive things the NDP would force Dalton McGuinty to do,
he could have won over enough left-leaning Liberals to increase his seat
count.

Midway through the campaign, Mr. Hampton briefly broached this subject. Then he reverted to his usual script, declining to make the case for a minority
government even when given the chance. That, as much as its lack of concern for
the poor and the elderly, is why the media went back to largely ignoring
him.

Best Day: Sept. 24, 2007

B+ “The smartest thing for Mr. Hampton to do from here on out is to try to convince those straddling the fence between the Liberals and the NDP that he’s
offering them a combination of the two. This was a modest start, but it suggests
he might know enough to stop pretending he’s going to be premier.”

NOW: So much for that theory. Mr. Hampton’s speculation on a minority government made him seem like a player. Then he went back to his usual script,
and most of the province went back to ignoring him.

Worst Day: Oct. 4, 2007

D “Hampton blew a gasket, lashing out at reporters for failing to give him and his issues the coverage they deserved. … I’m sorry, but this is loser
talk. Every NDP leader struggles to get media attention. The good ones find a
way.”

NOW: This was the culmination of not just a frustrating campaign for Mr. Hampton, but a frustrating career as leader. It’s understandable that he lost
his patience, but effectively conceding six days before the election isn’t a
brilliant strategy.


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