Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Doug Ford's Ontario PCs win re-election, with tariff threats around the corner

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Feb, 2025 01:08 PM
  • Doug Ford's Ontario PCs win re-election, with tariff threats around the corner

Doug Ford's Progressive Conservatives won't have long to sit back and bask in the glow of winning a third majority government with an imminent tariff threat around the corner.

The Tories won Ontario's snap provincial election Thursday with Ford speaking about the need to fight U.S. President Donald Trump's proposed tariffs at nearly every turn on the campaign trail.

Just days later those threats may become reality, as Trump has said 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian goods will be imposed starting Tuesday.

The Progressive Conservative seat count is largely unchanged, with 80, while the NDP will again form the official Opposition with a somewhat smaller caucus than before the election, at 27 seats. In 2022, the Tories won 83 seats while the NDP took 31.

The Tories are ready to work with the federal government should Trump impose tariffs next week, said Ford's spokeswoman Grace Lee. 

"We're ready to pull American alcohol from the shelves," Lee said Friday. "We're ready to tear up Ontario's contract with Starlink and ban American companies from billions of dollars' worth of procurement. We won’t start a fight with the U.S., but we’re ready to win one."

The LCBO began pulling U.S. alcohol from shelves in the hours leading up to Trump's previous deadline to impose tariffs on Canadian goods on Feb. 4. But Ontario's main liquor seller and distributor paused that when Trump delayed the tariffs. 

Ford also previously said he would rip up the $100-million deal his government signed with Elon Musk's SpaceX last year to bring high-speed internet to northern and rural communities.

The legislature cannot be recalled before March 15 because newly minted members of provincial parliament will not be certified until then, Lee said.

Despite winning fewer seats compared to 2022, the conservatives are jubilant with a third straight majority, said Michael Diamond, president of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario.

"I've always believed the more voters see and understand of Doug Ford, the more positively they respond, and we've seen that with increased vote share throughout his time as leader in these three elections," Diamond said.

Ford's PCs won 42.97 per cent of the vote with more than 2.1 million votes, up from a 40.8 per cent share in 2022 and a 40.5 per cent share in 2018.

The biggest change of the night was for the Liberals, who won 14 seats, enough to regain official party status for the first time since 2018 — but leader Bonnie Crombie did not win a seat.

She said in her election night speech that she is staying on, but whether party members are content to have her lead from outside the legislature remains to be seen.

"Rebuilding takes time," Crombie said on social media Friday.

"Ontario's Liberals fought hard in this tough snap election to win official party status for the first time in seven years. And we aren't going anywhere. Last night, we earned 30% of the vote and we will continue building."

Despite garnering the third most seats, the Liberals brought in significantly more voters. More than 1.5 million Ontarians voted for the Liberals Thursday, nearly 30 per cent of the vote share, while the NDP brought in 930,000 votes, or an 18.5 per cent share.

Andrea Lawlor, an associate political science professor at McMaster University, said the election can definitely be seen as a success for the Liberals, but there are always different factions in a broad tent party.

"I’m sure there will be some very frank conversations happening in the party headquarters over the next couple of days about what went well, what went wrong and what portion of that could be assigned to Bonnie Crombie," she said.

Meanwhile, Ford will need to get to the business of governing, something he and his team are well-prepared to do, having already been in government for the past seven years.

Karim Bardeesy, executive director at The Dais, a public policy think tank at Toronto Metropolitan University, said Ford will have to decide what he wants his next government to look like.

"The main decisions that are being made at this point are who's in the cabinet ... (and) what are the ministries?" said Bardeesy, who was also a top staffer in the former Ontario Liberal government. 

Governments often change the scope and names of ministries in order to signal different priorities, balance different regional considerations and eye the size of cabinet. 

In his last government, Ford split up several ministries, creating a large cabinet of 37 people.

"I don't know if it's possible to make this one any larger," Bardeesy said.

The new government will also start preparing a throne speech, which opens a new session of parliament and sets out a government's agenda, and working on bringing back legislation that died when the election was called, such as a bill intended to help municipalities clear homeless encampments out of public parks.

The next provincial budget will also have to be tabled soon.

"As it turns out, just because of where we are in the cycle, you'd go immediately into budget preparation, or picking up where the budget preparation left off," Bardeesy said.

The budget is typically tabled before the end of March.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Trump's 'strategy' is to create economic uncertainty in other countries: Freeland

Trump's 'strategy' is to create economic uncertainty in other countries: Freeland
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland says with Donald Trump as president, the United States has an open strategy of creating economic uncertainty in other countries to discourage investment outside U.S. borders. Freeland says the incoming Trump administration is proudly economic nationalist and Ottawa is realistic in recognizing that's the case.

Trump's 'strategy' is to create economic uncertainty in other countries: Freeland

Alberta urges Calgary city council to approve province's Green Line transit proposal

Alberta urges Calgary city council to approve province's Green Line transit proposal
The province contracted consulting firm AECOM in July to find alternatives to the city's latest proposal, which would have involved a tunnel through downtown and run a drastically shorter distance than previously planned.

Alberta urges Calgary city council to approve province's Green Line transit proposal

Scam targeting the elderly in Vancouver

Scam targeting the elderly in Vancouver
Police in Vancouver are warning seniors about a new bank card scam that resulted in about 40-thousand dollars in combined losses for two victims this month. They say fraudsters called the victims from a phone number that appeared to be a legitimate financial institution, claiming that there had been irregular activity on their accounts.

Scam targeting the elderly in Vancouver

B.C. NDP government, Greens reach 'shared priorities' agreement

B.C. NDP government, Greens reach 'shared priorities' agreement
Eby's party won a bare majority with 47 seats in the October provincial election, while two Greens were elected and the B.C. Conservatives have 44 seats. The premier's statement says the NDP and Greens will work together on health care, affordable housing, creating livable communities and growing a strong, sustainable economy. 

B.C. NDP government, Greens reach 'shared priorities' agreement

Former B.C. New Democrat member of the legislature Dan Coulter dead at 49

Former B.C. New Democrat member of the legislature Dan Coulter dead at 49
The party says Coulter "always championed the underdog," citing his work in the legislature after his election in Chilliwack in 2020, his former role of chair of the Chilliwack school board and as the Parliamentary secretary for accessibility and minister of state for infrastructure and transit.

Former B.C. New Democrat member of the legislature Dan Coulter dead at 49

Woman who preyed on Chinese students fined $3.3 million by BC Securities Commission

Woman who preyed on Chinese students fined $3.3 million by BC Securities Commission
A woman who used "high-pressure tactics and predatory conduct" on Chinese students has been fined $3.3 million by the BC Securities Commission. The commission says in a statement that a panel ordered Meiyun Zhang to pay an administrative penalty of $2.5 million and more than $790,000 in the traceable cash she's alleged to have obtained through fraud. 

Woman who preyed on Chinese students fined $3.3 million by BC Securities Commission