{"id":262451,"date":"2007-11-01T04:00:00","date_gmt":"2007-11-01T08:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/issues\/how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign\/"},"modified":"2025-10-07T20:02:56","modified_gmt":"2025-10-08T00:02:56","slug":"how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign","status":"publish","type":"issues","link":"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2007\/11\/how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign\/","title":{"rendered":"How Ontario got a one-issue campaign"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>When they called this election, few cared and fewer came. What is going on? Not since 1923 have so few Ontarians bothered to vote. For the first time nearly a majority of citizens said \u201cnone of the above\u201d\u2014 47.2 percent voted with their feet. In fact, it was 22 percent of Ontarians that gave Dalton McGuinty his two-thirds seat majority. Not that it should have been a surprise. This was the most soporific election in almost as long a time. One would have to reach back to post-war Ontario to find a more somnolent campaign, to the days when Leslie Frost wandered the fall fairs spinning homilies about strong families and good roads to win three majorities in a row.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps it was the foolishness of a fixed-term election date, a carbuncle on the body of a parliamentary democracy. It had been anticipated so long that even the parties failed to do the usual rhetorical ramp-up and activist mobilization of a pre-election period. It was a lovely long hot summer. The electorate was not thrilled with the government, unimpressed by its leader, but underwhelmed by the available options.<\/p>\n<p>A visiting foreigner could be excused for failing to see signs that the citizenry were in the midst of a wrenching economic transition and, according to analysts, on the cusp of a wrenching recession. That they were in the midst of choosing a new government was almost invisible until the closing days. Lost pet stories often trumped election coverage in small-town dailies. The Liberals were reduced to buying a front-page endorsement from one of the Toronto throwaway commuter papers to get attention.<\/p>\n<p>Why voters were so sanguine was, on the surface, a puzzle. Consider: Ontario<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<p>is rapidly running out of electricity, a crisis for which no party had a credible answer;<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li>\n<p>has endured two years of the smoggiest, most heavily polluted days in every major city;<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li>\n<p>is facing the most punishing round of public sector strikes in a decade within months\u2014 as teachers, nurses and public servants line up to test a famously strike-shy government;<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li>\n<p>has dropped to last in child poverty and post-secondary education funding stats;<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li>\n<p>faces a middle-class property tax revolt postponed only by the promise of unlikely government relief; has a manufacturing economy in serious decline, with the auto sector suffering its first trade imbalance in a generation;<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<li>\n<p>watches its economic engine and political capital, Toronto, facing a half-billion-dollar deficit next spring; and on and on.<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>The political elite&#8217;s slap in the face by Ontario voters should not have been surprising. This was an insulting campaign free of vision or new ideas. Each party merely recycled policy planks that had been around for years, in some cases decades.<\/p>\n<p>Now novelty in politics is not all, and some issues never go away, but this is a new century with a generation of voters raised on a new set of stimuli and issues. Voters raised on the wide frontiers of personal choice, immediate wiki proofs, precisely tailored products and service delivered instantly by the Net are too savvy to be seduced by a politician offering better transit\u2014 15 years from now. They are too suspicious of institutional claims of loyalty by church and employer, let alone political parties or governments, to respond to blather such as \u201cGet Orange\u201d\u2014 New Democrats&#8217; peculiar appeal. Progressive Conservative leader John Tory, despite the Liberal war room brats&#8217; attempt to tag him as \u201cRichie Rich\u201d is the leader with the closest personal engagement with youth causes and exposure to the bitterness of urban poverty. He had an opportunity to turn that connection into a powerful political message and didn&#8217;t.<\/p>\n<p>After the overheated rhetoric and ferocious partisan assaults of the Peterson\/Rae\/Harris years, Ontario&#8217;s political leaders appeared determined to bore the electorate into submission. There were occasional eruptions of partisan attack, usually tied to evocations of the good old days of blood sport politics.<\/p>\n<p>In British Columbia visitors are often bewildered by the ritual damnation of the politicians long gone, sometimes even dead. Dave Barrett, premier three decades ago, and W.A.C. (Wacky) Bennett, dead nearly as long, are still regularly blamed for current ills by angry socialists and sulky conservatives.<\/p>\n<p>At their most lustful, good grey Ontario politicians are no competition for the political fireworks of Canada&#8217;s left coast, but they are acquiring the same \u201cback-to-the-future\u201d weakness. The sins of the Harris government were featured in creepy Fox-News-style \u201creality TV\u201d ads from the Liberal war room, complete with \u201carrest photos\u201d of the former premier. (Harris was elected 12 years ago, in another century.) The Tory campaign used a rolling text ad with a similarly hideous photo of the Premier. Perhaps the ad gurus&#8217; theory is that unflattering photos are more powerful political ammunition than dumb policy?<\/p>\n<p>Not to be outdone, newspaper pundits regularly blamed Bill Davis for John Tory&#8217;s faith-based schools nightmare. (Davis was elected when the current premier was an unremarkable student at Ottawa&#8217;s St. Patrick Catholic High School, and retired 22 years ago in 1985.)<\/p>\n<p>NDP leader Howard Hampton attacked the current premier, the former premier and long-ago premiers Peterson and his former boss, Bob Rae.<\/p>\n<p>At a time when the province is losing its manufacturing base at the fastest rate since the Great Depression, a stranger listening to Liberal leader Dalton McGuinty would think he had landed in Lotusland. Several times a day, the Premier would recite statistics demonstrating record spending on schools, record numbers of hips replaced and record numbers of cops, nurses, teachers and rodent inspectors hired. It all had an \u201cAnother Record Cuban Sugar Cane Harvest!\u201d quality about it.<\/p>\n<p>Their advertising guru admitted that the boredom was intentional, bragging to confidants that their strategy was to \u201csleepwalk the voters to another majority.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>It worked like a treat, and then they got an assist from God. The <em>National Post<\/em> cartoonist framed the outcome perfectly the morning after: Dalton McGuinty, hands raised in rapture, shouting, \u201cThank you, Jesus!\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The story of religion in schools is as close as the province comes to passion in politics. While Ontario has never risked the civil conflict to which the \u201cSchools Question\u201d nearly drove Manitoba, anti-popery is close to the surface in Ontario to this day. What was more surprising and depressing was how close to the surface lay an easily provoked anti-Muslim itch.<\/p>\n<p>The combination of Church of England United Empire Loyalists, Ulster Orangemen and various Low Church Protestants nearly scuppered Confederation over the issue. They yielded grudgingly to a typically Canadian subtle and complex constitutional deal at the London Conference of 1866. The issue faded throughout the 20th century until the government decided to extend Catholic school funding to the end of high school. Bill Davis&#8217;s decision in 1984 to extend the terms of that original deal contributed to the defeat of his successor the following year, and left a time bomb for his successors.<\/p>\n<p>One of the side deals between Bob Rae and David Peterson that permitted Peterson&#8217;s minority government to be installed was the implementation of Catholic school funding. Behind the scenes in every caucus, members were heavily divided about the commitment. Angry words were exchanged between long-time friends among New Democrat, Liberal and Conservative MPPs. A harsh counter-attack lead by radio shock jocks and a strange combination of the \u201cSons of Orange,\u201d leftist public school advocates and teachers&#8217; unionists badly rattled the political establishment. The political leadership prevailed, but through threats and coercion more than persuasion in the end. The issue went to bed for another decade.<\/p>\n<p>The Conservatives unwisely reopened it first in the Harris years with a promise to extend funding to private and faith-based schools using the tax system. This \u201ceducation choice\u201d option, championed by then treasurer Jim Flaherty, opened all the same wounds over again. His successor as premier, Ernie Eves, dropped the idea but the seeds of a new battle had been sown. In a subsequent leadership contest three years ago John Tory promised to find a way of funding faith-based schools. The commitment got little attention at the time.<\/p>\n<p>By this spring, Ontario Conservatives with a respect for the province&#8217;s history, such as Toronto professor Michael Bliss, were warning John Tory of the campaign land mine he had laid for himself. Tory felt strongly that he could not back down on his commitment, as it was central to his vision of inclusiveness, and because he had given his word to the community leaders involved.<\/p>\n<p>His advisers&#8217; opinion research failed to signal how damaging a promise it could become. They did not simulate how ably the McGuinty war room would be able to torque the issue into a Canadian version of Nixon&#8217;s racist Southern strategy. Asked about the failures after the election, campaign director and pollster John Laschinger refused to comment. Similar phone interviews by pollster Greg Lyle also failed to caution his client, the Canadian Jewish Congress, what a disaster the issue would be if the Liberals decided to torque it into a ballot question.<\/p>\n<p>And torque it they did\u2014 hammering Tory every day from the beginning to the end of the campaign. Using code language about race and open threats about the risks to Ontario&#8217;s security, the highly effective Liberal dirty tricks team got the province enraged. The same gang that humiliated Stockwell Day in 2000 with dinosaur dolls conjured the prospect of immigrants with strange religions and foreign tongues \u201cripping the heart out\u201d of the public school system, bleeding it of desperately needed funds.<\/p>\n<p>For months in advance of the campaign they fed reporters with anonymous quotes about \u201cunhappy Conservatives\u201d and supplied YouTube with nasty videos and their canvassers with slippery doorstep lines. As the damage to Tory began to show up in public polls, they raised the pressure with egregious performances by Dalton McGuinty fretting about creating a \u201csegregationist\u201d Ontario, and suggesting that Ontario would suffer the same fate as \u201cLondon and Paris\u201d if the policy were adopted. In a clear appeal to Islamophobia they successfully ground the Conservative numbers down by nearly ten points in less than three weeks. At Toronto dinner parties one heard \u201cprogressive\u201d downtown Liberals muttering quietly that Tory&#8217;s policy would fund \u201csome crazy imam&#8217;s Mississauga madrassa.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>While the episode was admittedly devastating to the Tory campaign, and an impressive example of the power of vicious campaign tactics, it was troubling to watch a \u201cprogressive\u201d Canadian politician indulging in ethnic politics rarely seen in Canada. John Tory had never appropriately battletested his commitment, as he was forced into uncomfortable generalities when challenged about who would qualify and how.<\/p>\n<p>The salt in the wound for Conservatives was a regular complaint by the Liberal leader that John Tory was \u201cbeing negative\u201d in regularly dubbing him a \u201cpromise-breaker,\u201d a demonstrably unassailable charge to which McGuinty had many times confessed.<\/p>\n<p>The Liberal campaign may have laid a hostage to fortune for the government. The campaign was especially enraging to those Ontario Liberals from the communities being so casually slurred by the party. Two Jewish cabinet ministers expressed their reservations to the Premier&#8217;s Office directly, nervous about reaction in a community that had been safely Liberal provincially for generations.<\/p>\n<p>The tactic did hit Liberal support in Ontario&#8217;s influential Jewish community. It probably helped Tory marginally in some Muslim, Sikh and evangelical Christian communities, but even they were divided by the issue. The Conservatives elected one prominent radio personality, Peter Shurman, in a largely Jewish community, north of Toronto. It was small recompense for the damage done everywhere else.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>The irony is that Tory&#8217;s policy was, in part, a poorly articulated effort to begin to control the unregulated growth in religious schools that already live entirely outside any supervision. Few voters knew that in Ontario setting up \u201cThe Ahmadinejad Holocaust Deniers High\u201d was a snap, and that some very curious schools had long existed in the province. Indeed, members of the Iranian Canadian community claim that the hated imams in their former home were already secretly funding schools in the province. Tory&#8217;s hope was that when offered financial support, most schools would accept inspections, an approved curriculum and licensed teachers. It seems likely that a subsequent step would have been to make such supervision mandatory.<\/p>\n<p>All that got heard was that Conservatives were going to take money from \u201cour public schools\u201d and give it to brown-skinned Muslims to teach hate.<\/p>\n<p>Like the \u201cSwift Boat\u201d tactics that demolished the John Kerry campaign\u2014 twist a lie into a credible campaign attack and then hammer it endlessly in speeches and advertising\u2014 the Liberal campaign was remorseless and effective. They successfully painted Tory as a naive champion of \u201cprivate religious interests\u201d over the public good.<\/p>\n<p>The three leaders were curious representatives of their political tribes. Until recently, Dalton McGuinty looked and sounded like the sort of politically hopeless, small-town United Church minister that New Democrats were famous for recruiting. Having been rigorously retooled by media trainers of the \u201csay less, but say it over and over\u201d school, he emerged in this campaign sounding more like the Manchurian candidate than a seasoned premier. His endless repetition of Hallmark slogans such as \u201cMoving Forward Together\u201d and \u201cWe Are Ontario\u201d were apparently effective.<\/p>\n<p>Howard Hampton is the accidental leader of the hapless New Democrats. Chosen by the party in a fit of anti-Rae sentiment more than a decade ago, he has taken the party to lows not seen since the 1950s. As in his two previous stillborn campaigns, his was an old-fashioned and defensive message. As one of his advisers said somewhat despairingly, \u201cWe are reduced to a \u201d\u02dcsaviour&#8217; campaign: save medicare, save the North, save our schools. When you are always trying to hold on to what you&#8217;ve got, you&#8217;re always going to be pushed onto the defensive.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Though he tried to make the most of a modest increase in popular vote, in his post-campaign analysis, the reality is that Hampton has led the party to an increasingly narrow base of aging support. They came out with the same number of MPPs as they went into the campaign with. The Greens took votes from all three parties, but their \u201cyoung and cool\u201d protest posture is most damaging to the New Democrats&#8217; former competitiveness for that image.<\/p>\n<p>A massive NDP refit and renewal exercise is now well past urgent, starting with a leadership change. But drafting even a \u201crock star\u201d new leader without revamping the party&#8217;s tired brand and \u201d\u02dc60s platform will not stop the rot. Even a party loyalist such as Dave Cooke, a senior minister in the Rae government and lifelong New Democrat, appealed to the party to seize the post-election review period to make big changes, or else.<\/p>\n<p>The path forward is not hard to find. A night on Google, clipping pages from the Web sites of most of the successful social democratic parties in the rest of the Western world, would by itself catapult the party forward a couple of decades. A serious outreach to the best Canadian and international thinkers on social inclusion, sustainable growth and a progressive innovation agenda could make the party into a serious contender for government again. Part of the problem remains that for many Ontario New Democrats, the experience of power was so painful they would really rather not return.<\/p>\n<p>The challenge for the Conservatives is similar, if not quite as grim. Whether John Tory decides to remain or not, their appeal and distinctiveness as a political choice is also not entirely clear. A return to Harrisite policy is not an option for a party serious about power\u2014 that hard-edged response to the mess bequeathed by the Peterson\/Rae era will not sell today. Even the social conservative activist core of the Harper coalition recognizes that those days are now gone\u2014 at least until the next crisis makes normally centrist Canadians willing to adopt such a painful agenda.<\/p>\n<p>John Tory is the most attractive leader that the party has had since Bill Davis: none of the corrosive edge of a Mike Harris, lots of the gravitas that grounded the most successful Conservative leaders in the golden years. But he has a whiff of \u201cyesterday&#8217;s man\u201d as a result, despite having been around for only three years as leader. A warm glad-handing style risks being seen as a patrician son of privilege soothing the masses. Despite having raised more money for more worthy causes, done more to heal community divisions and been more proactive for\u00a0years on the race and poverty front than either McGuinty or Hampton, to the casual observer he looks like many other middle-aged white politicians in a pinstriped suit. The name is not an asset in many circles of liberal Ontario to boot.<\/p>\n<p>The slightly right-of-centre social policy space occupied so successfully by 50 years of Ontario Red Tories is now filled by the Liberals, who are big on family, and responsibility, and public safety\u2014 if only in their spin. The economic space in the centre is certainly open for competition given that the Liberals have so signally failed at staunching the bleeding in the agricultural, resource and manufacturing sectors, or at pointing out the path to a successful postindustrial economy. Success for a creative new innovation and economic stimulus message presupposes that voters care. This election would seem to indicate that they do not, yet. The \u201cnational\u201d card may offer some hope for a politician with credentials such as Tory&#8217;s. He is a veteran of Bill Davis&#8217;s careful positioning of the province as the benevolent economic engine and political flywheel of the nation. It&#8217;s almost hard to recall the days when Ontario could be counted on to \u201csquare the circle\u201d between western and Quebec demands at first ministers&#8217; tables, the time when its security as a perennial number one allowed it to support apparently generous national social and economic transfers.<\/p>\n<p>The province has fallen far in the national league tables since those days. It&#8217;s not credible for Queen&#8217;s Park to match Alberta&#8217;s or even British Columbia&#8217;s largesse in infrastructure spending today. But Ontario has fallen to the level of the poorest provinces in several key indices, including the crucial productivity and innovation stimulator, postsecondary education funding. Roads, hospitals and schools are still in Third World states of repair in many smaller communities and poorer neighbourhoods, despite a small uptick in Liberal spending over four years.<\/p>\n<p>Some friends of the Conservative Party pleaded with Tory advisers to adopt a \u201cWe&#8217;ll make Ontario number one. Again\u201d appeal, touching their history of government success and Ontario&#8217;s famous arrogance simultaneously. Tory played with the message in the debate and elsewhere but failed to give it the serious attention it would have needed to take off.<\/p>\n<p>An opposition campaign that contrasted Ontario&#8217;s sad performance against other provinces&#8217; could be the death of a thousand cuts for McGuinty&#8217;s credibility: \u201cDid you know that your grandma would wait half as long for her new hip in PEI as she had to in Picton? Aren&#8217;t you embarrassed our students score worse on their math tests than Canadian kids in Alberta, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick? Did you know that in Ontario we recycle less of our garbage than every one of the Atlantic provinces?\u201d Etc.<\/p>\n<p>The success of the Green Party across the province, taking votes from all three parties and nearly electing its first politician anywhere in the country, suggests another option for any of the three major parties. Demonstrating real leadership in this arena would probably motivate a cadre of new voters, secure the loyalty of young voters and fend off a challenge to the party base.<\/p>\n<p>Each party has good reasons not to make the kinds of changes necessary to be seen as serious. For New Democrats, it&#8217;s union intransigence and northern resource communities, for Conservatives, it&#8217;s small business and small government activists, and for Liberals it&#8217;s fear of the reaction of all of the above. Making Ontario the number one environmental innovator could be a political vision that touches several of the province&#8217;s hot buttons simultaneously. However, there is a shadow on the horizon for all of the parties, and especially for the governing Liberals.<\/p>\n<p>The province is now long overdue for a serious recession.<\/p>\n<p>Not since David Peterson was spooked into calling an early election in the summer of 1990 have the economic portents looked so gloomy for the province. The province has bubbled along on several economic fronts for more than a decade: auto sales, construction and commodity industry servicing. Each appears to be threatened for the first time in many years.<\/p>\n<p>This year Ontario slipped into deficit in auto parts and vehicle export revenue. It is blessed to have a strong and growing Asian auto manufacturing sector, but that cannot offset the secular slide of the Big Three American manufacturers. In addition, the huge advantage that weak Canadian dollars and horrific US health costs represented for our car plants have both disappeared at the same time. GM and Chrysler have each passed their retirees&#8217; health costs to their unions, and the Canadian dollar is now a 4 to 5 percent additional cost\u2014 from a 25 percent advantage two years ago\u2014 for every vehicle assembled here.<\/p>\n<p>Housing starts have remained strong in Ontario so far, but exports of lumber and other construction inputs to the US have been savaged by their credit crisis and our dollar. Economists are already wringing their hands about the impact of Ontario homebuyers losing their enthusiasm to go deeper into debt for a new home. Government infrastructure spending could offset some of the predicted decline in housing and the still weak commercial sector, but only the federal government is flush and it is unlikely to favour spending on shovels in Ontario. The province&#8217;s health is, ironically, likely to be propped up for some time by commodity prices. Although the coal, oil, uranium, diamonds, trees and water\u2014 Canada&#8217;s clich\u00e9d \u201crocks and logs\u201d economy\u2014 are primarily based elsewhere, the financing and industry servicing benefits flow disproportionately to Ontario. Few economists see the global boom in commodity prices running out of steam soon, but even a small dip in US demand could be severe for Canadians, as we are now much higher-cost producers.<\/p>\n<p>As the Rae government discovered, a serious recession in Ontario, especially one driven by a postpresidential-election decline in the US, can hurtle downhill with sickening speed. The provincial government&#8217;s levers to brake the decline are weaker today than they were 17 years ago, and they didn&#8217;t work then.<\/p>\n<p>The McGuinty government had a mostly bump-free first term, coasting first on the decimation of the NDP as opposition and the Tories&#8217; leadership battles, then on the cash thrown off by the booming Ontario economy. The bumpy ride that is sure to be the second term starts with labour negotiations with hundreds of thousands of public employees later this year.<\/p>\n<p>Following the time-honoured approach of Liberal and Conservative governments in the province\u2014 spend enough immediately on the loudest problems to reduce their volume, promise a lot more a lot later\u2014 McGuinty was able to stall a day of reckoning on transit, on infrastructure and on cities.<\/p>\n<p>To govern is to choose, however, especially when the revenues flatline or fall. As the Rae government discovered, government revenues fall much faster in a downturn than expenditures can be cut. In a province with a $556.3 billion GDP in 2006 and a provincial expenditure of $90 billion, an accumulated surplus of $2.3 billion is 2.6 percent of expenditure, equivalent to two cases of beer a month to the average Ontario wage earner. It may appear like a lot of money but it&#8217;s a trivial bulwark against a recession.<\/p>\n<p>Hard times require tough government decisions. There is probably little appetite among Ontario voters to run up the provincial deficit by the tens of billions required to try to ease the pain of a downturn for its most vulnerable victims, older laidoff workers and their families. There is even less willingness among global creditors to be so helpful except at punishing interest rates. The brick wall that Ontario Treasurer Greg Sorbara could be skidding toward before the end of winter is the need to find billions of dollars in discretionary expenditure cuts, fast. There is little in their record to give one hope that this is a challenge that the McGuinty government is up to meeting. This is the team, after all, whose first choice when faced with the perennial demand of the health system for more money was to break a promise not to raise taxes. The next four years were marked by avoidance, denial and delay as decision-making styles.<\/p>\n<p>Churchill once unfairly characterized Britain&#8217;s formidable post-war prime minister, Clement Attlee, as a \u201cmodest man with a great deal to be modest about.\u201d But Attlee confounded critics, laid the foundation of the British welfare state, completed the withdrawal from Empire and begin to rebuild the war-ravaged British economy.<\/p>\n<p>He was a skinny, balding, physically unbecoming political leader, with an unfortunate grin. His oratory was painful to endure, with a glad-handing style that was forced and embarrassing to observe. He went on to make the hardest decisions in a government in crisis, after a career as a political vacillator. Maybe McGuinty has a role model.\u00a0<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>When they called this election, few cared and fewer came. What is going on? Not since 1923 have so few Ontarians bothered to vote. For the first time nearly a majority of citizens said \u201cnone of the above\u201d\u2014 47.2 percent voted with their feet. In fact, it was 22 percent of Ontarians that gave Dalton [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"content-type":"","ep_exclude_from_search":false,"apple_news_api_created_at":"2025-10-08T00:02:58Z","apple_news_api_id":"71816479-bc41-458d-9c57-04545b5108ca","apple_news_api_modified_at":"2025-10-08T00:02:58Z","apple_news_api_revision":"AAAAAAAAAAD\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/w==","apple_news_api_share_url":"https:\/\/apple.news\/AcYFkebxBRY2cVwRUW1EIyg","apple_news_cover_media_provider":"image","apple_news_coverimage":0,"apple_news_coverimage_caption":"","apple_news_cover_video_id":0,"apple_news_cover_video_url":"","apple_news_cover_embedwebvideo_url":"","apple_news_is_hidden":"","apple_news_is_paid":"","apple_news_is_preview":"","apple_news_is_sponsored":"","apple_news_maturity_rating":"","apple_news_metadata":"\"\"","apple_news_pullquote":"","apple_news_pullquote_position":"","apple_news_slug":"","apple_news_sections":[],"apple_news_suppress_video_url":false,"apple_news_use_image_component":false},"categories":[9346],"tags":[],"article-status":[],"irpp-category":[],"section":[],"irpp-tag":[],"class_list":["post-262451","issues","type-issues","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"acf":[],"apple_news_notices":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v25.8 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>How Ontario got a one-issue campaign<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2007\/11\/how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"fr_FR\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"How Ontario got a one-issue campaign\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"When they called this election, few cared and fewer came. What is going on? Not since 1923 have so few Ontarians bothered to vote. For the first time nearly a majority of citizens said \u201cnone of the above\u201d\u2014 47.2 percent voted with their feet. In fact, it was 22 percent of Ontarians that gave Dalton [&hellip;]\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2007\/11\/how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Policy Options\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:publisher\" content=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/IRPP.org\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2025-10-08T00:02:56+00:00\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:site\" content=\"@irpp\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"21 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2007\/11\/how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2007\/11\/how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign\/\",\"name\":\"How Ontario got a one-issue campaign\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/#website\"},\"datePublished\":\"2007-11-01T08:00:00+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2025-10-08T00:02:56+00:00\",\"breadcrumb\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2007\/11\/how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign\/#breadcrumb\"},\"inLanguage\":\"fr-FR\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"ReadAction\",\"target\":[\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2007\/11\/how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign\/\"]}]},{\"@type\":\"BreadcrumbList\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2007\/11\/how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign\/#breadcrumb\",\"itemListElement\":[{\"@type\":\"ListItem\",\"position\":1,\"name\":\"Home\",\"item\":\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/\"},{\"@type\":\"ListItem\",\"position\":2,\"name\":\"Ontario 2007 &#8211; Dalton McGuinty\",\"item\":\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/2007\/11\/ontario-2007-dalton-mcguinty\/\"},{\"@type\":\"ListItem\",\"position\":3,\"name\":\"How Ontario got a one-issue campaign\"}]},{\"@type\":\"WebSite\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/#website\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/\",\"name\":\"Policy Options\",\"description\":\"Institute for Research on Public Policy\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"SearchAction\",\"target\":{\"@type\":\"EntryPoint\",\"urlTemplate\":\"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/?s={search_term_string}\"},\"query-input\":{\"@type\":\"PropertyValueSpecification\",\"valueRequired\":true,\"valueName\":\"search_term_string\"}}],\"inLanguage\":\"fr-FR\"}]}<\/script>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"How Ontario got a one-issue campaign","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/policyoptions.irpp.org\/fr\/2007\/11\/how-ontario-got-a-one-issue-campaign\/","og_locale":"fr_FR","og_type":"article","og_title":"How Ontario got a one-issue campaign","og_description":"When they called this election, few cared and fewer came. 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