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Drag
By Eric Dowd Toronto
– This is a federal election – so why are an Ontario premier, his main
challenger and a former premier up to their necks in it? Liberal
Premier Dalton McGuinty got involved first by choice, saying he supports
Liberal Prime Minister Paul Martin, which surprised some, because their
family relationship had been stormy. Martin
in the last federal election did not want to be viewed as in the same
party as McGuinty, because the premier had become unpopular for breaking
promises to avoid increasing taxes and balance the Budget. McGuinty
more recently argued his federal cousins were cheating the province,
because they collected from it $23 billion more a year in taxes than they
returned in transfer payments and services. Martin
responded Ontario was economically strong, then softened and agreed to
cough up $5.7 billion more, but not all is yet in the province’s hands. McGuinty
since has complained Martin’s government left natives in a northern
Ontario community in living conditions so deplorable the province had to
evacuate them. The
premier has now said in a year-end interview he wants a national
commission of the federal, provincial and territorial governments to
re-examine the whole financial relationship between them. McGuinty
was asked if he stands a better chance of help from Martin or federal
Conservative leader Stephen Harper and replied he believes Martin `will
deliver for us.’ McGuinty
is taking risks, because he has piled another burden on Martin, who has
made so many costly promises he may run short of funds. If Martin wins and
fails to deliver, McGuinty could be seen as breaking another promise. If
Harper wins, he may not look hard for funds for McGuinty, because the
premier helped an opponent This is on top of Harper saying in the campaign
he lacks respect for McGuinty, which would provide a shaky start for a
relationship between a prime minister and leader of the biggest province. Harper
told reporters McGuinty is out of step with most premiers, because they
`hate’ Martin. Harper added McGuinty is untrustworthy and `I wouldn’t
want him behind my back,’ apparently referring to the premier’s
vacillating between criticizing and praising Martin. McGuinty
responded he gathers Harper’s real concern is he endorsed Martin, but
this support is justified, because Martin helped Ontario and there are
good grounds for believing he will help more. Provincial
Progressive Conservative leader John Tory, who once co-chaired a
disastrous federal election campaign for prime minister Kim Campbell, is
both canvassing for Harper and feeling confident enough to offer him
advice. Tory
said Harper is handicapped in Ontario because its voters `don’t know him
and what he is about.’ He
said Harper has to spend more time in the province and focus on issues
that matter most to its residents, particularly jobs, taxes and
healthcare, and not be distracted by other issues such as same-sex
marriage. Tory
said he hopes to spend a good deal of time campaigning with federal
Conservative candidates. Former
Conservative premier Mike Harris, who retired from elected politics nearly
four years ago, has been dragged into the campaign by federal Liberals,
who feel they can extract votes from him. Harris
is frowned on by most residents because of growing recognition he weakened
essential services to pay for tax cuts, although he retains a core of true
believers. Ontarians
also have been reminded of Harris’s confrontational stances by recent
testimony at a public enquiry he was abusive and obscene when ordering
natives ejected from a provincial park. The
federal Liberals have urged their candidates to claim Harris `cost Ontario
dearly’ and Harper would `damage Ontario like Harris did.’ McGuinty’s
Liberals already seize every opportunity to remind of Harris, hoping this
will help sway voters to reject the Conservatives in the next provincial
election in 1977, and it almost seems Harris is still in the legislature. Harris’s
image is seen as such a handicap two levels of Liberals are now trying to
wring votes from it – few premiers have left such an impression. -30-
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