ontario’s political parties have been preparing for months for the possibility of an early election, but next week’s snap election call has pushed planning to a fever pitch.
premier doug ford has announced that he will meet with the lieutenant-governor on tuesday to trigger an election campaign beginning wednesday, for a vote on feb. 27.
he said he needs a new mandate, with the biggest majority in provincial history, to represent ontario’s interests amid threatened tariffs.
but opposition parties accuse ford of opportunism and trying to capitalize on favourable polling.
the ontario liberal party has also said it’s worried that ford could violate election laws that limit government activity during an election.
the party issued a letter sunday raising concerns that ford’s work pushing back against tariffs, including his travel to the u.s. and role as chair of the council of the federation, could see taxpayer funds used for something that could be raised as a political issue during the election.
it said the work would be “explicitly partisan in nature” because of ford has used the tariff threat as the reason for the election.
regardless of the reason, it’s happening, and the parties are all now in a flurry of nominating candidates, finalizing platforms, making ad buys, and training volunteers.