Hudak promises to restore Ontario's middle-class values
Article Comments (28) KAREN HOWLETT
Globe and Mail Update
April 2, 2009 at 11:25 AM EDT
TORONTO — Ontario Progressive Conservative MPP Tim Hudak promised to represent the hopes and dreams of the province's middle-class families as he formally launched his bid for the leadership of the party.
“Today, we begin a journey down a new path,” Mr. Hudak said at a news conference on Thursday on the front lawn of the provincial legislature, where he was flanked by a dozen members of the party's caucus.
Mr. Hudak said he wants to put conservative principles that have stood the test of time into action, including respecting the rule of law, rewarding hard work and ingenuity, and lowering taxes. He was vague about how he plans to translate those principles into policy. He also declined to comment on whether it was a mistake for John Tory to position himself as a moderate in the mould of his mentor, former premier Bill Davis — a stand that often put the former leader in conflict with the party's right wing.
“We ought to move beyond the red Tory, blue Tory debate,” Mr. Hudak said.
However, others have already labelled the 41-year-old member for the riding of Niagara West-Glanbrook. Mr. Hudak was first elected as an MPP at the age of 27 in the 1995 sweep that ushered in the Conservatives under premier Mike Harris. Many veterans of that era hope Mr. Hudak can steer the party back to the small-c conservative policies that were a hallmark of the Common Sense revolution.
The province was also in recession when the Tories ousted the New Democratic Party in 1995. But Mr. Hudak said there is a crucial difference between that recession and the one currently devastating the province. Ontario's fortunes have plunged to the point where it is now among the poor cousins of Confederation and is receiving federal equalization payments for the first time in history this year, he said.
“Who ever would have imagined that Ontario would be an equalization receiving province.”
Several party members from the Harris era are supporting Mr. Hudak's leadership campaign, including Mr. Harris himself. But Mr. Hudak was quick to point out that he has support from caucus members representing a wide spectrum, ranging from veterans of the Davis era to those days as well as those more recently elected, including Lisa MacLeod, who won a by-election race in 2006 and Bob Bailey, who won his seat in the October, 2007, provincial election.
Mr. Hudak is the perceived front-runner in the race: his endorsement from one half of the 24 caucus members attests to the momentum of his campaign leading up to Thursday's formal launch.
Three other caucus members are also in the running. Christine Elliott, 53, will launch her campaign on Friday in her riding of Whitby-Oshawa. Frank Klees, 58, and Randy Hiller, 50, are also running.
The party will choose a new leader on June 27.
The leadership post became available after Mr. Tory stepped down last month after he lost a by-election. Mr. Tory had been without a seat in the legislature since the provincial election, when his party was badly hurt by his policy to publicly fund all religious schools in addition to Catholic ones.
Mr. Hudak made it clear that he has no plans to adopt this policy, even though he had supported it in the past.
“It was put to the test in the last election,” he said. “The lesson in 2007 was very clear.”
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