Premier Doug Ford is firing back at federal Conservative charges that the provincial Tories “sabotaged” Pierre Poilievre’s campaign in Ontario.Â
“I shouldn’t interfere in the federal election,” Ford told reporters in Mississauga on Wednesday when asked why he didn’t help Poilievre.
“Last time I checked, Pierre Poilievre never came out in our election,” the premier said, referring to the Ontario Progressive Conservatives’ re-election on Feb. 27.
“Matter of fact, he … or one of his lieutenants told every one of his members, don’t you dare go out and help the PCs,” he said.
“Isn’t that ironic?”
Indeed, federal sources told the Star that after Ford’s Tories were re-elected in February, Poilievre’s office specifically instructed Conservative MPs not to publicly congratulate the provincial party on a third consecutive majority victory.
At events on Parliament Hill on Feb. 28, Tory MPs from Ontario were ordered to keep their mouths shut about the PC win — even though many rely upon the same campaign volunteers in their ridings.
Asked about the “bad blood” between the federal and provincial parties, Ford suggested he is not to blame.
“Well, all they have to do is make a phone call,” he said.
The Star revealed last month that Poilievre finally called Ford for the first time on March 17, some two and a half years after he became federal leader.
“I like a lot of the MPs, but the people spoke and they spoke loud and clear,” said the premier, who remained in constant contact with Liberal Prime Minister Mark Carney throughout the federal campaign.
“They spoke loud and clear in our election. They spoke loud and clear on the federal election. That’s democracy. They elect who they want.”
Ford’s comments came after Tory MP Jamil Jivani (Bowmanville-Oshawa North) accused him early Tuesday of “sabotaging” a federal campaign that saw Poilievre lose his Ottawa-area seat of Carleton.
“He couldn’t stay out of our business, always getting his criticisms and all his opinions out, distracting our campaign, trying to make it about him, trying to position himself as some kind of political genius that we needed to be taking cues from,” Jivani told CBC’s David Common in an interview that made headlines across Canada.
“I see Doug Ford as a problem for Ontario and for Canada,” said the MP, who had worked as an aide in the premier’s office at Queen’s Park during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“He’s not doing a great job in running this province, and now he’s trying to exercise his influence over other levels of government and it’s not like this guy is doing anything particularly well,” Jivani said.
“I’m speaking from experience. I tried to fix problems in this province, and he kept getting in his way, and all his goons around him all the time, they wouldn’t make anything better.”
A visibly disappointed Jivani told Common that Ford was a “hype man” for the Liberals and wanted them to be re-elected.
“He has taken the provincial Conservative party and turned it into something hollow, unprincipled, something that doesn’t solve problems. He’s glad-handing with (Transport Minister) Chrystia Freeland, having coffees and lattes with Mark Carney.”
In the run-up to the election, Ford had criticized Poilievre’s campaign for not using his successful campaign blueprint to make the vote a referendum on U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade war with Canada.
“Sometimes the truth hurts,” he said two weeks ago when pressed on his political guru Kory Teneycke’s comment that the federal Conservatives were guilty of “campaign malpractice” for failing to use Trump as the ballot question.
The defeat of Poilievre, who served as the MP for Carleton for 21 years, was especially stinging because the federal Tories did relatively well in Ontario on Monday.
They won 53 of the province’s 122 seats to 69 for the Liberals. The New Democrats were wiped out here.
Carney’s Liberals received 49 per cent of the popular vote in Ontario to 43.8 per cent for Poilievre’s Tories and 4.9 per cent for Jagmeet Singh’s NDP.
Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request.
There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again.
You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our and . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google and apply.
Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page.
To join the conversation set a first and last name in your user profile.
Sign in or register for free to join the Conversation