Ontario general election, 2014

Last updated
Ontario general election, 2014
Flag of Ontario.svg
  2011 June 12, 2014 (2014-06-12) 2018  

107 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario
54 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout51.3% (Increase2.svg3.1pp) [1]
 First partySecond partyThird party
  Hon Kathleen Wynne MPP Premier of Ontario (cropped2).jpg Tim Hudak 2014.jpg Horwath infobox.PNG
Leader Kathleen Wynne Tim Hudak Andrea Horwath
Party Liberal Progressive Conservative New Democratic
Leader since January 26, 2013 June 27, 2009 March 7, 2009
Leader's seat Don Valley West Niagara West—Glanbrook Hamilton Centre
Last election53 seats, 37.65%37 seats, 35.45%17 seats, 22.74%
Seats before483721
Seats won582821
Seat changeIncrease2.svg10Decrease2.svg9Steady2.svg
Popular vote1,862,9071,506,2671,144,576
Percentage38.65%31.25%23.75%
SwingIncrease2.svg1.00pp Decrease2.svg4.20pp Increase2.svg1.01pp

Ontario Provincial Election 2014 Riding Results Map.svg
Popular vote by riding. As this is an FPTP election, seat totals are not determined by popular vote, but instead via results by each riding. Riding names are listed at the bottom.

Premier before election

Kathleen Wynne
Liberal

Premier-designate

Kathleen Wynne
Liberal

The Ontario general election of 2014 was held on June 12, 2014, to elect the members of the 41st Parliament of Ontario. The Liberal Party won a majority of seats in the legislature, allowing its leader, Kathleen Wynne, to continue as premier, moving from a minority to majority government. This was the Liberals' fourth consecutive win since 2003 and an improvement from their performance in the 2011 election. [2] The Progressive Conservatives under Tim Hudak were returned to the official opposition; following the election loss, Hudak announced his resignation as Progressive Conservative leader. [3] The New Democratic Party under Andrea Horwath remained in third place, albeit with an improved share of the popular vote.

41st Parliament of Ontario

The 41st Legislative Assembly of Ontario was a legislature of the government of the province of Ontario, Canada. The membership was set by the 2014 Ontario general election. The 41st parliament of Ontario was dissolved on May 8, 2018.

The Ontario Liberal Party is a provincial political party in the province of Ontario, Canada. The party is ideologically aligned with the Liberal Party of Canada but the two parties are organizationally independent and have separate, though overlapping, memberships.

Legislative Assembly of Ontario single house of Legislature of Ontario

The Legislative Assembly of Ontario is one of two components of the Legislature of Ontario, the other being the Lieutenant Governor of Ontario. The Legislative Assembly is the second largest Canadian provincial deliberative assembly by number of members after the National Assembly of Quebec. The Assembly meets at the Ontario Legislative Building at Queen's Park in the provincial capital of Toronto.

Contents

The election was called on May 2, 2014, by Lieutenant Governor David Onley, [4] upon the recommendation of Wynne following the announcement that the NDP, whose support was critical to the survival of the Liberal's minority government in the Legislative Assembly, would vote against the Liberals' proposed budget. [5]

Lieutenant Governor of Ontario

The Lieutenant Governor of Ontario is the viceregal representative in Ontario of the Canadian monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, who operates distinctly within the province but is also shared equally with the ten other jurisdictions of Canada, as well as the other Commonwealth realms and any subdivisions thereof, and resides predominantly in her oldest realm, the United Kingdom. The Lieutenant Governor of Ontario is appointed in the same manner as the other provincial viceroys in Canada and is similarly tasked with carrying out most of the monarch's constitutional and ceremonial duties. The current Lieutenant Governor of Ontario is Elizabeth Dowdeswell.

David Onley Lieutenant Governor of Ontario

David Charles Onley, is a Canadian former journalist who served as the 28th Lieutenant Governor of Ontario from 2007 until 2014.

With the election, Wynne became the first gay woman to lead her party to a majority victory in an Ontario general election. [6]

Gay is a term that primarily refers to a homosexual person or the trait of being homosexual. The term was originally used to mean "carefree", "cheerful", or "bright and showy".

Results

Summary analysis

Number of seats held by party in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario (2014). Legislative Assembly of Ontario - Seats by Party (2014).png
Number of seats held by party in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario (2014).
Popular vote
partyyearvoteschange
Liberal2011
 
37.65%+1.00pp
2014
 
38.65%
Conservative2011
 
35.45%-4.20pp
2014
 
31.25%
NDP2011
 
22.74%+1.01pp
2014
 
23.75%
Green2011
 
2.92%+1.92pp
2014
 
4.84%
Libertarian2011
 
0.45%+0.36pp
2014
 
0.81%
Others2011
 
0.79%-0.09pp
2014
 
0.7%


Seat totals
Liberal
58
Conservative
28
NDP
21
Elections to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario - seats won/lost by party, 2011-2014
Party2011Gain from (loss to)2014
LibPCNDP
   Liberal 5373(5)58
   Conservative 37(7)(2)28
   New Democratic 175(3)221
Total1075(10)93(7)107

Pairing off the top three parties, swings were calculated to be:

Swing, in British politics, is a number used as an indication of the scale of voter change between two political parties. It originated as a mathematical calculation for comparing the results of two constituencies. Britain uses a first-past-the-post voting system. The swing is the percentage of voter support minus the comparative percentage of voter support corresponding to the same electorate or demographic.

  • PC to Liberal: 2.6%
  • PC to NDP: 2.6%
  • Liberal to NDP: insignificant

Regional analysis

Elections to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario - seats won by region (2014)
PartyToronto905 BeltHam/NiagaraCentralEastMidwestSouthwestNorthTotal
   Liberal 201445741358
   Conservative 216764228
   New Democratic 22515621
Total2218101114111011107
Elections to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario - change in seats by region (2011-2014)
PartyToronto905 BeltHam/NiagaraCentralEastMidwestSouthwestNorthTotal
   Liberal 3141(3)(1)5
   Conservative (1)(2)(4)(2)(9)
   New Democratic (3)111314

Detailed analysis

582821
LiberalPCNDP
PartyVotesSeats
Liberal 1,862,907
38.65%
Increase2.svg 1.00%
58 / 107(54%)
Progressive Conservative 1,506,267
31.25%
Decrease2.svg 4.20%
28 / 107(26%)
New Democratic 1,144,576
23.75%
Increase2.svg 1.01%
21 / 107(20%)
Green 233,269
4.84%
Increase2.svg 1.92%
0 / 107(0%)
Libertarian 38,956
0.81%
Increase2.svg 0.36%
0 / 107(0%)
Retention swing analysis between parties for the 2014 Ontario general election, compared to the results from the previous 2011 election. 41onla 2014 retention swing.png
Retention swing analysis between parties for the 2014 Ontario general election, compared to the results from the previous 2011 election.
Gallagher index for the results of the Ontario general election, 2014. There is significant distortion noted in the Liberal results. Gallagher on2014.png
Gallagher index for the results of the Ontario general election, 2014. There is significant distortion noted in the Liberal results.
Polling station in Toronto for the Ontario general election, 2014. MitchellFieldCommunityCentre2014Election.JPG
Polling station in Toronto for the Ontario general election, 2014.
Summary of the standings of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario
PartyParty leaderCandidatesSeatsPopular vote [7]
2011 Dissol. 2014Change#%Change
Liberal Kathleen Wynne 107534858+51,862,90738.65%+1.00%
Progressive Conservative Tim Hudak 107373728-91,506,26731.25%-4.20%
New Democratic Andrea Horwath 107172121+41,144,57623.75%+1.01%
Green Mike Schreiner 107000-233,2694.84%+1.92%
Libertarian Allen Small 74000-38,9560.81%+0.36%
Freedom Paul McKeever 42000-12,3810.26%+0.05%
Family Coalition Eric Ames (interim)6000-4,2880.09%-0.13%
None of the Above Greg Vezina 8*00-4,2470.09%-
  Independents and no affiliation14000-3,8540.08%-
Communist Elizabeth Rowley 11000-2,2900.05%+0.02%
Canadians' ChoiceBahman Yazdanfar4000-1,2930.03%+0.027%
Vegan EnvironmentalPaul Figueiras5000-9070.02%+0.012%
People's Political Party Kevin Clarke 5000-8940.02%+0.012%
Northern Ontario Heritage Edward Deibel3000-8920.02%=
Special Needs Danish Ahmed3000-7090.01%-0.01%
Confederation of Regions vacant2000-5510.01%=
Trillium Bob Yaciuk2*00-3970.01%-
Equal Parenting Dennis Valenta2*00-3660.01%-
Socialist Michael Laxer 2000-3610.01%=
Ontario Moderate Party Yuri Duboisky2*00-3350.01%-
Pauper John Turmel 3000-194<0.01%=
 Declined Vote [8] 31,3990.64%+0.59%
 Vacant1
Total6161071071074,851,333

Principal races

Party candidates in 2nd place
Party in 1st placeParty in 2nd placeTotal
LibPCNDP
Liberal 431558
Progressive Conservative 22628
New Democratic 14721
Total365021107
Principal races, according to 1st and 2nd-place results
PartiesSeats
  Liberal   Progressive Conservative 65
  Liberal   New Democratic 29
  Progressive Conservative   New Democratic 13
Total107

Marginal seats

The following seats had a margin of victory of less than 5 percentage points in the election:

Marginal constituencies (Ontario general election, 2014) [9]
ConstituencyRank of partiesMarginsResult
1st2nd3rd1st vs 2nd1st vs 3rd
Barrie 40.7%36.1%16.3%4.6%24.4% Lib gain
Beaches—East York 40.1%39.0%13.9%1.1%26.2% Lib gain
Durham 36.5%34.3%24.1%2.2%12.4% Lib gain
Kitchener—Conestoga 36.4%33.3%21.2%3.1%15.2% PC hold
Parkdale—High Park 40.8%40.0%12.8%0.8%28.0% NDP hold
Sudbury 42.2%39.4%13.8%2.8%28.4% NDP gain
Thornhill 44.0%43.8%8.1%0.2%35.9% PC hold
Windsor West 41.4%38.5%14.4%2.9%27.0% NDP gain

Maps

Timeline (2011–2014)

Seat changes

40th Legislative Assembly of Ontario - Movement in seats held from 2011 to 2014
Party2011Gain/(loss) due to2014
scope="col" Resignationscope="col" Byelection holdscope="col" Byelection upset
Liberal 53(8)348
Progressive Conservative 37(2)1137
New Democratic 17421
Vacant11
Total107(9)45107
Changes in seats held (2011–2014)
SeatBeforeChange
DateMemberPartyReasonDateMemberParty
Kitchener—Waterloo April 27, 2012 Elizabeth Witmer   PC Resignation [a 1] September 6, 2012 Catherine Fife   New Democratic
Vaughan August 1, 2012 Greg Sorbara   Liberal Resignation [a 2] September 6, 2012 Steven Del Duca   Liberal
London West February 14, 2013 [10] Chris Bentley   Liberal Resignation [a 3] August 1, 2013 [11] Peggy Sattler   New Democratic
Windsor—Tecumseh February 14, 2013 Dwight Duncan   Liberal Resignation [a 4] August 1, 2013 Percy Hatfield   New Democratic
Ottawa South June 12, 2013 [12] Dalton McGuinty   Liberal ResignationAugust 1, 2013 John Fraser   Liberal
Scarborough—Guildwood June 27, 2013 [13] Margarett Best   Liberal ResignationAugust 1, 2013 Mitzie Hunter   Liberal
Etobicoke—Lakeshore July 2, 2013 [14] Laurel Broten   Liberal Resignation [a 5] August 1, 2013 Doug Holyday   PC
Niagara Falls September 24, 2013 [15] Kim Craitor   Liberal ResignationFebruary 13, 2014 [16] Wayne Gates   New Democratic
Thornhill December 31, 2013 [17] Peter Shurman   PC ResignationFebruary 13, 2014 Gila Martow   PC
Brampton—Springdale March 25, 2014 [18] Linda Jeffrey   Liberal Resignation [a 6]  Vacant

Other developments

DateEvent
October 6, 2011 Election held for members of the Ontario Legislature in the 40th Legislative Assembly of Ontario.
November 22, 2011The 40th Legislative Assembly of Ontario opens with a Speech from the throne. [19]
March 28, 2012 Dwight Duncan presents the Government's first minority budget, requiring support from at least one of the other two parties to ensure passage and avoid an early election.
April 10, 2012NDP Leader Andrea Horwath makes several demands to be met in exchange for her party to support the Liberal budget, which support is necessary for the approval of the budget following Tim Hudak's outright rejection of it. [20]
June 15, 2012 Premier Dalton McGuinty states he will drop the writ if his budget is not passed. [21]
June 20, 2012The budget bill is passed, after the NDP agrees to abstain, avoiding a summer election. [22]
October 15, 2012Dalton McGuinty announces his resignation as Premier of Ontario and as Leader of the Ontario Liberal Party. [23]
January 26, 2013 Kathleen Wynne is elected Leader of the Ontario Liberal Party. [24]
February 11, 2013Wynne is sworn in as Premier, and a new cabinet is sworn in. [25]
February 20, 2013Wynne resumes the 40th Legislative Assembly of Ontario with a Speech of the Throne.
May 1, 2014Progressive Conservative leader Tim Hudak announces that his caucus will be voting against the Liberals' budget, proposed earlier that day.
May 2, 2014NDP leader Andrea Horwath announces that the NDP will be voting against the Liberals' proposed budget, triggering a spring election. [5] Following this, Premier Wynne formally asks Lieutenant Governor David Onley to dissolve the legislature and call an election for June 12, 2014. [26]
June 12, 2014The Liberal Party wins a majority, claiming 58 ridings in the Ontario election. [27] Tim Hudak announced that he is stepping down from his leadership of the PC party. [28]
June 14, 2014A judicial recount has been requested in the riding of Thornhill. [29]
June 24, 2014A judge confirms results in Thornhill are in favour of the Progressive Conservatives. [30]

Opinion polls

Voting intention polls released throughout the election campaign were distinctly inconsistent and contradictory, [31] [32] [33] [34] as shown in the graph and table below. During much of the campaign, different pollsters persistently disagreed, frequently by important margins, on whether the Liberals or Progressive Conservatives held the lead, though by the final days most polls showed the Liberals marginally to comfortably ahead. Still, polls completed on the last day of the campaign by Ipsos Reid and EKOS showed vastly divergent support for the NDP, at 30% and 19%, respectively. Also of note, although four different pollsters released results among "likely voters" alongside their results among all eligible voters in an effort to better predict the outcome of the election based on expected voter turnout, in all cases the former proved to be overall poorer predictors than the latter. [35]

General opinion polls

Evolution of voting intentions during the 2014 Ontario general election campaign. Dots represent results of individual polls. Lines connect successive polls by the same polling firm. Dashes on June 12 represent election results. Polling during the 2014 Ontario election campaign.png
Evolution of voting intentions during the 2014 Ontario general election campaign. Dots represent results of individual polls. Lines connect successive polls by the same polling firm. Dashes on June 12 represent election results.

1 Innovative Research states, for Province Wide Online Survey, "Margin of error not applicable, online samples not random."
2 Data shown above for campaign-period polls are top-line results, typically among all eligible voters. However, certain pollsters additionally report results among "likely voters" in an effort to better predict the actual outcome of the election. When available, these alternative results are shown in the following table:

Likely voters

Pre-campaign period

Evolution of voting intentions since the 40th Ontario general election on October 6, 2011. Points represent results of individual polls. Trend lines represent three-poll moving averages. ON provincial polling since the 2011 election (alt).png
Evolution of voting intentions since the 40th Ontario general election on October 6, 2011. Points represent results of individual polls. Trend lines represent three-poll moving averages.

Incumbent MPPs not running for re-election

Liberals

Progressive Conservative

Candidates by region

East

Ottawa

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green LibertarianOther
Carleton—Mississippi Mills Rosalyn Stevens Jack MacLaren John HansenAndrew WestJack MacLaren
Nepean—Carleton Jack Uppal Lisa MacLeod Ric DagenaisGordon KubanekCoreen CorcoranLisa MacLeod
Ottawa Centre Yasir Naqvi Rob DekkerJennifer McKenzieKevin O'DonnellBruce FaulknerLarry Wasslen (Communist)Yasir Naqvi
Ottawa—Orléans Marie-France Lalonde Andrew ListerProsper M'Bemba-MekaBob BellGerald Bourdeau Phil McNeely
Ottawa South John Fraser Matt YoungBronwyn FunicielloMatt Lakatos-HaywardJean-Serge BrissonEspoir Manirambona (Communist)

John Redins (Special Needs)

John Fraser
Ottawa—Vanier Madeleine Meilleur Martin ForgetHervé NgambyDavid BaglerPhillip RichardMadeleine Meilleur
Ottawa West—Nepean Bob Chiarelli Randall Denley Alex Cullen Alex HillMatthew BrooksBob Chiarelli

Eastern Ontario

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green LibertarianOther
Glengarry—
Prescott—Russell
Grant Crack Roxane Villeneuve RobertsonIsabelle SabourinRaymond St. MartinDarcy Donnelly

Marc-Antoine Gagnier (Independent),
Carl Leduc (Freedom)

Grant Crack
Kingston and the Islands Sophie Kiwala Mark BainMary Rita HollandRobert KileyJonathan Reid (Freedom) John Gerretsen
Lanark—Frontenac—
Lennox and Addington
Bill MacDonald Randy Hillier Dave ParkhillCam MatherRandy Hillier
Leeds—Grenville Christine Milks Steve Clark David LundySteve BoweringHarold GabrielSteve Clark
Prince Edward—Hastings Georgina Thompson Todd Smith Merrill StewartAnita PayneLindsay ForbesTodd Smith
Renfrew—Nipissing—
Pembroke
Rod Boileau John Yakabuski Brian DoughertyBenjamin Wright

Chad Beckwith-Smith (Independent),
Murray Reid (Conf of Regions)

John Yakabuski
Stormont—Dundas—
South Glengarry
John Earle Jim McDonell Elaine MacDonaldSharron NormanShawn McRaeJim McDonell

Central Ontario

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green LibertarianOther
Barrie Ann Hoggarth Rod Jackson David BradburyBonnie NorthDarren RoskamRod Jackson
Bruce—Grey—Owen Sound Ellen Anderson Bill Walker Karen GventerJenny ParsonsCaleb VoskampJamie Spence (Freedom)Bill Walker
Dufferin—Caledon Bobbie Daid Sylvia Jones Rehya Rebecca YazbekKarren WallaceDaniel KowalewskiSylvia Jones
Durham Granville Anderson Mike PatrickDerek SpenceHalyna ZaluckyConner Toye John O'Toole
Haliburton—Kawartha Lakes—Brock Rick Johnson Laurie Scott Don Abel Arsalan AhmadLaurie Scott
Newmarket—Aurora Chris Ballard Jane TwinneyAngus DuffAndrew Roblin Jason Jenkins

Dorian Baxter (Cdns' Choice),
Bob Yaciuk (Trillium)

Frank Klees
Northumberland—
Quinte West
Lou Rinaldi Rob Milligan Kira MeesGudrun Ludorf-WeaverRob Milligan
Peterborough Jeff Leal Scott StewartSheila WoodGary Beamish

Andrea Gar Quiano (Socialist),
Wayne Matheson (Freedom),
Gerard Faux (Pauper),
Brian Martindale (Independent)

Jeff Leal
Simcoe—Grey Lorne Kenney Jim Wilson David MatthewsJesseca DudunJim Wilson
Simcoe North Fred Larsen Garfield Dunlop Doris MiddletonPeter StubbinsGarfield Dunlop
York—Simcoe Loralea Carruthers Julia Munro Laura BowmanPeter ElgieCraig WallaceJulia Munro

905 Belt

Durham & York

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green LibertarianOther
Ajax—Pickering Joe Dickson Todd McCarthyJermaine KingAdam NarrawayKyle StewartJoe Dickson
Markham—Unionville Michael Chan Shan ThayaparanNadine Kormos HawkinsMyles O'BrienAllen SmallMichael Chan
Oak Ridges—Markham Helena Jaczek Farid WassefMiles KrauterEmilia MelaraKarl BoellingGennady Vilensky (Trillium)Helena Jaczek
Oshawa Esrick Quintyn Jerry Ouellette Jennifer French Becky SmitJerry Ouellette
Pickering—
Scarborough East
Tracy MacCharles Kevin GaudetEileen HigdonAnthony NavarroScott HoefigMatt Oliver (Freedom)Tracy MacCharles
Richmond Hill Reza Moridi Vic GuptaAdam DeVitaRachael LaveIgor BilyYuri Duboisky (Moderate)Reza Moridi
Thornhill Sandra Yeung Racco Gila Martow Cindy HackelbergDavid BergartGene BalfourErin Goodwin (Freedom)Gila Martow
Vaughan Steven Del Duca Peter MeffeMarco ColettaMatthew PankhurstPaolo FabrizioSteven Del Duca
Whitby—Oshawa Ajay Krishnan Christine Elliott Ryan KellyStacey LeadbetterDouglas Thom (Freedom)Christine Elliott

Brampton, Mississauga & Oakville

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green LibertarianOther
Bramalea—Gore—
Malton
Kuldip Kular Harjit Jaswal Jagmeet Singh Pauline ThornhamJagmeet Singh
Brampton—Springdale Harinder Malhi Pam HundalGurpreet DhillonLaila Zarrabi YanElizabeth Hill (Communist)Vacant
Brampton West Vic Dhillon Randeep SandhuGugni Gill PanaichSayyeda EbrahimLuis Chacin

Ted Harlson (Freedom),
Dan Sullivan (FamilyCoalition)

Vic Dhillon
Mississauga—
Brampton South
Amrit Mangat Amarjeet GillKevin TroakeKathy AchesonRichard Levesque

Robert Alilovic (Independent),
Kathleen Vezina (NOTA)

Amrit Mangat
Mississauga East—
Cooksville
Dipika Damerla Zoran ChurchinFayaz KarimLinh NguyenLevko IwanusiwDolly Catena (EPP)Dipika Damerla
Mississauga—Erindale Harinder Takhar Jeff WhiteMichelle BilekVivek GuptaChris Jewell

Nabila Kiyani (FamilyCoalition),
Greg Vezina (NOTA)

Harinder Takhar
Mississauga South Charles Sousa Effie TriantafilopoulosBoris RosolakLloyd JonesJames JudsonAndrew Weber (NOTA)Charles Sousa
Mississauga—Streetsville Bob Delaney Nina TangriAnju SikkaScott WarnerDave WalachAlexander Vezina (NOTA)Bob Delaney
Oakville Kevin Flynn Larry ScottChe MarvilleAndrew ChlobowskiDavid ClementSilvio Ursomarzo (Freedom)Kevin Flynn

Toronto

Scarborough

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP GreenOther
Scarborough—Agincourt Soo Wong Liang ChenAlex WilsonPauline ThompsonKevin Clarke (People's)Soo Wong
Scarborough Centre Brad Duguid David RamalhoCarol BakerEdward YaghledjianBrad Duguid
Scarborough—Guildwood Mitzie Hunter Ken KirupaShuja SyedJeffrey Bustard

Richard Kerr (Libertarian),
Khalid Mokhtarzada (Freedom),
John Sawdon (Cdns' Choice)

Mitzie Hunter
Scarborough—Rouge River Bas Balkissoon Raymond Cho Neethan Shan George SinghAmir Khan (NOTA)Bas Balkissoon
Scarborough Southwest Lorenzo Berardinetti Nita KangJessie MacaulayDavid Del Grande

Tyler Rose (Libertarian),
Jean-Baptiste Foaleng (Independent)

Lorenzo Berardinetti

North York and North Toronto

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green FreedomOther
Don Valley East Michael Coteau Angela KennedyAkil SadikaliChristopher McLeodWayne SimmonsMichael Coteau
Don Valley West Kathleen Wynne David PorterKhalid AhmedLouis FlissTracy Curley

Dimitrios Kabitsis (Communist),
Patrick Boyd (Libertarian),
Brock Burrows (Independent),
Rosemary Waigh (Vegan Environ.)

Kathleen Wynne
Eglinton—Lawrence Michael Colle Robin MartinThomas GallezotLucas McCannMichael BoneErwin Sniedzins (Independent)Michael Colle
Willowdale David Zimmer Michael CeciAlexander BrownTeresa PunDavid Zimmer
York Centre Monte Kwinter Avi YufestJohn FaganJosh BorensteinLaurence CherniakMonte Kwinter

Toronto & East York

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green Libertarian FreedomOther
Beaches—East York Arthur Potts Nicolas Johnson Michael Prue Debra ScottAlex LindsayNaomi Poley-FisherMichael Prue
Davenport Cristina Martins Lan Daniel Jonah Schein Daniel SteinNunzio VenutoFranz Cauchi

Mariam Ahmad (Communist),
Troy Young (People's)

Jonah Schein
St. Paul's Eric Hoskins Justine DeluceLuke SavageJosh RachlisJohn KittredgeMike RitaEric Hoskins
Toronto Centre Glen Murray Martin AbellKate SellarMark DayeJudi FalardeauChris Goodwin

Lada Alekseychuk (Special Needs),
Drew Garvie (Communist),
Robin Nurse (People's),
Harvey Rotenberg (Vegan Environ.),
Bahman Yazdanfar (Cdns' Choice)

Glen Murray
Toronto—Danforth Rob NewmanNaomi Solomon Peter Tabuns Rachel PowerThomas ArmstrongTristan Parlette

Elizabeth Rowley (Communist),
Ali Azaroghli (People's),
Simon Luisi (Vegan Environ.),
John Richardson (Cdns' Choice)

Peter Tabuns
Trinity—Spadina Han Dong Roberta Scott Rosario Marchese Tim GrantAndrew Echevarria

Paul Figueiras (Vegan Environ.),
Dan King (Special Needs)

Rosario Marchese

Etobicoke & York

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green Libertarian FreedomOther
Etobicoke Centre Yvan Baker Pina MartinoChris JonesGeorge MorrisonAlexander BussmannAndrew Kuess

John Martins (People's),
Felicia Trigiani (Vegan Environ.)

Donna Cansfield
Etobicoke—Lakeshore Peter Milczyn Doug Holyday P. C. ChooAngela SalewskyMark WrzesniewskiJeff Merklinger

Natalie Lochwin (Socialist),
Ian Lytvyn (Moderate)

Doug Holyday
Etobicoke North Shafiq Qaadri Tony MiloneNigel BarriffeKenny RobertsonAllan deRooJames McConnellShafiq Qaadri
Parkdale—High Park Nancy LeblancJamie Ellerton Cheri DiNovo Tim RudkinsRedmond WeissenbergerMelanie MotzMatthew Vezina (NOTA)Cheri DiNovo
York South—Weston Laura Albanese Andrew Ffrench Paul Ferreira Jessica HigginsEric ComptonAbi Issa (Independent)Laura Albanese
York West Mario Sergio Karlene Nation Tom Rakocevic Keith JarrettKayla BaptisteWally Schwauss (Independent)Mario Sergio

Hamilton, Burlington & Niagara

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green LibertarianOther
Ancaster—Dundas—
Flamborough—Westdale
Ted McMeekin Donna SkellyAlex JohnstoneRaymond DartschGlenn LangtonBarry Spruce (Freedom)Ted McMeekin
Burlington Eleanor McMahon Jane McKenna Jan MowbrayMeredith CrossCharles ZachAndrew Brannan (Freedom)Jane McKenna
Halton Indira Naidoo-Harris Ted Chudleigh Nik SpohrSusan FarrantKal GhoryGerry Marsh (FamilyCoalition)Ted Chudleigh
Hamilton Centre Donna Tiqui-ShebibJohn Vail Andrea Horwath Peter Ormond

Bob Mann (Communist),
Peter Melanson (Freedom)

Andrea Horwath
Hamilton East—
Stoney Creek
Ivan LuksicDavid Brown Paul Miller Greg ZinkMark BurnisonBritney Johnston (Freedom)Paul Miller
Hamilton Mountain Javid MirzaAlbert Marshall Monique Taylor Greg LenkoHans WienholdBrian Goodwin (Freedom)Monique Taylor
Niagara Falls Lionel Tupman Bart Maves Wayne Gates Clarke BitterRalph PanucciJohn Beam (NOTA)Wayne Gates
Niagara West—Glanbrook David Mossey Tim Hudak Brian McCormackBasia KrzyzanowskiStefanos KaratopisGeoff Peacock (Freedom)Tim Hudak
St. Catharines Jim Bradley Mat SiscoeJennie StevensKaren FraserNicholas Dushko

Saleh Waziruddin (Communist),
Dave Unrau (Freedom)

Jim Bradley
Welland Benoit MercierFrank Campion Cindy Forster Donna CridlandAndrea MurikCindy Forster

Midwestern Ontario

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green LibertarianOther
Brant Dave Levac Phil Gillies Alex FelskyKen BurnsRob Ferguson

Brittni Mitchell (Freedom),
John Turmel (Pauper)

Dave Levac
Cambridge Kathryn McGarry Rob Leone Bobbi StewartTemara BrownAllan DettweilerRob Leone
Guelph Liz Sandals Anthony MacDonald James Gordon Mike Schreiner Blair SmytheJuanita Burnett (Communist)Liz Sandals
Haldimand—Norfolk Karen Robinson Toby Barrett Ian NicholsAnne FaulknerBrad MottashedToby Barrett
Huron—Bruce Colleen Schenk Lisa Thompson Jan JohnstoneAdam WerstineMax Maister

Dennis Valenta (EPP),
Andrew Zettel (FamilyCoalition)

Lisa Thompson
Kitchener Centre Daiene Vernile Wayne Wettlaufer Margaret JohnstonRonnie SmithPatrick Bernier John Milloy
Kitchener—Conestoga Wayne Wright Michael Harris James VilleneuveDavid WeberDavid SchummMichael Harris
Kitchener—Waterloo Jamie BurtonTracey Weiler Catherine Fife Stacey DanckertJames SchulzCatherine Fife
Oxford Dan Moulton Ernie Hardeman Bryan SmithMike FarlowDevin WrightTim Hodges (Freedom)Ernie Hardeman
Perth—Wellington Stewart Skinner Randy Pettapiece Romayne Smith FullertonChris DesjardinsScott Marshall

Matthew Murphy (Independent),
Irma DeVries (FamilyCoalition),
Robby Smink (Freedom)

Randy Pettapiece
Wellington—Halton Hills Dan Zister Ted Arnott Michael CarlucciDave RodgersJason CousineauMitch Sproule (Freedom)Ted Arnott

Southwestern Ontario

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green LibertarianOther
Chatham-Kent—Essex Terry Johnson Rick Nicholls Dan GelinasKen BellDouglas McLartyRick Nicholls
Elgin—Middlesex—London Serge Lavoie Jeff Yurek Kathy CornishJohn FisherClare Maloney (Freedom)Jeff Yurek
Essex Crystal MelocheRay Cecile Taras Natyshak Mark VercouterenTaras Natyshak
Lambton—Kent—Middlesex Mike Radan Monte McNaughton Joe HillJames ArmstrongMatt Willson

Dave Durnin (Freedom),
Bob Lewis (NOTA),
Marinus Vander Vloet (FamilyCoalition)

Monte McNaughton
London—Fanshawe Marcel MarcellinChris Robson Teresa Armstrong William SorrellTim Harnick

Paul McKeever (Freedom),
Ali Aref Hamadi (Independent)

Teresa Armstrong
London North Centre Deb Matthews Nancy BranscombeJudy BryantKevin Labonte

Dave McKee (Communist),
Salim Mansur (Freedom),
Michael Spottiswood (Pauper)

Deb Matthews
London West Nick SteinburgJeff Bennett Peggy Sattler Keith McAlisterAl Gretzky (Freedom)Peggy Sattler
Sarnia—Lambton Anne Marie Gillis Bob Bailey Brian WhiteKevin ShawAndrew FalbyBob Bailey
Windsor—Tecumseh Jason DupuisBrandon Wright Percy Hatfield Adam WrightTimothy MarshallPercy Hatfield
Windsor West Teresa Piruzza Henry Lau Lisa Gretzky Chad DurocherHelmi Charif (Independent)Teresa Piruzza

Northern Ontario

Electoral DistrictCandidates Incumbent
 Liberal PC NDP Green LibertarianOther
Algoma—Manitoulin Craig HughsonJib Turner Michael Mantha Alexandra ZaluckyRichard HadidianMichael Mantha
Kenora—Rainy River Anthony LeekRandy Nickle Sarah Campbell Tim McKillopSarah Campbell
Nickel Belt James TregonningMarck Blay France Gélinas Heather DahlstromFrance Gélinas
Nipissing Catherine Whiting Vic Fedeli Henri GirouxNicole PeltierDerek ElliottPatrick Clement (Independent)Vic Fedeli
Parry Sound—Muskoka Dan Waters Norm Miller Clyde MobbleyMatt RichterAndy Stivrins (Freedom)Norm Miller
Sault Ste. Marie David Orazietti Rod Fremlin Celia Ross Kara FlanniganAustin WilliamsDavid Orazietti
Sudbury Andrew OlivierPaula Peroni Joe Cimino Casey LalondeSteve WilsonJ. David Popescu (Independent) Rick Bartolucci
Thunder Bay—Atikokan Bill Mauro Harold WilsonMary KozorysJohn NortheyJoe TalaricoEd Deibel (N.Ont. Heritage)Bill Mauro
Thunder Bay—Superior North Michael Gravelle Derek ParksAndrew FouldsJoseph LeBlancTamara JohnsonPaul Sloan (N.Ont. Heritage)Michael Gravelle
Timiskaming—Cochrane Sébastien GoyerPeter Politis John Vanthof Cody FraserGino Chitaroni (N.Ont. Heritage)John Vanthof
Timmins—James Bay Sylvie Fontaine Steve Black Gilles Bisson Bozena HrycynaFauzia Sadiq (Conf of Regions)Gilles Bisson
  • † Indicates MPP not running for re-election.

Issues

Economy

Unemployment in Ontario was a major political issue. In particular, the manufacturing sector had shrunk by about 30% or more than 300,000 jobs since 2002. [44]

The Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario proposed a plan called "Million Jobs Plan", outlining their strategy for job creation and economic growth. By reducing tax, government services, energy costs and regulations the PCs projected to create a cumulative 507,488 jobs over eight years. [45] The plan also called for the reduction of 100,000 civil service jobs. Economists and critics noted fundamental mathematical errors with the PCs' projections. They held, even if the PCs' own data were correctly tabulated, only 50,000 extra jobs would be created (in addition to the 500,000 that would be created anyway without any policy change). [46]

The Ontario Liberal Party proposed the 10 year "Jobs and Investment Plan", which proposed infrastructure investments as their main strategy to create jobs. [47]

The Ontario New Democratic Party platform called for targeted tax credits and incentives to encourage job creation. [48]

The Green Party of Ontario policy proposal stated that it would "focus on your job by lowering payroll taxes for small businesses" as well as investing in transit infrastructure and subsidising energy-saving home improvements. [49]

The Ontario Libertarian Party called for mass privatization, lower taxes and general deregulation, eliminating many business requirements such as permitting, insurance and certification that they considered to be interfering with job creation. [50] Their platform called for government spending to be limited to "only core functions of government; defending life, liberty, and property" [51] and as such would have eliminated industry subsidies or incentives of any kind, particularly in the energy sector. [52]

The Communist Party of Ontario called for raising the minimum wage to $19/hr as well as introducing a guaranteed annual income, nationalization of the domestic steel industry, and investments in public housing, infrastructure and social programs, while shifting taxes from lower to higher income-earners and businesses. [53]

Transit

Due to rapid urban and suburban expansion in southern Ontario, traffic congestion had been increasing greatly. A 2013 study by the CD Howe Institute determined that it was costing $7.5-11 billion annually for the economy of Toronto alone. [54] [55]

The Liberals promised $29 billion in infrastructure spending, $15 billion of which would go towards building new transit (mostly LRT) lines in the GTHA, based on the outline of Metrolinx's The Big Move plan, as well as an LRT in Ottawa. [56] [57] A high-speed rail line crossing the province from the southeast into Quebec was also planned. The PCs promised to finish building the Eglinton Crosstown, but cancel all the other planned lines, and instead focus on quickly expanding GO service. [58] The NDP plan was similar to the Liberal plan, but included an extra $1 billion to get certain projects built faster. [56]

Endorsements

Media endorsements

The following media outlets made endorsements during the campaign:

Liberal

Progressive Conservative

New Democratic Party

Explicitly not endorsing any party

Public figure endorsements

The media has reported the following endorsements by public figures during the campaign:

See also

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