In the rough
You know, when your party drops to one seat in Toronto, you want to know your election co-chair is golfing in California. Because he is. #onpoli #olp #pcpo pic.twitter.com/m750qay1u4
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) May 18, 2018
You know, when your party drops to one seat in Toronto, you want to know your election co-chair is golfing in California. Because he is. #onpoli #olp #pcpo pic.twitter.com/m750qay1u4
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) May 18, 2018
My old friend David Akin got in touch with me about a study that Global News has put together. Akin and a team of researchers looked at where the three provincial party leaders have been since the election started – and it tells a very telling story.
What I’m hearing is that, presently, Wynne and her Wizard have one safe seat in Toronto, and a couple leaning their way. That’s it. Everything else is blue or orange. So that suggests to me that Akin’s analysis is right.
Anyway: that debate is going to be pretty important, I’d say. Comments are open.
A Global News analysis of the campaign itineraries of each leader adds some new data points to support what multiple polls have already shown. The NDP, in second place, have the wind at their backs. The front-running Progressive Conservatives are largely playing it safe. Meanwhile, the Liberal mission from day one appears to have been “Save the Furniture” by placing the leader in a series of ridings considered Liberal strongholds like Ottawa-Vanier, Mississauga-Malton, Guelph and London North Centre.
Struggling to avoid becoming the third party in Queen’s Park, Wynne has been campaigning in several ridings her party won by 20 points or more in 2014.
“The Ontario Liberal Party is calling its campaign ‘Care Over Cuts’ but it should be called ‘Save the Furniture’ [or]’Shore the Core’ because that’s what [Wynne’s] doing,” said Warren Kinsella, a Toronto-based lawyer and political consultant who played a key role in the election war rooms for winning Liberal campaigns for both Jean Chretien and Dalton McGuinty. “You can tell that by the ridings she’s visiting.”
Up to and including Friday’s published itineraries, Wynne has made or will make 28 campaign stops but just six, or 21 per cent, have been in ridings where one of her opponents is the incumbent.In fact, on Thursday night she visited for the first time a riding where the PCs are the incumbent, stopping in at a brewery and pub to meet with a handful of supporters in the GTA riding of Whitby.
“Everything can change, but when you look at where she’s going and what’s doing, it’s not a growth strategy,” said Karl Belanger, a veteran of several federal NDP campaigns, including the “Orange Wave” of 2011 that vaulted Jack Layton into the opposition leader’s office in Ottawa.
We had a surprise visitor today! We've had Prime Ministers and Premiers at Daisy – but this was our first President.
Thank you President @BarackObama for a productive meeting – enjoy the Daisies from Daisy! #ONpoli #JustATypicalThursday pic.twitter.com/2GI8rLaVoI
— Daisy Group (@DaisyGrp) May 17, 2018

Need a great summer read for your reluctant young reader? Try one of these titles, selected as Best Books for Kids & Teens, Spring 2018! Congratulations to @sylviamcnicoll, Shelley Peterson, @kinsellawarren, and @pamwithers. Find them here: https://t.co/VVSuqkaZ6M pic.twitter.com/jJztVSgIem
— Dundurn (@dundurnpress) May 17, 2018
Spoke to CBC’s Mike Crawley yesterday about why Kathleen Wynne is doing so badly.
Told him Wynne made herself the only face of this government – that she didn’t ever use her capable ministers or caucus to spread the Ontario Liberal gospel. She insisted on being the only Ontario Liberal people ever heard from – to the extent, even, of actually going to grocery stores to repeatedly announce beer sales, and treating it like it was the moon landing.
Being the only recognizable face of your party is fine, I told him – if you are certain you are always going to be popular forever.
No one is popular forever.
Link here.
Snippets here:
“We teach our clients that simplicity, repetition and volume work. That’s what [PC leader Doug] Ford and [NDP leader Andrea] Horwath are doing. Sounding like a deputy minister at a policy convention doesn’t work. It’s how you lose.”
And:
“A daily frenzy of seemingly-unrelated announcements doesn’t equal having a narrative. When you don’t have a narrative, you don’t have much of a chance.”
“The Liberals have fallen pretty precipitously everywhere. So this is becoming a race between these Conservatives and the NDP.”
Great work, Team Wizard.
Chart here:

Got that Amber Alert just as I was about to go under the scalpel. One the one hand, glad the system worked. On the other hand, disappointed the surgeon was distracted and lopped off that body part.
— Warren Kinsella (@kinsellawarren) May 14, 2018
All the way back in 2012, @kinsellawarren had an inkling about Trump. Wrote a cool song about it too. #FightTheRight pic.twitter.com/WgL35cga5c
— Richard McAdam (@RealRGM81) May 13, 2018