The 5 most dramatic moments of the year in Ontario politics
Mike Crawley | CBC News | Posted: December 27, 2018 9:00 AM | Last Updated: December 28, 2018
2018 was a year like no other for Queen's Park
There's no shortage of memorable moments in Ontario politics in 2018. The challenge is trying to pick just the top five.
It was bound to be an interesting year, with the unpopular Liberal government of Kathleen Wynne facing an election, and the Progressive Conservatives, after 15 years in Opposition, looking to regain power under leader Patrick Brown.
And then, stuff happened, and 2018 unfolded in a way that nobody predicted last December.
Here's my list of the five most dramatic moments of the year.
5. Midnight sitting
Premier Doug Ford's move to cut the size of Toronto city council came out of the blue when he announced it in late July, with the municipal election campaign already underway. The battle moved from the Ontario Legislature to court, and after a judge ruled the move violated the Charter of Rights, Ford announced that the province would for the first time in history invoke the charter's notwithstanding clause.
To push that through the legislature, Ford called a rare overnight sitting at Queen's Park on Sept. 17. As MPPs debated from midnight onward, people watching from the gallery started shouting, and were led away by security guards, some in handcuffs. The Speaker cleared the chamber, prompting the protest to move outside and gain in volume.
In the end, Ford didn't have to use the clause after an appeals court ruled in his government's favour. A bill without the notwithstanding clause eventually passed, the number of Toronto city councillors was cut in half, and the municipal election went ahead as scheduled.
4. Wynne won't win
By the final weekend of the election campaign, most pollsters and pundits had concluded that Wynne's Liberals were not going to win. Still, when Wynne publicly said so herself five days before voting day, it made for a remarkable moment. Wynne's declaration was the official word that 15 years of Liberal government had come to an end.
Wynne's voice trembled with emotion as she was asked to describe what the moment was like for her.
"I have thought long and hard about this, believe me," she told the Saturday morning news conference. "It's hard, because I know there are Liberals who believe in us, and believe in what we've been doing and some are going to be mad. Some are going to be sad."
3. Election night
Election nights are often dramatic and suspenseful because of the time it takes for the results to be clear. This election, with electronic tabulators counting the ballots that had already been fed into the machine, and with the Progressive Conservatives' strong showing across the province, the CBC Decision Desk projected only 14 minutes after the polls closed that Ford's PCs would form the government.
The June 7 election night brought the first Ontario PC campaign victory this century. It also brought Andrea Horwath's NDP to Official Opposition status for the first time since 1987. Wynne resigned as Liberal leader. And Ontario elected its first Green MPP, party leader Mike Schreiner.
When such a historic election night is not the most memorable moment of the year, you know it's been a roller-coaster.
2. Patrick Brown's downfall
In 2017, PC Leader Patrick Brown was still struggling for recognition, even though he was poised to become the next premier. That all changed on Jan. 24. Brown called reporters to Queen's Park for an urgent late-night news conference. Mere minutes before CTV News aired a report in which two women accused Brown of sexual misconduct, he delivered an extraordinary and emotion-filled statement denying the allegations, then dramatically walked away, refusing to answer questions.
Despite Brown's denials, he lost the backing of his caucus and top staff and was forced to resign, in a statement sent out in the wee hours. It plunged the PC Party into chaos, with the start of the election campaign barely three months away.
But Brown did not let that be the end of his political career. He ran for mayor of Brampton last October, and won with about 44 per cent of ballots cast, unseating 4-year incumbent Linda Jeffrey.
1. PC leadership
Leadership races usually happen within parties that are out of power, or are trying to cling on to power. The PC race was a rarity, given that the party was favoured to win the coming election after 15 years in Opposition. The battle between Ford, Christine Elliott, Caroline Mulroney and Tanya Granic Allen was therefore bitter and topsy-turvy, in no small part because of Brown's on-again, off-again attempts to get back his old job.
But the biggest drama came on March 10, the day for announcing the results. It was supposed to happen at 3 p.m., but time ticked by with no official explanation from the party. Reporters learned that lawyers and senior campaign officials for Ford and Elliott were in locked rooms arguing about the vote count.
Then, sources with direct knowledge of the results told me that although it was extremely close, Ford had won, and Elliott was disputing his victory.
A couple more hours passed, with no official word about anything from the party. Then officials announced to the PC members that they had to clear the hotel ballroom and go home. Finally, some six hours after the result was supposed to be announced in front of hundreds of cheering supporters showered by colourful balloons, party officials anti-climactically read the numbers in a tiny meeting room to a smattering of applause, declaring Ford the new PC leader.
While the day was packed with drama, it was also the most politically consequential day of the year. The result was so close: Ford beat Elliott by just one percentage point. Had Elliott squeaked out the victory, she would be premier now, instead of Ford.