Toronto

Internal PC memo signals Ontario premier will likely call early election

Doug Ford’s chief of staff has sent a memo to party staffers, saying they need a stronger mandate to "stand up" to U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff threats. Opposition leaders say the PC majority government already has that mandate, and an election right now is unnecessary.

Doug Ford’s chief of staff says government needs stronger mandate to 'stand up' to Trump

A closeup of Doug Ford's face. His suit is just visible in the bottom of the frame. He is indoors at a museum, facing the right side of the photo
An internal email to Progressive Conservative Party staffers, obtained by CBC Toronto, adds another layer to speculation that Ontario Premier Doug Ford is planning to call an early election. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Ontario Premier Doug Ford's office has responded to U.S. President Donald Trump's intentions to impose tariffs on Canadian goods next week by sending an internal email to Progressive Conservative staffers, telling them the majority government needs a stronger mandate to effectively negotiate during a potential trade war.

The Monday night email, obtained by CBC Toronto, is perhaps the strongest sign yet that Ford intends to call an early election in 2025. In it, Ford's chief of staff said he had a "brief but important update" in light of Trump's planned tariffs.

"As we enter a period of unparalleled economic risk and critical negotiations, our government will need a strong mandate from the people to stand up for Ontario," Patrick Sackville told party staffers in the email.

"The stronger the mandate the better."

In the weeks leading up to his inauguration Monday, Trump repeatedly threatened to impose a 25 per cent tariff on all Canadian goods coming into the U.S., something Ford's government has said could cost Ontario half a million jobs

Hours after Trump's inauguration, the president reaffirmed his intentions to reporters on live television. Trump said Monday evening that he may implement a tariff against Canada on Feb. 1.

"This unnecessary and wrongheaded action by President Trump poses an immediate and devastating impact to the jobs, livelihoods, and welfare of hundreds of thousands of Ontarians," Sackville said. "Make no mistake: this is only the beginning of what will be a long, hard fight."

WATCH | Trump proposes steep tariff on Canadian goods. What are the possible impacts?: 

How possible Trump tariffs could impact Canada's economy

2 days ago
Duration 7:57
With U.S. president-elect Donald Trump set to take office Monday, Metro Morning host David Common spoke to an expert researcher in international trade about what can be done to protect Canada's economy from the threat of tariffs.

Ford has been hinting at an early election for months now, recently using the threat of American tariffs as a reason for sending Ontarians back to the voting booth. 

"I need a clear mandate from the people of Ontario. Not for tomorrow, or the next day — for four years of dealing with our American friends," he told reporters at Queen's Park on Monday.

'Answer to chaos is not more chaos,' says Liberal Leader

Ontario's opposition leaders have said Ford already has a strong mandate, leading a majority government with more than a year left in his term and holding the role of chair of the Council of the Federation, which represents Canada's premiers.

Ontario NDP Leader Marit Stiles said Monday's email came as no surprise.

"Doug Ford sees this as a gift, as an opportunity to secure his re-election," she said of the tariff threat Tuesday. 

"This is not about protecting those 500,000 jobs. This is about protecting his own job," she said. "He already has that mandate. I don't know what more he needs. And I'm willing to work with him." 

WATCH | Ford says proposed U.S. tariffs could cost 500,000 Ontario jobs: 

Ford says U.S. tariffs would put half a million jobs at risk. What do experts say?

8 days ago
Duration 2:41
Ontario Premier Doug Ford is painting a bleak picture of the potential impact of American tariffs on the province’s job market. CBC’s Lane Harrison has reaction from trade experts.

Opposition parties, including the NDP, have said they would back emergency spending by Ford's Progressive Conservative government to support industries and workers through a potential trade war. Ford has said that kind of stimulus package would cost tens of billions of dollars and that he would need a new mandate to spend that kind of money.

Ontario Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie said Tuesday that an election now would leave the province rudderless at a critical time when it needs to present a united front.

"The answer to chaos is not more chaos," Crombie said in a speech at the Regional Ontario Municipality conference in Toronto on Tuesday. "President Trump's tariffs should be treated as a threat, not as an excuse to call an unnecessary early election."

Crombie said Ford has been too focused on tariffs and a possible election at the expense of other issues, such as a lack of affordable housing and a strained health care system. 

Ford's government began fuelling speculation about an early election before Trump started to threaten tariffs late last year, taking hard stances on controversial issues like encampments, bike lanes and supervised consumption sites.

His government also announced $200 rebate cheques for all residents in December, something opposition leaders have called a gimmick to win votes.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ethan Lang

Reporter

Ethan Lang is a reporter for CBC Toronto. Ethan has also worked in Whitehorse, where he covered the Yukon Legislative Assembly, and Halifax, where he wrote on housing and forestry for the Halifax Examiner.

With files from Lane Harrison