2014 Ontario general election




















Ontario general election, 2014







← 2011
June 12, 2014 (2014-06-12)
2018 →

← outgoing members


elected members →



107 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario
54 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout 51.3% (Increase3.1pp)[1]
















































































 
First party
Second party
Third 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 election
53 seats, 37.65%
37 seats, 35.45%
17 seats, 22.74%
Seats before
48
37
21
Seats won
58
28
21
Seat change

Increase10

Decrease9
Steady
Popular vote
1,862,907
1,506,267
1,144,576
Percentage
38.65%
31.25%
23.75%
Swing

Increase1.00pp

Decrease4.20pp

Increase1.01pp




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.


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]


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




Contents






  • 1 Results


    • 1.1 Summary analysis


    • 1.2 Regional analysis


    • 1.3 Detailed analysis


    • 1.4 Principal races


    • 1.5 Marginal seats


    • 1.6 Maps




  • 2 Timeline (2011–2014)


    • 2.1 Seat changes


    • 2.2 Other developments




  • 3 Opinion polls


    • 3.1 General opinion polls


    • 3.2 Likely voters


    • 3.3 Pre-campaign period




  • 4 Incumbent MPPs not running for re-election


  • 5 Candidates by region


    • 5.1 East


      • 5.1.1 Ottawa


      • 5.1.2 Eastern Ontario




    • 5.2 Central Ontario


    • 5.3 905 Belt


      • 5.3.1 Durham & York


      • 5.3.2 Brampton, Mississauga & Oakville




    • 5.4 Toronto


      • 5.4.1 Scarborough


      • 5.4.2 North York and North Toronto


      • 5.4.3 Toronto & East York


      • 5.4.4 Etobicoke & York




    • 5.5 Hamilton, Burlington & Niagara


    • 5.6 Midwestern Ontario


    • 5.7 Southwestern Ontario


    • 5.8 Northern Ontario




  • 6 Issues


    • 6.1 Economy


    • 6.2 Transit




  • 7 Endorsements


    • 7.1 Media endorsements


    • 7.2 Public figure endorsements




  • 8 See also


  • 9 References


  • 10 External links





Results



Summary analysis




Number of seats held by party in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario (2014).





















































































Popular vote
party year votes change
Liberal 2011
  

37.65% +1.00pp
2014
  

38.65%
Conservative 2011
  

35.45% -4.20pp
2014
  

31.25%
NDP 2011
  

22.74% +1.01pp
2014
  

23.75%
Green 2011
  

2.92% +1.92pp
2014
  

4.84%
Libertarian 2011
  

0.45% +0.36pp
2014
  

0.81%
Others 2011
  

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

Party

2011

Gain from (loss to)

2014

Lib

PC

NDP
    Liberal 53 7 3 (5) 58
    Conservative 37 (7) (2) 28
    New Democratic 17 5 (3) 2 21
Total 107 5 (10) 9 3 (7) 107

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



  • 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)
Party Toronto 905 Belt Ham/Niagara Central East Midwest Southwest North Total
    Liberal 20 14 4 5 7 4 1 3 58
    Conservative 2 1 6 7 6 4 2 28
    New Democratic 2 2 5 1 5 6 21
Total 22 18 10 11 14 11 10 11 107
























































Elections to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario - change in seats by region (2011-2014)
Party Toronto 905 Belt Ham/Niagara Central East Midwest Southwest North Total
    Liberal 3 1 4 1 (3) (1) 5
    Conservative (1) (2) (4) (2) (9)
    New Democratic (3) 1 1 1 3 1 4


Detailed analysis



















58
28
21

Liberal

PC

NDP















































Party
Votes
Seats


Liberal
1,862,907



38.65%



Increase 1.00%


58 / 107 (54%)




Progressive Conservative
1,506,267



31.25%



Decrease 4.20%


28 / 107 (26%)




New Democratic
1,144,576



23.75%



Increase 1.01%


21 / 107 (20%)




Green
233,269



4.84%



Increase 1.92%


0 / 107 (0%)




Libertarian
38,956



0.81%



Increase 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.





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.





























































































































































































































































































































Summary of the standings of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario
Party
Party leader

Candidates
Seats
Popular vote[7]

2011

Dissol.
2014
Change
#
%
Change


Liberal

Kathleen Wynne
107
53
48
58
+5
1,862,907
38.65%
+1.00%


Progressive Conservative

Tim Hudak
107
37
37
28
-9
1,506,267
31.25%
-4.20%


New Democratic

Andrea Horwath
107
17
21
21
+4
1,144,576
23.75%
+1.01%


Green

Mike Schreiner
107
0
0
0
-
233,269
4.84%
+1.92%


Libertarian

Allen Small
74
0
0
0
-
38,956
0.81%
+0.36%


Freedom

Paul McKeever
42
0
0
0
-
12,381
0.26%
+0.05%


Family Coalition
Eric Ames (interim)
6
0
0
0
-
4,288
0.09%
-0.13%


None of the Above

Greg Vezina
8
*
0
0
-
4,247
0.09%
-
 

Independents and no affiliation
14
0
0
0
-
3,854
0.08%
-


Communist

Elizabeth Rowley
11
0
0
0
-
2,290
0.05%
+0.02%

Canadians' Choice
Bahman Yazdanfar
4
0
0
0
-
1,293
0.03%
+0.027%

Vegan Environmental
Paul Figueiras
5
0
0
0
-
907
0.02%
+0.012%


People's Political Party

Kevin Clarke
5
0
0
0
-
894
0.02%
+0.012%


Northern Ontario Heritage
Edward Deibel
3
0
0
0
-
892
0.02%
=


Special Needs
Danish Ahmed
3
0
0
0
-
709
0.01%
-0.01%


Confederation of Regions

vacant
2
0
0
0
-
551
0.01%
=


Trillium
Bob Yaciuk
2
*
0
0
-
397
0.01%
-


Equal Parenting
Dennis Valenta
2
*
0
0
-
366
0.01%
-


Socialist

Michael Laxer
2
0
0
0
-
361
0.01%
=


Ontario Moderate Party
Yuri Duboisky
2
*
0
0
-
335
0.01%
-


Pauper

John Turmel
3
0
0
0
-
194
<0.01%
=
 
Declined Vote[8]
31,399
0.64%
+0.59%
 
Vacant
1

Total

616

107

107

107


4,851,333




Principal races















































Party candidates in 2nd place
Party in 1st place Party in 2nd place Total

Lib

PC

NDP


Liberal
43 15 58


Progressive Conservative
22 6 28


New Democratic
14 7 21
Total
36 50 21 107




























Principal races, according to 1st and 2nd-place results
Parties Seats

 Liberal

 Progressive Conservative
65

 Liberal

 New Democratic
29

 Progressive Conservative

 New Democratic
13
Total
107


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]
Constituency Rank of parties Margins Result
1st 2nd 3rd 1st vs 2nd 1st 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
Party
2011
Gain/(loss) due to
2014
scope="col" Resignation
scope="col" Byelection hold
scope="col" Byelection upset


Liberal
53 (8) 3 48


Progressive Conservative
37 (2) 1 1 37


New Democratic
17 4 21

Vacant
1 1
Total 107 (9) 4 5 107























































































































Changes in seats held (2011–2014)
Seat
Before
Change
Date
Member
Party
Reason
Date
Member
Party

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
Resignation
August 1, 2013

John Fraser

 Liberal

Scarborough—Guildwood
June 27, 2013[13]

Margarett Best

 Liberal
Resignation
August 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
Resignation
February 13, 2014[16]

Wayne Gates

 New Democratic

Thornhill
December 31, 2013[17]

Peter Shurman

 PC
Resignation
February 13, 2014

Gila Martow

 PC

Brampton—Springdale
March 25, 2014[18]

Linda Jeffrey

 Liberal
Resignation[a 6]



 Vacant




  1. ^ after being appointed chair of the Workplace Safety & Insurance Board


  2. ^ former Chair of the Management Board of Cabinet and Minister of Finance


  3. ^ also from the positions of Minister of Aboriginal Affairs and Minister of Energy


  4. ^ also from the positions of Minister of Finance and Minister of Government Services


  5. ^ also from her position as Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs


  6. ^ resigning from the positions of Chair of Cabinet and Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing, to run for Mayor of Brampton




Other developments



































































Date Event
October 6, 2011
Election held for members of the Ontario Legislature in the 40th Legislative Assembly of Ontario.
November 22, 2011 The 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, 2012 NDP 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, 2012 The budget bill is passed, after the NDP agrees to abstain, avoiding a summer election.[22]
October 15, 2012 Dalton 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, 2013 Wynne is sworn in as Premier, and a new cabinet is sworn in.[25]
February 20, 2013 Wynne resumes the 40th Legislative Assembly of Ontario with a Speech of the Throne.
May 1, 2014 Progressive Conservative leader Tim Hudak announces that his caucus will be voting against the Liberals' budget, proposed earlier that day.
May 2, 2014 NDP 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, 2014 The 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, 2014 A judicial recount has been requested in the riding of Thornhill.[29]
June 24, 2014 A 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.

























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































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.




















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Incumbent MPPs not running for re-election


Liberals




  • Rick Bartolucci, Sudbury[36]


  • Donna Cansfield, Etobicoke Centre[37]


  • John Gerretsen, Kingston and the Islands[38]


  • Phil McNeely, Ottawa—Orléans[39]


  • John Milloy, Kitchener Centre[40]


Progressive Conservative




  • Frank Klees, Newmarket—Aurora[41][42]


  • John O'Toole, Durham[43]



Candidates by region



East



Ottawa














































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian Other

Carleton—Mississippi Mills

Rosalyn Stevens


Jack MacLaren

John Hansen

Andrew West





Jack MacLaren

Nepean—Carleton

Jack Uppal


Lisa MacLeod

Ric Dagenais

Gordon Kubanek

Coreen Corcoran



Lisa MacLeod

Ottawa Centre


Yasir Naqvi

Rob Dekker

Jennifer McKenzie

Kevin O'Donnell

Bruce Faulkner

Larry Wasslen (Communist)

Yasir Naqvi

Ottawa—Orléans


Marie-France Lalonde

Andrew Lister

Prosper M'Bemba-Meka

Bob Bell

Gerald Bourdeau




Phil McNeely†

Ottawa South


John Fraser

Matt Young

Bronwyn Funiciello

Matt Lakatos-Hayward

Jean-Serge Brisson

Espoir Manirambona (Communist)

John Redins (Special Needs)



John Fraser

Ottawa—Vanier


Madeleine Meilleur

Martin Forget

Hervé Ngamby

David Bagler

Phillip Richard



Madeleine Meilleur

Ottawa West—Nepean


Bob Chiarelli


Randall Denley


Alex Cullen

Alex Hill

Matthew Brooks



Bob Chiarelli


Eastern Ontario














































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian Other

Glengarry—
Prescott—Russell


Grant Crack

Roxane Villeneuve Robertson

Isabelle Sabourin

Raymond St. Martin

Darcy Donnelly


Marc-Antoine Gagnier (Independent),

Carl Leduc (Freedom)



Grant Crack

Kingston and the Islands


Sophie Kiwala

Mark Bain

Mary Rita Holland

Robert Kiley



Jonathan Reid (Freedom)


John Gerretsen†

Lanark—Frontenac—
Lennox and Addington

Bill MacDonald


Randy Hillier

Dave Parkhill

Cam Mather





Randy Hillier

Leeds—Grenville

Christine Milks


Steve Clark

David Lundy

Steve Bowering

Harold Gabriel



Steve Clark

Prince Edward—Hastings

Georgina Thompson


Todd Smith

Merrill Stewart

Anita Payne

Lindsay Forbes



Todd Smith

Renfrew—Nipissing—
Pembroke

Rod Boileau


John Yakabuski

Brian Dougherty

Benjamin Wright




Chad Beckwith-Smith (Independent),

Murray Reid (Conf of Regions)



John Yakabuski

Stormont—Dundas—
South Glengarry

John Earle


Jim McDonell

Elaine MacDonald

Sharron Norman

Shawn McRae



Jim McDonell


Central Ontario


















































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian Other

Barrie


Ann Hoggarth


Rod Jackson

David Bradbury

Bonnie North

Darren Roskam



Rod Jackson

Bruce—Grey—Owen Sound

Ellen Anderson


Bill Walker

Karen Gventer

Jenny Parsons

Caleb Voskamp

Jamie Spence (Freedom)

Bill Walker

Dufferin—Caledon

Bobbie Daid


Sylvia Jones

Rehya Rebecca Yazbek

Karren Wallace

Daniel Kowalewski



Sylvia Jones

Durham


Granville Anderson

Mike Patrick

Derek Spence

Halyna Zalucky

Conner Toye




John O'Toole†

Haliburton—Kawartha Lakes—Brock


Rick Johnson


Laurie Scott


Don Abel

Arsalan Ahmad





Laurie Scott

Newmarket—Aurora


Chris Ballard

Jane Twinney

Angus Duff

Andrew Roblin


Jason Jenkins


Dorian Baxter (Cdns' Choice),

Bob Yaciuk (Trillium)




Frank Klees†

Northumberland—
Quinte West


Lou Rinaldi


Rob Milligan

Kira Mees

Gudrun Ludorf-Weaver





Rob Milligan

Peterborough


Jeff Leal

Scott Stewart

Sheila Wood

Gary Beamish




Andrea Gar Quiano (Socialist),

Wayne Matheson (Freedom),

Gerard Faux (Pauper),

Brian Martindale (Independent)



Jeff Leal

Simcoe—Grey

Lorne Kenney


Jim Wilson

David Matthews

Jesseca Dudun





Jim Wilson

Simcoe North

Fred Larsen


Garfield Dunlop

Doris Middleton

Peter Stubbins





Garfield Dunlop

York—Simcoe

Loralea Carruthers


Julia Munro

Laura Bowman

Peter Elgie

Craig Wallace



Julia Munro


905 Belt



Durham & York
















































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian Other

Ajax—Pickering


Joe Dickson

Todd McCarthy

Jermaine King

Adam Narraway

Kyle Stewart



Joe Dickson

Markham—Unionville


Michael Chan

Shan Thayaparan

Nadine Kormos Hawkins

Myles O'Brien


Allen Small



Michael Chan

Oak Ridges—Markham


Helena Jaczek

Farid Wassef

Miles Krauter

Emilia Melara

Karl Boelling

Gennady Vilensky (Trillium)

Helena Jaczek

Oshawa

Esrick Quintyn


Jerry Ouellette


Jennifer French

Becky Smit





Jerry Ouellette

Pickering—
Scarborough East


Tracy MacCharles

Kevin Gaudet

Eileen Higdon

Anthony Navarro

Scott Hoefig

Matt Oliver (Freedom)

Tracy MacCharles

Richmond Hill


Reza Moridi

Vic Gupta

Adam DeVita

Rachael Lave

Igor Bily

Yuri Duboisky (Moderate)

Reza Moridi

Thornhill

Sandra Yeung Racco


Gila Martow

Cindy Hackelberg

David Bergart

Gene Balfour

Erin Goodwin (Freedom)

Gila Martow

Vaughan


Steven Del Duca

Peter Meffe

Marco Coletta

Matthew Pankhurst

Paolo Fabrizio



Steven Del Duca

Whitby—Oshawa

Ajay Krishnan


Christine Elliott

Ryan Kelly

Stacey Leadbetter



Douglas Thom (Freedom)

Christine Elliott


Brampton, Mississauga & Oakville
















































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian Other

Bramalea—Gore—
Malton


Kuldip Kular

Harjit Jaswal


Jagmeet Singh

Pauline Thornham





Jagmeet Singh

Brampton—Springdale


Harinder Malhi

Pam Hundal

Gurpreet Dhillon

Laila Zarrabi Yan



Elizabeth Hill (Communist)

Vacant

Brampton West


Vic Dhillon

Randeep Sandhu

Gugni Gill Panaich

Sayyeda Ebrahim

Luis Chacin


Ted Harlson (Freedom),

Dan Sullivan (FamilyCoalition)



Vic Dhillon

Mississauga—
Brampton South


Amrit Mangat

Amarjeet Gill

Kevin Troake

Kathy Acheson

Richard Levesque


Robert Alilovic (Independent),

Kathleen Vezina (NOTA)



Amrit Mangat

Mississauga East—
Cooksville


Dipika Damerla

Zoran Churchin

Fayaz Karim

Linh Nguyen

Levko Iwanusiw

Dolly Catena (EPP)

Dipika Damerla

Mississauga—Erindale


Harinder Takhar

Jeff White

Michelle Bilek

Vivek Gupta

Chris Jewell


Nabila Kiyani (FamilyCoalition),

Greg Vezina (NOTA)



Harinder Takhar

Mississauga South


Charles Sousa

Effie Triantafilopoulos

Boris Rosolak

Lloyd Jones

James Judson

Andrew Weber (NOTA)

Charles Sousa

Mississauga—Streetsville


Bob Delaney

Nina Tangri

Anju Sikka

Scott Warner

Dave Walach

Alexander Vezina (NOTA)

Bob Delaney

Oakville


Kevin Flynn

Larry Scott

Che Marville

Andrew Chlobowski

David Clement

Silvio Ursomarzo (Freedom)

Kevin Flynn


Toronto



Scarborough
































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green Other

Scarborough—Agincourt


Soo Wong

Liang Chen

Alex Wilson

Pauline Thompson


Kevin Clarke (People's)

Soo Wong

Scarborough Centre


Brad Duguid

David Ramalho

Carol Baker

Edward Yaghledjian



Brad Duguid

Scarborough—Guildwood


Mitzie Hunter

Ken Kirupa

Shuja Syed

Jeffrey Bustard


Richard Kerr (Libertarian),

Khalid Mokhtarzada (Freedom),

John Sawdon (Cdns' Choice)



Mitzie Hunter

Scarborough—Rouge River


Bas Balkissoon


Raymond Cho


Neethan Shan

George Singh

Amir Khan (NOTA)

Bas Balkissoon

Scarborough Southwest


Lorenzo Berardinetti

Nita Kang

Jessie Macaulay

David Del Grande


Tyler Rose (Libertarian),

Jean-Baptiste Foaleng (Independent)



Lorenzo Berardinetti


North York and North Toronto












































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Freedom Other

Don Valley East


Michael Coteau

Angela Kennedy

Akil Sadikali

Christopher McLeod

Wayne Simmons



Michael Coteau

Don Valley West


Kathleen Wynne

David Porter

Khalid Ahmed

Louis Fliss

Tracy Curley


Dimitrios Kabitsis (Communist),

Patrick Boyd (Libertarian),

Brock Burrows (Independent),

Rosemary Waigh (Vegan Environ.)



Kathleen Wynne

Eglinton—Lawrence


Michael Colle

Robin Martin

Thomas Gallezot

Lucas McCann

Michael Bone

Erwin Sniedzins (Independent)

Michael Colle

Willowdale


David Zimmer

Michael Ceci

Alexander Brown

Teresa Pun





David Zimmer

York Centre


Monte Kwinter

Avi Yufest

John Fagan

Josh Borenstein

Laurence Cherniak



Monte Kwinter


Toronto & East York











































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian   Freedom Other

Beaches—East York


Arthur Potts

Nicolas Johnson


Michael Prue

Debra Scott

Alex Lindsay

Naomi Poley-Fisher



Michael Prue

Davenport


Cristina Martins

Lan Daniel


Jonah Schein

Daniel Stein

Nunzio Venuto

Franz Cauchi


Mariam Ahmad (Communist),

Troy Young (People's)



Jonah Schein

St. Paul's


Eric Hoskins

Justine Deluce

Luke Savage

Josh Rachlis

John Kittredge

Mike Rita



Eric Hoskins

Toronto Centre


Glen Murray

Martin Abell

Kate Sellar

Mark Daye

Judi Falardeau

Chris 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 Newman

Naomi Solomon


Peter Tabuns

Rachel Power

Thomas Armstrong

Tristan 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 Grant

Andrew Echevarria




Paul Figueiras (Vegan Environ.),

Dan King (Special Needs)



Rosario Marchese


Etobicoke & York











































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian   Freedom Other

Etobicoke Centre


Yvan Baker

Pina Martino

Chris Jones

George Morrison

Alexander Bussmann

Andrew Kuess


John Martins (People's),

Felicia Trigiani (Vegan Environ.)




Donna Cansfield†

Etobicoke—Lakeshore


Peter Milczyn


Doug Holyday

P. C. Choo

Angela Salewsky

Mark Wrzesniewski

Jeff Merklinger


Natalie Lochwin (Socialist),

Ian Lytvyn (Moderate)



Doug Holyday

Etobicoke North


Shafiq Qaadri

Tony Milone

Nigel Barriffe

Kenny Robertson

Allan deRoo

James McConnell



Shafiq Qaadri

Parkdale—High Park

Nancy Leblanc

Jamie Ellerton


Cheri DiNovo

Tim Rudkins

Redmond Weissenberger

Melanie Motz

Matthew Vezina (NOTA)

Cheri DiNovo

York South—Weston


Laura Albanese

Andrew Ffrench


Paul Ferreira

Jessica Higgins



Eric Compton

Abi Issa (Independent)

Laura Albanese

York West


Mario Sergio

Karlene Nation


Tom Rakocevic

Keith Jarrett



Kayla Baptiste

Wally Schwauss (Independent)

Mario Sergio


Hamilton, Burlington & Niagara

































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian Other

Ancaster—Dundas—
Flamborough—Westdale


Ted McMeekin

Donna Skelly

Alex Johnstone

Raymond Dartsch

Glenn Langton

Barry Spruce (Freedom)

Ted McMeekin

Burlington


Eleanor McMahon


Jane McKenna

Jan Mowbray

Meredith Cross

Charles Zach

Andrew Brannan (Freedom)

Jane McKenna

Halton


Indira Naidoo-Harris


Ted Chudleigh

Nik Spohr

Susan Farrant

Kal Ghory

Gerry Marsh (FamilyCoalition)

Ted Chudleigh

Hamilton Centre

Donna Tiqui-Shebib

John Vail


Andrea Horwath

Peter Ormond




Bob Mann (Communist),

Peter Melanson (Freedom)



Andrea Horwath

Hamilton East—
Stoney Creek

Ivan Luksic

David Brown


Paul Miller

Greg Zink

Mark Burnison

Britney Johnston (Freedom)

Paul Miller

Hamilton Mountain

Javid Mirza

Albert Marshall


Monique Taylor

Greg Lenko

Hans Wienhold

Brian Goodwin (Freedom)

Monique Taylor

Niagara Falls

Lionel Tupman


Bart Maves


Wayne Gates

Clarke Bitter

Ralph Panucci

John Beam (NOTA)

Wayne Gates

Niagara West—Glanbrook

David Mossey


Tim Hudak

Brian McCormack

Basia Krzyzanowski

Stefanos Karatopis

Geoff Peacock (Freedom)

Tim Hudak

St. Catharines


Jim Bradley

Mat Siscoe

Jennie Stevens

Karen Fraser

Nicholas Dushko


Saleh Waziruddin (Communist),

Dave Unrau (Freedom)



Jim Bradley

Welland

Benoit Mercier

Frank Campion


Cindy Forster

Donna Cridland

Andrea Murik



Cindy Forster


Midwestern Ontario


















































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian Other

Brant


Dave Levac


Phil Gillies

Alex Felsky

Ken Burns

Rob Ferguson


Brittni Mitchell (Freedom),
John Turmel (Pauper)



Dave Levac

Cambridge


Kathryn McGarry


Rob Leone

Bobbi Stewart

Temara Brown

Allan Dettweiler



Rob Leone

Guelph


Liz Sandals

Anthony MacDonald


James Gordon


Mike Schreiner

Blair Smythe

Juanita Burnett (Communist)

Liz Sandals

Haldimand—Norfolk

Karen Robinson


Toby Barrett

Ian Nichols

Anne Faulkner

Brad Mottashed



Toby Barrett

Huron—Bruce

Colleen Schenk


Lisa Thompson

Jan Johnstone

Adam Werstine

Max Maister


Dennis Valenta (EPP),
Andrew Zettel (FamilyCoalition)



Lisa Thompson

Kitchener Centre


Daiene Vernile


Wayne Wettlaufer

Margaret Johnston

Ronnie Smith

Patrick Bernier




John Milloy†

Kitchener—Conestoga

Wayne Wright


Michael Harris

James Villeneuve

David Weber

David Schumm



Michael Harris

Kitchener—Waterloo

Jamie Burton

Tracey Weiler


Catherine Fife

Stacey Danckert

James Schulz



Catherine Fife

Oxford

Dan Moulton


Ernie Hardeman

Bryan Smith

Mike Farlow

Devin Wright

Tim Hodges (Freedom)

Ernie Hardeman

Perth—Wellington

Stewart Skinner


Randy Pettapiece

Romayne Smith Fullerton

Chris Desjardins

Scott Marshall


Matthew Murphy (Independent),

Irma DeVries (FamilyCoalition),

Robby Smink (Freedom)



Randy Pettapiece

Wellington—Halton Hills

Dan Zister


Ted Arnott

Michael Carlucci

Dave Rodgers

Jason Cousineau

Mitch Sproule (Freedom)

Ted Arnott


Southwestern Ontario

































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian Other

Chatham-Kent—Essex

Terry Johnson


Rick Nicholls

Dan Gelinas

Ken Bell

Douglas McLarty



Rick Nicholls

Elgin—Middlesex—London

Serge Lavoie


Jeff Yurek

Kathy Cornish

John Fisher



Clare Maloney (Freedom)

Jeff Yurek

Essex

Crystal Meloche

Ray Cecile


Taras Natyshak

Mark Vercouteren





Taras Natyshak

Lambton—Kent—Middlesex

Mike Radan


Monte McNaughton

Joe Hill

James Armstrong

Matt Willson


Dave Durnin (Freedom),

Bob Lewis (NOTA),

Marinus Vander Vloet (FamilyCoalition)



Monte McNaughton

London—Fanshawe

Marcel Marcellin

Chris Robson


Teresa Armstrong

William Sorrell

Tim Harnick


Paul McKeever (Freedom),

Ali Aref Hamadi (Independent)



Teresa Armstrong

London North Centre


Deb Matthews

Nancy Branscombe

Judy Bryant

Kevin Labonte




Dave McKee (Communist),
Salim Mansur (Freedom),

Michael Spottiswood (Pauper)



Deb Matthews

London West

Nick Steinburg

Jeff Bennett


Peggy Sattler

Keith McAlister



Al Gretzky (Freedom)

Peggy Sattler

Sarnia—Lambton

Anne Marie Gillis


Bob Bailey

Brian White

Kevin Shaw

Andrew Falby



Bob Bailey

Windsor—Tecumseh

Jason Dupuis

Brandon Wright


Percy Hatfield

Adam Wright

Timothy Marshall



Percy Hatfield

Windsor West


Teresa Piruzza

Henry Lau


Lisa Gretzky

Chad Durocher



Helmi Charif (Independent)

Teresa Piruzza


Northern Ontario


















































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  Liberal   PC   NDP   Green   Libertarian Other

Algoma—Manitoulin

Craig Hughson

Jib Turner


Michael Mantha

Alexandra Zalucky

Richard Hadidian



Michael Mantha

Kenora—Rainy River

Anthony Leek

Randy Nickle


Sarah Campbell

Tim McKillop





Sarah Campbell

Nickel Belt

James Tregonning

Marck Blay


France Gélinas

Heather Dahlstrom





France Gélinas

Nipissing

Catherine Whiting


Vic Fedeli

Henri Giroux

Nicole Peltier

Derek Elliott

Patrick Clement (Independent)

Vic Fedeli

Parry Sound—Muskoka


Dan Waters


Norm Miller

Clyde Mobbley

Matt Richter



Andy Stivrins (Freedom)

Norm Miller

Sault Ste. Marie


David Orazietti

Rod Fremlin


Celia Ross

Kara Flannigan

Austin Williams



David Orazietti

Sudbury

Andrew Olivier

Paula Peroni


Joe Cimino

Casey Lalonde

Steve Wilson

J. David Popescu (Independent)


Rick Bartolucci†

Thunder Bay—Atikokan


Bill Mauro

Harold Wilson

Mary Kozorys

John Northey

Joe Talarico


Ed Deibel (N.Ont. Heritage)

Bill Mauro

Thunder Bay—Superior North


Michael Gravelle

Derek Parks

Andrew Foulds

Joseph LeBlanc

Tamara Johnson

Paul Sloan (N.Ont. Heritage)

Michael Gravelle

Timiskaming—Cochrane

Sébastien Goyer

Peter Politis


John Vanthof

Cody Fraser



Gino Chitaroni (N.Ont. Heritage)

John Vanthof

Timmins—James Bay

Sylvie Fontaine


Steve Black


Gilles Bisson

Bozena Hrycyna



Fauzia 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




  • Toronto Star[59]


  • Now[60]


  • Torontoist[61]


Progressive Conservative




  • Burlington Post ,[62]The Flamborough Review ,[63]Oakville Beaver[64] (Same editorial printed in several papers)


  • The Globe and Mail[65](endorsing a minority government)


  • National Post[66]


  • Ottawa Citizen[67]


  • Toronto Sun ,[68]Ottawa Sun[69](Identical editorial printed in multiple cities)


  • Windsor Star[70]


New Democratic Party



  • Sudbury Star [71](endorsing a minority government)

Explicitly not endorsing any party




  • Hamilton Spectator[72]


  • The Kitchener-Waterloo Record[73]



Public figure endorsements


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




  • Deputy Mayor of Toronto, and acting mayor, Norm Kelly endorsed Liberal leader Kathleen Wynne.[74]


  • Mayor of Mississauga, Hazel McCallion endorsed Liberal leader Kathleen Wynne.[75]

  • Mayor of Kitchener, Carl Zehr endorsed Liberal leader Kathleen Wynne.[76]



See also


  • Independent candidates, 2014 Ontario provincial election


References





  1. ^ "STATISTICAL SUMMARY" (PDF). Elections Ontario. June 13, 2014. Retrieved April 28, 2018..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "Ontario election 2014: Liberals return to power with majority". CBC News. June 12, 2014. Retrieved June 12, 2014.


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  5. ^ ab "Ontario Election Seemingly On Way As NDP Won't Support Budget". Huffington Post. May 2, 2014. Retrieved May 2, 2014.


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  27. ^ Once again, Kathleen Wynne settles the debate


  28. ^ Tim Hudak to step down as PC leader


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  45. ^ "How the Ontario Tories screwed up the 'Million Jobs Plan'". theglobeandmail.com. The Globe and Mail. 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2014-05-28.


  46. ^ "Tim Hudak defends math used in PCs' million jobs plan". cbc.ca. CBC. 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2014-05-19.


  47. ^ "2014 Ontario Liberal Party Platform". ontarioliberalplan.ca. Ontario Liberal Party. 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2014-05-19.


  48. ^ "2014 Ontario New Democratic Party Platform". ontarioliberalplan.ca. Ontario New Democratic Party. 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2014-05-19.


  49. ^ "2014 Ontario Green Party Platform" (PDF). gpo.ca. Ontario Green Party. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2014-05-19.


  50. ^ "2014 Libertarian Platform – Jobs: Secure & Rewarding". Ontario Libertarian Party. Archived from the original on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2014-06-10.


  51. ^ "2014 Libertarian Platform – Budget: Lower & Simplified". Ontario Libertarian Party. Archived from the original on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2014-06-10.


  52. ^ "2014 Libertarian Platform – Energy: Cheaper & Abundant". Ontario Libertarian Party. Archived from the original on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2014-06-10.


  53. ^ "2014 Ontario Communist Party Platform". communistpartyontario.ca. Communist Party of Canada (Ontario). 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2014-05-19.


  54. ^ Toronto gridlock may cost economy up to $11B, C.D. Howe says. CBC. 2013-07-13.


  55. ^ Gridlock is costing Toronto up to $11 billion yearly—here’s how to fix it. Canadian Business. 2013-07-11.


  56. ^ ab Ontario parties' transit plans reveal politics and paralysis. CBC. 2014-05-28


  57. ^ Majority gives Liberals freer hand with public transit. The Globe and Mail. 2014-06-13.


  58. ^ Tim Hudak vows to scrap light rail lines, cancel GO electrification. CBC. 2014-05-16


  59. ^ "Kathleen Wynne has earned a fresh mandate in Ontario: Editorial". Toronto Star. 2014-06-06. Archived from the original on 2014-06-08. Retrieved 2014-06-06.


  60. ^ "The best pro-social outcome June 12 is a Wynne gov". Now. 2014-06-05. Archived from the original on 2014-06-08. Retrieved 2014-06-08.


  61. ^ "In this provincial election: (sigh) The Liberals – Much to our chagrin, the only endorsement we can make.". Torontoist. 2014-06-09. Retrieved 2014-06-10.


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  63. ^ "It's time for a change". Flamborough Review, a division of Metroland Media Group. 2014-06-05. Archived from the original on 2014-07-15. Retrieved 2014-06-10.


  64. ^ "EDITORIAL: It's time for a change". Oakville Beaver, a division of Metroland Media Group. 2014-06-03. Archived from the original on 2014-06-08. Retrieved 2014-06-05.


  65. ^ "Ontario election, part 4: For a Conservative minority". The Globe and Mail. 2014-06-06. Archived from the original on 2014-06-08. Retrieved 2014-06-06.


  66. ^ "National Post editorial board: A Conservative government for Ontario". National Post. 2014-06-07. Archived from the original on 2014-06-07. Retrieved 2014-06-07.


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  68. ^ "Editorial: We endorse Tim Hudak, for Ontario". Toronto Sun a member of Canoe Sun Media. 2014-06-08. Retrieved 2014-06-08.


  69. ^ "Editorial: We endorse Tim Hudak, for Ontario". Ottawa Sun a member of Canoe Sun Media. 2014-06-08. Retrieved 2014-06-10.


  70. ^ "The Star's View: Hudak has the right plan to restore Ontario's economic health". Windsor Star. 2014-06-04. Archived from the original on 2014-06-08. Retrieved 2014-06-04.


  71. ^ "The NDP - for now". Sudbury Star. 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2014-06-11.


  72. ^ "The Spectator's View: Picking the least unappealing option". Hamilton Spectator, June 11, 2014


  73. ^ "Stark choices for Ontario voters". The Kitchener-Waterloo Record, a division of Metroland Media Group. 2014-06-07. Retrieved 2014-06-09.


  74. ^ Don Peat (2014-06-05). "Deputy Mayor Norm Kelly endorses Wynne". Toronto Sun. Retrieved 2014-06-10.


  75. ^ Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion endorses Kathleen Wynne. CBC News. 2014-05-14.


  76. ^ "Kitchener Mayor Carl Zehr endorses Kathleen Wynne". CBC. 2014-06-09. Retrieved 2014-06-11.




External links






  • Elections Ontario









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