From Ford's 'Captain Canada' jersey to Crombie's all-red suit, party leaders have relied on visual cues to get their message across in this sped-up campaign.
Doug Ford has positioned himself as an ally of workers but labour advocates say his work legislation has been weak on enforcement, resulting in little change in the workplace
Ontario's top bureaucrat is admonishing PC Leader Doug Ford and his staff for allegedly trying to use his Washington D.C. trip last week to the party's advantage in the election campaign.Ford went to Washington on a two-day anti-tariff push,
Progressive Conservative Leader Doug Ford offered little clarity Sunday on how he would pay for billions of dollars in promises if re-elected, as looming tariffs from the U.S. continue to keep economic stability at the forefront of the election campaign.
Taking questions from reporters for the first time in more than a week, the PC Leader said he would remove unnecessary red tape to bolster the province’s economy if re-elected. Ontario’s other major parties have also committed to improving interprovincial trade by removing barriers.
Ontario residents report getting text messages about provincial election. Ontario PC party confirms it sends text messages but won’t confirm how it accesses Ontario residents’ phone numbers.
From Doug Ford's hot mic moment to limiting journalists' questions, the Progressive Conservatives have hit a rocky stretch in their re-election campaign.
Underscoring the accelerating march to the right of Canada’s union bureaucracies, Unifor Local 1285—the bargaining agent for some 8,000 auto assembly, auto parts, food processing and other workers in Brampton,
Three party leaders saw an opportunity during the debate held specifically to discuss northern issues to press Ford on not meeting his own targets to build housing across the province
Watch: National Post's Chris Selley and National Post contributor Anthony Furey discuss the latest in the 2025 Ontario election
Ontario’s Doug Ford won an overwhelming majority government on the basis of the ballots of less than 18 per cent of the province’s eligible voters. Are voters still disengaged?
Doug Ford and his Ontario PC Party is campaigning off the one-time $200 cheque that his government is sending to every Ontarian, a $3 billion spend. Marit Stiles of the NDP is promising an ...
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