Ontario PC Party Headlines

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Ontario welfare recipients jump in July (a headline we should expect to see under Dalton McGuinty)

BY ,QUEEN'S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

TORONTO - More than 9,000 Ontarians joined the welfare rolls in July — the largest single-month increase in at least two years.

Sandy Mangat, a spokesman for the ministry of community and social services, said ministry officials know of no specific reason for the bump in cases.

“We think it’s a blip at this point,” Mangat said Tuesday. “We’re going to continue to monitor in the next couple of months and see what happens.”

The July results, the most recent Ontario Works figures available, show that 482,748 people were receiving social assistance that month.

That number is a 1.9% increase over the previous month, when 473,702 Ontarians were on assistance.

The caseloads were higher in all three categories of singles, couples and sole-support families.

The largest-percentage increase was among singles, with 3,763 people added to the list.

There were an additional 3,831 members of sole-support families as well.

Statistics Canada unemployment numbers may shed some light on the sudden increase in welfare cases, revealing that the province lost 22,000 jobs in July.

The unemployment rate actually fell slightly despite the job numbers because so many people dropped out of the labour force, StatsCan says.

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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Joe Ganetakos opens Parkdale-High Park Campaign Office

TORONTO — On Wednesday August 31st at 7PM, Parkdale-High Park Ontario PC candidate Joe Ganetakos will open his campaign/community office. The office is located at 1727 Bloor Street West, just three doors east of Keele on the south side of Bloor, a few steps away from the Keele subway station.

Since his nomination in April, Ganetakos has knocked on more than 7,000 doors as he brings the Ontario PC campaign of change and much needed relief for Parkdale-High Park families after eight years of Liberal tax hikes, expensive energy experiments, wasteful spending and secret deals.

To contact the campaign:

Phone: 416-604-8484

URL: http://votejoe2011.ca/home/

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Toronto Star: Ontario election fight gets dirty online












The Tories believe the Liberals, or their supporters, started the website www.thetruthabouttim.com, above, after they launched www.truthabouttimhudak.com.
ImageTanya TalagaQueen's Park Bureau


It may be all smiles for the cameras as Ontario political leaders fight their way toward the Oct. 6 election, but online the fight is nasty.
On Wednesday, the NDP launched a new website to counter social media attacks and rumours they claim are being spread by other parties.
The site, www.stopthesmears.ca, aims to dispel myths such as the NDP have a fleet of 20 orange SUVs on standby for the election and that leader Andrea Horwath is really the incarnation of Mike Harris.
People are tired of whisper campaigns and negative ads, said NDP MPP Cheri DiNovo (Parkdale-High Park). She claims the NDP website will “tackle the smears” and get the facts out.
Party leaders have vowed not to wage a dirty campaign before the Oct. 6 election.
But in the social media universe, the election is running a different course. Fake people espousing partisan views have proliferated on Twitter, there are YouTube videos making fun of certain party leaders, and websites have been created by the political parties to try to make sense of it all.
The profile of @GrandmaHudak presents itself with a picture of an elderly lady in a black bathing suit getting out of a swimming pool. GrandmaHudak states she likes to swim on hot days, dry her clothes on a line and that her opinions are her own and “not those concocted by my grandson’s idiot spin doctors”.
Another fake is @FakeDonnaSkelly, a spoof on PC Ancaster-Dundas-Flamborough-Westdale candidate and former TV news anchor Donna Skelly. A recent tweet from this account shows how the gloves are off: “Thinking about pulling an @andreahorwath and photoshopping 20 pounds off my campaign photo.”
The Tories started www.truthabouttimhudak.com and within 24 hours they believe the Liberals, or their supporters, started up the parallel site www.thetruthabouttim.com. The later site does not advertise who created it but it notes Hudak would “cut $3 billion out of health care” and that he wants to scrap the Liberals’ Green Energy Act.
The Liberals deny they are behind the Hudak site. But they do list www.recklessrookie.com,www.Hazardoushudak.com and www.dirtyndp.ca as theirs.
“We stay focused on our positive plan to keep Ontario moving forward and don’t get distracted by the games of others,” said Christine McMillan, the Ontario Liberal Party’s vice-president of communications.
McMillan says they’ll continue to talk about their “positive plan to keep moving Ontario forward and the risky schemes of the PCs, both at the door and in our communities as well as on websites and in social media.”
However, the social media noise distracts journalists from the real news and it can confuse voters, said Greg Elmer, a Ryerson University media professor.
At its worst, social media in campaigns is a “distraction factory” trying to divert attention from positive policy announcements coming from political opponents, said Elmer.
This won’t be the first time political parties have run at least two campaigns.
There is relatively little mud-slinging on the campaign bus tour as the leaders make shiny happy proposals, he said.
The flip side to that are the online anonymous dirty campaigns. Elmer predicts as the vote gets closer, there will be a proliferation of videos, blog posts, sound files and tweets.
“Often what happens is that we are all focused on what these objects mean — is that really the person we see in the image, is that really the voice of the premier we hear in that crackling, web-based audio recording? What is often displaced is who is circulating these,” he said