Progressive Conservative Party wins third consecutive majority in vote dominated by trade tensions.
Canada’s Ontario province has re-elected Premier Doug Ford’s ruling conservatives in an election heavily focused on trade tensions stoked by United States President Donald Trump.
Ford and his Progressive Conservative Party (PC Party) cruised to their third consecutive legislative majority on Thursday after seeking the “largest mandate in Ontario history” to protect the economy of Canada’s most populous province from Trump’s tariffs.
The PC Party had won at least 74 seats in the 124-member Legislative Assembly of Ontario and was leading in seven other districts as of Thursday night, according to a tally by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
“We’re going to make sure we will protect the people of Ontario and protect their families, their jobs and businesses,” Ford, 60, told CTV News after his win.
“I’ll fight tooth and nail against Donald Trump.”
Ford, who often sported a “Canada is Not for Sale” hat and styled himself as Captain Canada throughout his election campaign, called the vote more than a year early, arguing that he should have a stronger mandate to navigate years of potential economic chaos under Trump.
“This is gonna be a battle for the next four years,” Ford said last month as he called the snap election. “I want to make sure I have a strong mandate to outlast President Trump.”
During his campaign, Ford twice travelled to Washington, DC, and made numerous appearances on US networks such as Fox News and CNN to lobby against the tariffs and position himself as a spokesman for Canada as a whole.
Earlier this week, he said he would impose a tariff on electricity sent from the province to the US if Trump went ahead with his threatened trade measures.
Ontario, which surrounds Toronto and is home to about 40 percent of Canada’s population of some 40 million people, is highly dependent on trade with the US.
More than 80 percent of Ontario’s exports went to the US in 2023, making it the province most reliant on American consumers after New Brunswick and Alberta, according to an analysis by Scotiabank.
Trump, who had agreed to a 30-day pause on his threatened tariffs on Canada and Mexico pending negotiations on border security, said on Thursday that the 25-percent levies would go into effect on March 4.
Trump, who has also suggested that the US could absorb Canada as its 51st state, said on Truth Social that he had made his decision as illicit drugs such as fentanyl were continuing to cross the border at “unacceptable levels”.