– Vows To “Rebuild A Proud, Strong, Confident Ontario
A Foreword by Doug Draper
This February 10, 11 and 12, Niagara, Ontario area MPP Tim Hudak and his provincial Conservatives gathered in Niagara Falls for, among other things, a review of his leadership of the party.
The review comes four months after a provincial election that had his part and the NDP gaining enough seats to reduce the government Liberals to a minority that could be brought down any time during the next three and a half years should both the Tories and NDP agree that any furtherance of the Liberals in power is, in their view, is out of the question. It also comes after an election that, much to the disappointment of many provincial Tories, Hudak let victory slip out of the party’s hands after he had a convince lead in the polls in the months leading up to it.
Yet it appears that Hudak will have little problem surviving a review at this February weekend’s annual general meeting for the party. He’ll be given another chance to take on a Liberal government that many Ontarians would possibly give the boots to with their ballots if they could see one of or both the Conservatives and NDP looking and sounding like a promising alternative.
One of the key questions this observer of politics shares with many other political pundits out there is will Hudak and his party begin to focus more on developing and offering us a platform and vision for the province’s future, and focus less on simply slamming what they (and especially the leader) brand as “the McGuinty Liberals.” There has been so much of the party’s time and energy spent on vilifying McGuinty, one cannot help but wonder what Hudak and company would do if the Liberals suddenly decided to switch horses.
Will this annual gathering of the party mark the beginning of a new focus for Tim Hudak as leader – one that gives us a clearer idea of the future he would shape for Ontario if he became premier? We shall see.
Niagara At Large is posting below the media release circulated this February 11 on Hudak’s address to the Tory assembly, followed by the complete text of the address.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
February 11, 2012
TIM HUDAK: A PARTY ON THE RISE
“This is our voice. It’s a voice of hope, for those who’ve lost hope. A voice of optimism for those who could use some right now. A voice that says it’s time for conservatives to lead again!”
– Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak, Niagara Falls, February 11, 2012
NIAGARA FALLS – Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak vowed today that he and his Party would offer a clear, conservative vision for restoring our province’s economy and stature in Canada.
“We have found our voice,” Hudak said, addressing more than 1,600 delegates to the Party’s 2012 Annual General Meeting. “It’s a strong, positive voice that advances conservative ideas, values and principles and projects optimism for a better future for our province.
“We are today the Party of ideas for jobs and our economy.”
The task ahead isn’t just about defeating the Liberals in the next election, Hudak stressed. “It’s about the work that begins the very next day – to turn our province around on behalf of the nearly 600,000 men and women who now don’t have a job in Dalton McGuinty’s Ontario.
“We’ll start by getting the big things right. We’ll treat taxpayer dollars with respect. We’ll build an economy driven by innovation and hard work, not handouts. And we’ll look to business planners, not central planners.”
Ontarians know in their hearts that there’s a way out of Dalton McGuinty’s mess, Hudak said: “They reject the defeatist notion that our best days are behind us, and that the only challenge now is how best to manage our fall from grace.”
Last October 6th, Ontarians signalled that “those PCs may be onto something – but they’ve got more work to do,” Hudak said. “So they sent us reinforcements: Twelve more seats and 16 new MPPs, who represent renewal and symbolize momentum.
“Our trajectory is upward and we’re on the right path. Ours is a Party on the rise, and the Liberals are a Party in decline.”
With the right climate for private sector job creation, and a smaller, smarter government, Ontario can and will bestride Confederation again, Hudak said. “And our efforts will be framed by a conservative campaign that we can all be proud of, and a platform that says what it means.
“We are an Ontario PC Party for the 21st century,” Hudak concluded, “with a proud and unapologetic voice and a vision for a renewed Ontario that will lead Canada – and the world.”
Remarks by Tim Hudak, MPP
Ontario PC Leader
2012 Ontario PC Annual General Meeting
February 11, 2012
“Thank you, Christine. Thank you for everything you’ve done for me, and our Caucus.
Thanks for a fantastic turnout today by members of Prime Minister Harper’s team from Ottawa. You are here in force, and I am grateful.
Thank you, Ken Zeise. For everything you’ve done for our great Party.
Richard Ciano… Kevin Gaudet… John Snobelen… Thanks to each of you for creating such excitement this weekend, with the first contested Party presidency since 1994. And the first three-way contest since the Second World War. Premiers Eves, Harris and Davis… Former Leaders Andy Brandt, Bob Runciman and John Tory. You know, when you are tested… When things don’t go your way…You find out who really stands by you.
So thanks to all of you for being here. Friends and colleagues.
I want to talk to you this afternoon about two things on the minds of our great Party as we convene this weekend.
The first is Ontario – as it exists today. The second is Ontario – as we know it can be.
On October 6, 2011, Ontarians arrived at a fork in the road toward these two places. And they paused to deliver a message: One to Dalton McGuinty, and one to us. To me.

Tim Hudak, holding daughter Miller, at a stop during last October's provincial election. Photo by Doug Draper
The message to Dalton McGuinty was this: “It’s time to stop the spending and cut out the waste.” “It’s time to focus on jobs, and our economy.” “No more excuses.” “And we’re putting you on a short leash to see that you get on with it.”
Did he get that message? No he didn’t.
In every way, and every day, since October 6th, it’s been clear that Dalton McGuinty simply ignored what Ontarians tried to tell him.
And what’s happened?
Spending has gone up. By two and-a-half billion dollars. Every hour of every day, Dalton McGuinty now spends one point eight million dollars more than he takes in, in revenue. While family incomes stagnate. The deficit has gone up – not down. While we’ve hemorraged even more jobs.
The credit agencies are breathing down our necks.
Ontarians have a right to be exhausted with this man, and with this government.
By a deadening, defeatist consensus that our best days are behind us. And that the only big challenge now is how best to manage our fall from grace. But as much as Dalton McGuinty wants to blame Greece, and Wall Street and tsunamis and now Ottawa, for his own mess…
The facts tell a different story. That by every available measure our province lands near the bottom of the pack compared to most others when it comes to the things people really care about. Things like job security, paying the bills, and knowing – hoping – that that their tax dollars are going toward things they actually need.
No, my friends, our troubles are home-grown.
So here we are. This is Ontario as it exists today, in 2012, under Dalton McGuinty.
Now, what was the message from the people of Ontario to our PC Party, the night of October 6th?
“You didn’t give us an alternative.”
“You didn’t give us enough change.”
“You didn’t give us a choice.”
It’s true. People did not see a clear, positive, conservative alternative.
A path to a brighter tomorrow.Toward a place that once again draws resilient people from around the planet, for a new start and a better future. A place where hard-working people invent, create, mine, forge, harvest, build and sell first-class products and services to the world. Where hard work and middle-class aspirations are rewarded with growing paycheques, and thriving families.
My own Slovak immigrant grandparents found such a place – and called it the envy of the world. And, of course, it once was.
It’s Ontario. It can be that place again. But it all depends on the next steps that you, and I, take today. Starting here. Starting now.
You see, I believe Ontarians know in their hearts that there’s a way out of this hole.
Step One: Stop digging But more than that – they need someone to reach down, and help them back up.
Someone who sees the sunlight up above – not more darkness down below.
Someone who can restore their optimism, and earn their trust.
I, as your Leader, did not give sufficient voice to a bold, positive, conservative
alternative – to do just that.
A conservatism founded on a powerful idea: that government should serve the people, and not the other way around.
Now, it takes work to safeguard this essential conservative principle in public life today. From the left, from the commentators, from the arrogance of those who think they’re smarter than the rest of us.
Winning the contest against these proponents of mediocrity is, first and foremost, about finding your voice.
A voice of your own. One that gives meaning to these ideas, and that in turn gives voice to the hopes and aspirations of others who share them.
I’ve done a lot of thinking about this, in the months since October 6th.
About the things you said to me. About things I needed to hear.
And I’m pleased to report that there’s no shortage of candour and honesty among our Ontario PC Party ranks…
Chiefly, I’ve heard those thoughts expressed from talking to hundreds of riding
executive members, candidates and campaign managers in every corner of our
province.
Folks who are here, in this room, today.
Most of it supportive and encouraging. Some of it, a little tough to hear. All of it welcome. Necessary to know. And valuable. For that I thank you all. For your commitment to our common conservative cause. Here are the key things you said to me. And all of them hit the nail on the head.
First, I’ve heard a lot about whether we spent too much time on certain – perhaps
secondary – issues during the last election.That our central campaign should have done a better job working with local campaigns. We could have been more courteous. More professional.That we could have enabled more flexibility at the riding level.That our whole effort could have been better attuned to changing conditions on the ground.
You told me a lot about our platform. That it was a critique of the way things are – not a vision for the way things could be. But there’s one thing that came up repeatedly in all the conversations I’ve had since
October 6th:
“Tim, we know the real you. And the real you didn’t come through.”
“Tim, we didn’t hear your true voice.”
And you were right.
Now, it’s easy to say that there’s no real school for leaders running in their first
campaigns: There’s no course you can take, or book you can read.
In time, you can find your footing… But that’s no guarantee you’re going to find your voice. Put another way, we ran a campaign designed not to lose – as opposed to running flat out to win.
We are not going to do that again. This time, we’re playing to win.
And here’s how we’re going to do it. With a voice.
A strong voice for advancing conservative ideas, values and principles.
One that projects optimism for a better future. For a government that looks to business planners, not central planners. For an economy driven by innovation and hard work – not handouts.
That treats energy policy as an economic fundamental – not a plaything for social
engineers. That treats every taxpayer dollar with the respect it deserves.
That gets the big things right.
No more tinkering at the margins – Mister McGuinty!
With things like ill-conceived green energy schemes and subsidized electric cars that
only the rich can afford in the first place.
I say to you that we Ontarians know in our guts that a better future really is possible.
All that’s missing – is for someone to lead the charge.
So I will lead the charge.
We will lead the charge.
On October 6th, the people of this province said “Those PCs may be onto something…
“But they’ve got more work to do.”
So they sent us reinforcements – sixteen new MPPs to hold this government’s eet to the fire. We woke up on October 7th with sixteen more MPPs – twelve additional seats.
Dalton McGuinty? He lost nineteen!
This is our strongest showing since 1999. And we salute the Class of 2011 up here with me today!
The sixteen new members of our team have joined a deeply experienced and battlehardened corps of veterans. They represent renewal. They certainly stand for conservative ideas and principles. But more than that, they symbolize momentum: That our trajectory is upward. That we are on the right path.
That The Liberals are a party in decline – and we are a Party on the rise.
Because we are the Party of Jobs and Our Economy.
With principles that proclaim the things we conservatives – and the vast majority of Ontarians – believe in: That turning Ontario’s economy around – for jobs – is Priority One.
That if a part of government can’t prove its worth, it’s gone. That if government tries to pick winners and losers – we all lose. That “good enough” in public services is not an outcome – but an alibi. And that businesses, and job creators and innovators, want to be asked in – not chased out!
These are our touchstones for the task ahead. Not just the defeat of Dalton McGuinty in the next election. But to confront, head-on, the task that begins the very next day. To rebuild a proud, strong, confident Ontario that stands astride Confederation again.
This, my friends, is my voice. This is our voice. It is the voice of hope for those who’ve lost hope. It is a voice of optimism for those who could use some right now.
It’s time for conservatives to lead again!
And I stand ready to do my part. Because this is my voice.
Hear it now, as I commit to you today: To a conservative campaign that we can all be proud of. To a platform that says what it means.
To a Party for the 21st Century that’s found its voice. Proud and unapologetic. Which will give us a majority PC government for Ontario.
For an Ontario that will lead again!
Thank you.
(Niagara At Large invites you to share your views on this post in the comment boxes below. Please remember that NAL does not post anonymous comments or comments by people using pseudonyms. Only comments attached to real names work here.)

Hudak got one thing right,the PC alternative sounded and looked like the McGuinty Liberal party and was a lot like changing the name on the door, same house, same garden the leaders of both parties were like Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum.The Province is in deep quick sand and it is up to our necks. Help!!!!!!
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First Hudak has to figure out what a platform is before he offers us one. He is the most rehtorical of all the leaders and he stands for nothing but slinging dirt at the other parties. Yes the election was his to take, but he spent so much of his time slamming McGinty that the electorate just got tired of him. He is not Premier quality. He is Harper’s joe boy in Ontario. Maybe he should run for the federal party next time and he can be next to the one that he worships.
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I agree. All Hudak would do if he got a majority would be going for mindless cuts without a true vision of where the province is going. Would serve his corporate friends before even the ordinary folks that would have otherwise voted for him, if he had any ideas.
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Let’s face it. The Liberal experiment is a failure and even the socialists are beginning to realize it. Dalton McGuinty’s vision was nothing more than growing bigger government obsessed with interfering with every aspect of our lives. Too bad he forgot about the price tag that comes with his nanny state approach and too bad for our children and grandchildren that will be stuck paying for his deeds no matter when the next government has the chance to take the vacuum out of our pockets.
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I refused to back Hudak because he did not offer to help me with my own family’s conundrum, being married to a man that cannot work and how my (limited) income deciminates his and leaves us all in poverty. I cannot earn enough to fully support my entire family. I am not in the Sunshine Club. The least he and his party could have done to gain some support from my end was to promise to exempt spousal and family income from my husband’s piddly disability allowance.
Nevertheless, I couldn’t back any of the other parties either, but on the overall survey that I sent out to all the parties during the last provincial election, the only ones with some honest answers were the NDP and the Greens. But nevertheless, I am fed up with all the party leaders talking out of both sides of their mouth.
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This is what Harris/Hudak did!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Sense_Revolution
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The term “socialist” is used condescendingly by some.. If “socialist” means taking care of seniors on OAS ( a social program), as well as taking care those in need etc.then the word “socialist” should be seen in a positive light. It should be viewed as a positive adjunct to civilisation. A lack of concern for the “demos”, in a democracy, aligns itself with those who are oriented in a more “anti-socialist” fashion. Politicians of the more “neo-liberal”, “anti-socialist” persuasion like to cut taxes and worship corporations, like,say Walmart or Caterpillar. When Walmart comes to town, as an example, it dictates wages, working conditions, and “socialist” benefits, It also destroys many local businesses and it negatively impacts local decision-making. Corporations are about monopolies, not fair competition. The Liberals and Consevatives share the crumbling “neo-liberal” ideology, with the Conservatives even more “neo-liberal” than the Liberals. Neo-liberalism is a failing economic model, and, ironically, it is coming full circle now to the point where it is fostering inverted totalitarianism. Mr. Harper, as an example, rules with a heavy hand. He is intolerant of healthy dissent in the public, or within his own party ranks. And his policies are arguably destroying the fabric of this nation. The rhetoric coming from the provincial Conservative campaign, quite frankly, is demeaning in its simplicity. If someone were to give me a label, I’d prefer the “socialist” one to the alternative. Let’s not forget either, that the neo-liberal “hands off regulations” approach led to the stock market crash of 2008. It’s also giving us the mess out west, the petro-looney, and the current Dutch Disease impacting Canada’s manufacturing and its middle class.
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When I go to Europe the Europeans ask if I am American,? I say I am Canadian, they say it is the same, while my children are US born their outlook is not that, of off the wall, blind obtuse and rabid wild eyed folks, of the so called red states,they see the world through a kinder and softer enlightend view point, we share this place called North America , it is not a place where we loot and destroy and pillage for the few, the 1% who are not into shareing anything.we are supposed to be care takers of the planet not exploiters. This planet can bite back anytime it wan’t to.
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What is really killing the manufacturing and hence the middle class in Ontario is not being able take advantage of the golden goose called the Canadian Tar Sands. The world lusts after this resource yet we are hellbent on shipping it to them unrefined with no added value. The material to build these projects are from offshore and of dubious quality . It all used to be manufactured in Ontario actually a lot in Niagara. But because of archaic free trade laws between the Provinces along with more than a dash of short sightedness we are not in a position to take full advantage of the Tar Sands. By conveying crude to Eastern Canada to be refined in new facilties we provide jobs in manufacturing. As well as stopping the importation of foreign oil into Eastern Canada.
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Hmm…..the New Europe socialist experiment, so how is that working for them?
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At least I know who I *won’t* be voting for in the next election…Of course with they way Harper & Ford are running things, why would I want to add Hudak to the mix.
As bad as McGuinty has been at times, Hudak would be far worse.
@Andy, I’d be-careful when you mention “nanny-state”. Your friends in the Federal government want to monitor Canadian’s web and cell phone habits…Sounds far more like a nanny state then anything McGuinty has done.
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Ryan, good argument. Harper wants tighter controls on all Canadians and the only ones who have true freedoms are the wealthy, especially those that can pay for their own health care, etc.
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Europe and North America are feeling the brunt of globalization and neo-liberalism, not socialism. And it’s turning inwards to totalitarianism. Watch what you say on the internet comrades. Yes, despite what Rob Ford might think, Stalin was right wing communist, a dictator, and a tyrant. His fellow “leftist” councillors behave FAR more democratically than he does.
Neo-liberalism also breeds corporate media monopolies, and they teach people how to “think”. Beware my fellow radicals. Totalitarians don’t like dissent, and neither does PM Harper. He sets records for closing debates in the Commons, he gives negative connotations to public dissent, and his own party members feel restrictions to express views.
Inverted totalitarianism presents itself as democracy, but underneath, it is more totalitarian. Homeland Security sounds benign, but be careful, the U.S, and now Canada, are losing liberties faster than some might think.
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Poorly regulated, “laissez faire”, “free market governance’ of the Tar Sands have turned it into a third world energy supermarket.
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Actually not as poorly regulated as you think. Why do you think we have not built a refinery in this Country in 35 years. Because our standards are too high. Think of the Greenhouse Gases and pollution we could eliminate from the world if we refined OUR crude in new Canadian refineries . As opposed to shipping it to 100 year old refineries in the southern states, lets not even discuss the standards in China.
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John, I have an article coming up on the Tar Sands. I do agree that we should be refining our own. Trade deals are such that we don’t even have sustainability in Canada. We’re still importing oil.
Sending it to the southern states and China … Very bad all around.
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Looking forward to your article Mark. One reason we are shipping foreign oil to eastern Canada might be due to Petro Canada’s Decision to shut down refineries in Ontario and Quebec because of their investments in the Mid East would prove more profitable. Now I might add to their great regret. They had spent millions to turn these tea kettle refineries turning them into highly productive and cleaning their sulphur parts per million from over 150 to 15 way ahead of requirements. Now because someone in upper management yelled the loudest these former refineries are now mere distrbution centres for a foreign product.
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