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So what’s a Licensed Producer?

Welcome to Season 2 of Legalized. Throughout this season we’ll be looking at the growth of the legal cannabis industry, the developments with Bill C-45, and much, much more. On our first episode we’re looking at how companies become Licensed Producers, what the biggest challenges for new cannabis companies are, and what’s in store for the industry post-legalization.

 

Views expressed do not necessarily represent those of Navigator or its affiliates

Andrea Horwath Must Be The People’s Champion

Jaime Watt, who has orchestrated communication strategies behind elections across Canada, is writing a three-part series advising each of the main provincial party leaders on their best path to winning a majority government on June 7. This is Part 2.

Heading into her third election as leader, Andrea Horwath can’t seem to catch a break. After winning her party’s leadership in 2009, she led the NDP from the doldrums where it had lived since its crushing defeat in 1995.

Her steady and reasonable management approach, combined with her charisma and down-to-Earth, approachable style can be credited with much of that.

But that hasn’t been enough.

And, now, should she not at least be able to form the opposition, this election will likely be her last.

Politics is rarely fair and, to make matters worse, a series of unfortunate events have befallen the New Democrats. For a while, Horwath looked quite competitive. The Liberals were trailing in the polls and she was one of two fresh faces and arguably the more experienced one.

But Patrick Brown’s downfall has roiled the Ontario political scene. The eventful race to succeed Brown as leader of the PCs managed to capture nearly every inch of column length and minute of TV time.

To add insult to injury, Horwath’s chief of staff was the subject of allegations that he had mishandled sexual-harassment complaints in an unrelated former job. While that has since been cleared up, it created unhelpful upheaval at a time when Horwath was preparing for the election of a lifetime.

In spite of these challenges, she was uniquely positioned to be the people’s champion – the one who was most authentically positioned to fight an out-of-touch Wynne government.

Doug Ford‘s election as PC leader changed all that. Ford connects with much of Horwath’s audience in a way few can claim to do. And the polls have already begun to show the result.

This leaves Horwath little option but to advance a left-leaning approach to populism. The problem is, Premier Kathleen Wynne has been using the power of incumbency to move in on that territory. The premier’s policy announcements have been aimed squarely at winning those voters from the NDP.

Horwath can’t allow herself to be squeezed out of broader debate by the PCs and Liberals. Although positioned at different points on the political spectrum, both share the strategic advantage that comes from such a narrative.

Horwath’s coalition, itself, also presents complications: The New Democrats have always had a hard-to-reconcile coalition of urban intelligentsia, blue-collar sensibility and rural co-operation. It allowed them to win ridings such as Parkdale-High Park, Hamilton Centre and Essex at the same time.

In 2011, Horwath successfully held her own. In the 2014 election, she made gains in Southwestern Ontario but the urban core of her party fell apart: leaving only one seat in each of Toronto and Ottawa.

This time out, the party must focus on protecting its turf in rural and blue-collar Ontario, while increasing its share of seats in downtown cores. Ontarians want to hear common-sense talk from Horwath that speaks to how she will make their lives more affordable.

She has a great opportunity to run a campaign based on who she is and the experiences she has lived. A sandwich generation, career woman from a mid-size market. A single mom.

She is the perfect pitch person for an approach to government that’s not based on ideology or dogma but rather on making people’s everyday lives better.

Horwath’s decision on Monday to hold an announcement of a large policy item – a $1.2-billion public dental plan – to counteract the effects of the government’s throne speech and the PC’s unity rally was an example of how both to keep the focus on themselves and thread the needle of her coalition.

The New Democrats refused to cede the stage, and they were rewarded with considerable media coverage.

The next 80 days will be more of the same. Balancing coalitions while seizing attention. A high-wire act, for sure, but if one leader has demonstrated the ability to do it, it’s Andrea Horwath.

Jaime Watt is the executive chairman of Navigator Ltd. and a Conservative strategist.

The Ontario election and Trudeau’s polls

On this episode of Political Traction, David is joined by Navigator Principal Lanny Cardow and Senior Consultant Colin MacDonald to talk about the recent selection of Doug Ford as PC Party leader, Ontario premier Kathleen Wynne’s Speech from the Throne, and recent polling showing the federal Conservatives outperforming Justin Trudeau’s Liberals.

 

Views expressed do not necessarily represent those of Navigator or its affiliates. 

A Marathon Filibuster

 

Sally Housser joins CTV Power Play’s Strategy Session to discuss the marathon filibuster that ended after an astonishing 21 hours. Plus: gun control legislation and Service Canada’s new gender-neutral policy.

Aired on CTV News on March 23, 2018