Right Turn: How the Tories Took Ontario

Front Cover
Dundurn, Jan 10, 1995 - Political Science - 192 pages

It wasn’t so much a big blue machine that chugged its way across Ontario’s political landscape in the spring of 1995 — it was more a big purple bulldozer driven by leader Mike Harris and a new breed of Tories. Gone were the pinstripes and the cigar-chomping backroom boys of the forty-two years of Tory rule. These Tories were young, hip, and they were riding the wave of their Common Sense Revolution, a platform launched a year earlier.

Still, there were only a few who thought the PCs stood a chance of winning the Ontario provincial election. Though Bob Rae’s NDP government was foundering, Lyn McLeod and the Liberals were holding what looked like a steady two-to-one lead in the polls. Relying on a combination of video tapes, clever advertising, and a brilliant campaign plan, the Harris team turned it all around, pulling off one of the most stunning upsets in Canadian political history.

Right Turn tells the story.

 

Contents

1 Coronation to Revolution
1
2 A House Divided
5
3 No Cents and Common Sense
9
4 Out of the Smoke
16
5 Dont Underestimate This Guy
20
6 Beyond the Big Blue Machine
30
7 Just Call Me Janet
36
8 Dial 1800668MIKE
41
15 With the Greatest of Respect
97
16 The Young and the Hip
101
17 A Blue Lady in a Red Outfit
107
18 Shout at Your Spouse Lose the Election
110
19 Playing the Percentages
114
20 The Dreaded Red Book
122
21 Landslide Ernie
128
22 Whatever Happened to the Liberals?
136

9 Sex Halftruths and Videotape
46
10 Mussel Power
55
11 Hey Presto Reform Vanishes
64
12 This Bus Was a Gas
68
13 Closet Politics
78
Illustrations
83
14 Trust Me I Can Do It
95
23 Political Orphans
159
24 Free Spirits
169
25 You Say You Want a Revolution?
171
26 The Writ Drops
177
27 Red Book versus Revolution
182
Index
185
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1995)

Christina Blizzard has worked for the Toronto Telegram and the London Guardian, and for the past eight years has been a political columnist for the Toronto Sun.

Bibliographic information