TORONTO -- Voters in five Ontario ridings will get a chance to pass judgment on rookie Premier Kathleen Wynne and her stewardship of the governing Liberal party in byelections to be held Thursday, Aug. 1.
The byelections in Windsor, London, Ottawa and two Toronto-area ridings were triggered by the resignations of five Liberals since Wynne took over as premier in February, including former premier Dalton McGuinty.
Wynne will call all five byelections Wednesday, Liberal sources said, even though she could wait until December to call the votes in Ottawa-South, Scarborough-Guildwood and Etobicoke-Lakeshore.
It's an "unusually large number of byelections" to be held all at one time, especially when people often use such opportunities for protest votes against governments, said associate professor of politics Bryan Evans of Ryerson University in Toronto.
"Byelections are an opportunity to punish a government but not defeat it, and come the general election, vote for that government if it is deemed better than the alternatives," Evans said.
Despite the $585 million spent to cancel gas plants in Oakville and Mississauga, which the opposition parties say were scrapped to save Liberal seats in the 2011 election, the Progressive Conservatives downplayed their chances in the byelections.
"We have to remember that these five byelections are being held in ridings that the Liberals have held for quite some time, so they do have a strategic infrastructure advantage in terms of their campaign team," said PC critic Lisa MacLeod.
The New Democrats want voters to punish the Liberals for the gas plants scandal, even though the NDP voted to support the minority government's budget instead of joining with the Tories to defeat the fiscal plan and trigger a general election.
"This is a government that's careening from scandal to scandal, the gas plants being the latest of many scandals, and absolutely the voters should hold them to account," said New Democrat Cheri DiNovo.
"Certainly from what I've heard in my canvassing in my own neighbourhood and others, people are very concerned about the integrity of this government."
Three of the byelections can be tied directly to the gas plants scandal: London-West was held by former energy minister Chris Bentley; Ottawa-South was McGuinty's riding; while Etobicoke-Lakeshore in Toronto was one of the seats the opposition parties say was saved in 2011 by scrapping the energy projects.
Both the Tories and New Democrats cried foul after it was announced the Liberal candidate in London-West would be Ken Coran, the former head of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation who last year boasted about helping defeat the Liberals in a byelection in Kitchener-Waterloo.
Wynne's decision to reward teachers with more money after they fought against the government's wage freeze legislation, known as Bill 115, was a payoff to Coran to get the powerful teachers' union back on side with the Liberals, said MacLeod.
"It cost Kathleen Wynne $114 million to get a Liberal candidate in London. It cost them over $500 million to save five Liberal seats in the last election," said MacLeod.
"I think the public will draw a very stark conclusion that Kathleen Wynne and her predecessor, Dalton McGuinty, will use public money to advance their own political gain."
The New Democrats said the Liberals should not expect teachers to vote for them in the byelections just because Coran is now a candidate for the governing party, warning people won't like a union boss "turning" on his membership.
"I think it's somewhat shameful that you have a union leader running for an anti-union party, a union leader who is out protesting Bill 115 turns around and runs for the government that brought it in," said DiNovo.
"Let me tell you the teachers in my riding are still livid about Bill 115. They understand that the Liberals attacked the very collective bargaining process that they hold dear, and I think all unionists recognize that."
The Liberals were one seat short of a majority government before the five resignations, so the outcome of the byelections will not change the balance of power in the legislature.