An Ontario Liberal leadership candidate is calling on party members to put substance over spectacle as they consider who should be given the reins of the third-place party and take on Premier Doug Ford in the next provincial election.
Dylan Marando, the first candidate to sign up as a leadership candidate, is betting his experience as a policy adviser to former prime ministers and premiers, along with work on consequential national programs, will set him apart in a race that typically boils down to a popularity contest.
âOntario Liberals are smart, and they know that weâre in the fight of our lives and that when youâre in a fight for your life, you have to abandon the spectacle and get to substance,â Marando told Global News in a recent interview.
âYou need a plan, you need a team that can execute that plan, and you need the leader who has experience getting big stuff done. So I think policy is going to be really, really important in this leadership race.â
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Marado, who boasts a Masters degree in public policy and a PhD in political science, spent years working in the back rooms of Queenâs Park and Parliament Hill, shaping policies for former premier Dalton McGuinty, Kathleen Wynne and former prime minister Justin Trudeau.
âI was at the table when we built the national housing strategy, when we built the national child care program, when we built the Canada Child Benefit, and when we built the Canadian dental care plan,â Marando said.
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âSo Iâve been part of some of the biggest Liberal policies of the last decade. I know what it takes to get the big stuff done.â
Those programs appear to have shaped Marandoâs approach to how the provincial government should spend the $232 billion it is estimated to bring in, according to the 2026 budget.
âI think achieving solidarity through economic policies, through social policies ought to be a priority for a Liberal leader,â Marando said. âUniversal programs reinforce that message that we are all in it together.â
Most of those programs would be geared toward younger Ontarians, who Marando calls a âforgotten generationâ in need of a ânew dealâ from the province.
âQueenâs Park is nickel-and-diming our university and college students. Theyâre not allowing young workers and young families to save fast enough to pay rent and pay for groceries and buy that first home,â Marando said.
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Marando is proposing to reverse the Ford government changes to the OSAP loan-to-grant formula, to eliminate interest on student loans and make tuition more affordable.
Marando would also eliminate income taxes for anyone earning $50,000 or below and add mental health care to the Ontario Health Insurance Plan, which he said would make treatment âuniversal.â
Some of the programs, which would potentially add billions in new spending to the provinceâs books, would âpay for themselves,â Marando said.
âEducation, in my view, is not a cost; itâs an investment. If you have the worldâs best education system, youâre going to have the worldâs best workforce, and if you have the worldâs best workforce, your economyâs going to boom,â Marando explained. âSo I think that measure pays for itself.â
During the interview, Global News asked Marando whether his time spent working for deeply unpopular politicians would be counted against him during the leadership race.
âI donât think Liberals will see it that way,â Marando said. âI think Liberals are very proud of the legacies of Kathleen [Wynne] and Justin [Trudeau]⊠It might be more politically expedient for me to distance myself and say Iâm my own man, but at the end of the day, Iâm not that kind of guy.â
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Marando added that both Trudeau and Wynne simply reached their âbest before dateâ and that voters seek change when the âmilk soursâ on a politician.
âWhatâs important to recognize right now is that the milk has soured on Doug Ford,â Marando said, referencing Fordâs recent 21-per cent approval rating noted in a recent Angus Reid survey.
âSo our job as the Ontario Liberal Party is to be a credible alternative come the next election.â
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