New northern Ontario riding buoys francophones: ‘Still fighting for our rights’
KAPUSKASING, Ont. — The heart of la francophonie in small town northern Ontario is beating a little faster these days as a newly minted riding gets set to elect its first representative to the legislature.
The creation of Mushkegowuk-James Bay has opened another door to the halls of power for Franco-Ontarians — one of the province’s oldest, largest and proudest minorities — while long-simmering resentment over the priorities of a distant Liberal government in the south has given Progressive Conservatives a new sense of mission in an otherwise heavily NDP region.
At a hair salon in Kapuskasing, Kimberly Kostecky, 58, launches into a full-throated tirade against the cost of electricity she blames on the Liberals.
“It’s astronomical what we pay for hydro. We live in an area that gets extremely cold, and when we’re struggling to pay our hydro bill and we hear that the CEO (of Hydro One) is making $6.2 million on our backs, that’s ludicrous,” Kostecky says. “So when I hear (Tory Leader) Doug Ford say he’ll get rid of him and his other cronies, that’s a point. I’m not a real Ford fan, but that did catch my ear.”