Doug Ford is ditching the media bus for the upcoming campaign - Action News
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Toronto

Doug Ford is ditching the media bus for the upcoming campaign

In a rare move, Ontario's Progressive Conservative leader will not bring journalists with him on the campaign trail this spring.

Experts say campaign's goal is to keep unpredictable candidate out of the hot seat

PC Leader Doug Ford, right, won't have a media bus following him as he criss-crosses the province ahead of the June election. (John Rieti/CBC)

Ontario's Progressive Conservative leader will not bring journalists with him on the campaign trail this spring, a rare move experts say suggests the Tories are keen to keep the unpredictable populist politician out of the hot seat as he takes on two more seasoned rivals.

Doug Ford's team said Wednesday the former Toronto city councillor will not have a media bus following him as he criss-crosses the province ahead of the June election, an accommodation traditionally offered by Ontario's party leaders to facilitate coverage while they hold multiple daily events in different cities.

Spokeswoman Melissa Lantsman said Ford's campaign events will be broadcast online and his itinerary will be released for media interested in covering them in person.

"Most media outlets have shifted to covering events from their office and relying on live feeds. It is in our interest to have as much media coverage as possible and will do everything we can to ensure our events are streamed online to assist in that," she said in an email.

Premier Kathleen Wynne called Ford's move "unusual" and said her party will continue to have a media bus.

"I think it's an important part of the democratic process," she told reporters on Thursday.

Wynne said it will be up to Ford to explain why he's ditching the bus and why it looks like "there's some hiding going on."

Wynne also called on the PCs to release a clearly-articulated platform. Ford hasn't done that, and won the leadership by rejecting many of the plans in the People's Guarantee platform put forward by former leader Patrick Brown.

Expert questionsFord's move

Experts say the decision suggests a campaign strategy that centres on limiting questions and preventing Ford a brash politician whose candid remarks often make headlines from publicly going off-script.

And while this approach may prove effective politically, it's concerning for democracy, they say.

"He is attempting to bypass the accountability function of the free press by limiting access to his campaign. This will not prevent coverage, but it alters the degree of access and creates a different, more opaque degree of transparency in the campaign," said Tim Abray, a former journalist and current teaching fellow in political science at Queen's University.

"This should not be blown off as insignificant," he said.

News outlets pay thousands for seats on buses

Political parties have already done away with media buses in some Western provinces, but that has not been the case in Ontario, where leaders have deployed them as well as chartered flights to more remote communities in all recent elections.

News outlets pay thousands of dollars to the parties in order to reserve a seat on their buses and cover the costs of meals and other expenses.

It's not new for politicians to try to control the narrative around their campaign by restricting media access in various ways, said Tamara Small, a political science professor at the University of Guelph.

The federal Conservatives did so under Stephen Harper by imposing a cap of five questions at news conferences, a rule that prompted a public pushback from journalists at the time, she said.

More recently, the federal Liberals have successfully peppered newspapers across the country with photos taken by the prime minister's own photographer a move the Ford camp may try to replicate if fewer news organizations send staff photographers, she said.

"The narrative is that you're not going to get that photo that's unattractive," Small said. "You're going to get the photo where the lighting is perfect and the right people are in the background and all of that kind of stuff and it tells the story that they want to tell."

While Ford, nonetheless, needs media attention to grow his profile and attract new votes, he can get it in a much more controlled setting by doing one-on-one interviews with local media or forcing journalists to quote his tweets as U.S. President Donald Trump has done, she said.

"I wouldn't be surprised if they're trying to make sure that the plan is as clear as possible now so that they can operate as strategically as possible," she said.

"One of the things that makes Doug Ford very attractive to people is his ability to sort of speak off the cuff and all that kind of stuff but that is also the stuff...that could become problematic," she said.

'Shot across the bow'

The Tories may also be trying to shift the focus from their leader onto other issues such as their policies, as the federal Liberals did in the 1980s in the campaign for a then-unpopular Pierre Elliott Trudeau, said Jonathan Rose, a political science professor at Queen's University.

"It'll be interesting to see if Doug Ford maintains that script and doesn't do as many photo ops as the other leaders," he said. "The reason why you do that, of course, is to focus on the policy and avoid any kind of problems with Ford going off-script."

Ford's campaign would not say whether he will be holding daily events during the campaign, nor would it confirm whether he will deliver a fully costed platform before the election as promised.

"We have a plan for the people of Ontario and we will be rolling it out piece by piece over the coming weeks. Stay tuned," Lantsman said.

In any case, Ford's decision to scrap the media bus is a "shot across the bow to the media," but the issue is unlikely to ruffle voters, said Rose.

"Voters don't care about that and in fact it might play well to Doug Ford's base that he is not playing nice with the media," he said. "The U.S. wave of populism that has sort of washed over Ontario since his election may be evidence of that."

With files from CBC News