Party leaders were out Wednesday making their final pitches to voters in advance of election day on Feb. 27.
Four weeks on the campaign trail have brought with them plenty of promises from all major party leaders.
The Progressive Conservatives, led by Doug Ford, have focused their campaign on U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff threat, promising $40 billion in new spending to protect workers, municipalities and businesses from a possible trade war. Other promises include a Highway 401 tunnel and removing the minimum retail price for alcohol products.
The NDP's Marit Stiles has tried to highlight affordability, pitching a grocery rebate, a new "Homes Ontario" agency to oversee the building of more affordable housing, and the doubling of ODSP — the latter of which the Liberals and Greens have also committed to. While the party has proposed multiple new taxes aimed at high-income earners, the NDP is promising to freeze income taxes for 98 per cent of Ontarians.
The Liberals' main plank has been health care, with Leader Bonnie Crombie promising to get every Ontarian a family doctor within four years — similar to other parties — and to end hallway health care. The party is also promising to reduce income taxes for those making $50,000–$75,000 and on small businesses, and to remove HST on home heating and hydro bills.
The Greens have trumpeted their plan to "put people over profits." Leader Mike Schreiner has promised to build two million homes within existing urban boundaries over 10 years, upload costs for transit and shelters from municipalities to the province and the create a "foodbelt" to protect farmland.
Here are all the promises the four major political parties have made this election: