mackaycartoons

Graeme MacKay's Editorial Cartoon Archive

  • Archives
  • Kings & Queens
  • Prime Ministers
  • Sharing
  • Special Features
  • The Boutique
  • Who?
  • Young Doug Ford
  • Presidents

2018

2018: Trump Year in Review

December 29, 2018 by Graeme MacKay
December 22, 2017
December 22, 2017
January 13, 2018
January 13, 2018
January 16, 2018
January 16, 2018
March 3, 2018
March 3, 2018
March 7, 2018
March 7, 2018
March 9, 2018
March 9, 2018
March 14, 2018
March 14, 2018
April 5, 2018
April 5, 2018
April 10, 2018
April 10, 2018
April 13, 2018
April 13, 2018
April 14, 2018
April 14, 2018
May 1, 2018
May 1, 2018
May 11, 2018
May 11, 2018
June 1, 2018
June 1, 2018
June 6, 2018
June 6, 2018
June 9, 2018
June 9, 2018
June 12, 2018
June 12, 2018
June 13, 2018
June 13, 2018
June 15, 2018
June 15, 2018
July 12, 2018
July 12, 2018
July 13, 2018
July 13, 2018
July 16, 2018
July 16, 2018
July 17, 2018
July 17, 2018
July 18, 2018
July 18, 2018
July 27, 2018
July 27, 2018
August 10, 2018
August 10, 2018
August 23, 2018
August 23, 2018
August 28, 2018
August 28, 2018
August 30, 2018
August 30, 2018
September 6, 2018
September 6, 2018
October 2, 2018
October 2, 2018
October 12, 2018
October 12, 2018
October 25, 2018
October 25, 2018
October 31, 2018
October 31, 2018
November 3, 2018
November 3, 2018
November 6, 2018
November 6, 2018
November 14, 2018
November 14, 2018
November 30, 2018
November 30, 2018
December 4, 2018
December 4, 2018

2017 Review of Donald Trump

Posted in: USA Tagged: 2018, 2018 editorial cartoons, Donald Trump, Graeme Gallery, retrospective, year-end review

2018: Hamilton in Review

December 28, 2018 by Graeme MacKay
January 9, 2018
January 9, 2018
February 7, 2018
February 7, 2018
March 13, 2018
March 13, 2018
March 31, 2018
March 31, 2018
August 14, 2018
August 14, 2018
September 8, 2018
September 8, 2018
September 12, 2018
September 12, 2018
October 20, 2018
October 20, 2018

Extra Gallery

January 20, 2018
January 20, 2018
April 24, 2018
April 24, 2018
May 24, 2018
May 24, 2018
May 2, 2018
May 2, 2018
July 21, 2018
July 21, 2018
October 23, 2018
October 23, 2018
October 5, 2018
October 5, 2018

2017 Hamilton Year in Review

Posted in: Hamilton Tagged: 2018, 2018 editorial cartoons, Fred Eisenberger, Graeme Gallery, Hamilton, LRT, retrospective, year-end review

2018: Ontario in Review

December 27, 2018 by Graeme MacKay
December 15, 2017
December 15, 2017
January 23, 2018
January 23, 2018
February 21, 2018
February 21, 2018
February 28, 2018
February 28, 2018
May 23, 2018
May 23, 2018
June 5, 2018
June 5, 2018
July 11, 2018
July 11, 2018
July 28, 2018
July 28, 2018

Extra Gallery

February 1, 2018
February 1, 2018
February 3, 2018
February 3, 2018
February 8, 2018
February 8, 2018
March 2, 2018
March 2, 2018
March 13, 2018
March 13, 2018
June 11, 2014
June 11, 2014
April 18, 2018
April 18, 2018
May 5, 2018
May 5, 2018
May 8, 2018
May 8, 2018
May 26, 2018
May 26, 2018
May 31, 2018
May 31, 2018
June 7, 2018
June 7, 2018
June 21, 2018
June 21, 2018
June 27, 2018
June 27, 2018
June 22, 2018
June 22, 2018
August 9, 2018
August 9, 2018
August 24, 2018
August 24, 2018
August 31, 2018
August 31, 2018
September 7, 2018
September 7, 2018
September 19, 2018
September 19, 2018
October 24, 2018
October 24, 2018
November 17, 2018
November 17, 2018
November 27, 2018
November 27, 2018
December 11, 2018
December 11, 2018

2017 Ontario Year in Review

Posted in: Ontario Tagged: 2018, 2018 editorial cartoons, Doug Ford, Graeme Gallery, Kathleen Wynne, Ontario, Patrick Brown, retrospective, year-end review

2018: Canada in Review

December 26, 2018 by Graeme MacKay
February 22, 2018
February 22, 2018
March 3, 2018
March 3, 2018
April 11, 2018
April 11, 2018
June 13, 2018
June 13, 2018
June 19, 2018
June 19, 2018
June 22, 2018
June 22, 2018
August 10, 2018
August 10, 2018
November 8, 2018
November 8, 2018

Extra Gallery

January 11, 2018
January 11, 2018
January 25, 2018
January 25, 2018
January 18, 2018
January 18, 2018
February 2, 2018
February 2, 2018
February 6, 2018
February 6, 2018
February 22, 2018
February 22, 2018
February 22, 2018
February 22, 2018
March 15, 2018
March 15, 2018
April 28, 2018
April 28, 2018
June 2, 2018
June 2, 2018
July 10, 2018
July 10, 2018
August 17, 2018
August 17, 2018
September 1, 2018
September 1, 2018
October 18, 2018
October 18, 2018
November 1, 2018
November 1, 2018
November 9, 2018
November 9, 2018
December 7, 2018
December 7, 2018
December 13, 2018
December 13, 2018

2017 Canada Year in Review

Posted in: Canada Tagged: 2018, 2018 editorial cartoons, Canada, Graeme Gallery, Justin Trudeau, retrospective, year-end review

The 2018 Ontario Election

May 9, 2018 by Graeme MacKay

The Writ Drops

The coming provincial election promises to be an interesting one. At Queen’s Park, Premier Kathleen Wynne has controlled the levers of an unpopular government since 2013, that, combined with 10 years of Dalton McGuinty’s tenure, adds up to 15 years of rule by Ontario Liberals. The projected net debt is at an all time high of $325 billion (compared with $138 billion when Liberals assumed power in 2003). The debt to GDP ratio is approaching 40%. Hydro costs have ballooned under the Liberals, and despite efforts to tackle emergency ward wait times, hospitals continue to be overcrowded. Falling grades are indicating a decline in Ontario’s education, and transit projects aren’t keeping pace with congested 400 series highways. The combined corruption storms resulting from the McGuinty years regarding gas plant emails, and the Sudbury by-election bribery case haven’t helped matters for the current Liberal leader.

The unpopularity problem

The election results of 2014 clearly showed that voters were intent on forgiving the Liberals for their many misdeeds and confident its new leader Kathleen Wynne would build the trust and good government that had been lost in the dying years of McGuinty’s reign. Ontario voters even rewarded the new leader with a majority victory in 2014, after slapping the previous one down with a slim minority. This is often forgotten in the current #metoo climate when supporters of Kathleen Wynne deal the misogyny and homophobe cards to explain her dreary popularity numbers. 

Polls consistently show that voters are done with Kathleen Wynne (ranked as the least popular Premier in Canada), and indeed the Liberal government in Ontario. To answer this, the Liberal Party platform is chock-a-block full of big spending progressive (NDPesque) promises for child care, health care, senior support, and dental and pharmacare. Despite the efforts, the mood among comment boards, call-in shows, and letters to the editor, seem to be very much about “throwing the bums out”. If, at this point the Liberal’s defeat is quite certain, then the question of who wins and by how much remains to be answered.

The numbers problem

Andrea Horwath enters her 3rd provincial election leading the NDP with poll numbers matching the governing Liberals. After attempting to make her party more palatable to centrist and Liberal Party voters in 2014, while outraging the most leftie members in the process, she has steered the party back to its traditional NDP position with campaign promises embracing free dental care, free tuition, and undoing Kathleen Wynne’s privatization of Hydro.

The populism problem

As big spending platforms rule the day on the left with the Liberals and NDP, the Doug Ford PCs are the very opposite. Even with no platform to run on the Tories are banking on poll numbers that are 15% plus above the numbers of either competitor. They are assumed to be the winning player in the game to take power back, to trumpet fiscal prudence, reining in spending, cutting away public services, and doling out incentives to business’ and wealthy folk.

Hastily assuming the leadership of the PCs beset by scandal and malaise under Patrick Brown, Doug Ford seems to have used populist energy to recharge a party lacking confidence in direction. With new leadership comes learning, and based on the amount of sloganeering dished out by Doug Ford, and an increasingly obvious dearth in policy expertise, or even knowledge (i.e.: how a bill becomes law), it’s becoming evident by the day that the presumptive Premier requires a steep learning curve to adequately prepare himself for the top job. It’s merely a matter of time before we find out if Doug Ford just managed to be the right person at the right time, no matter how uninformed he proves himself to be.

At this point there’s no betting on who will be in charge at the pink palace after June 7, 2018. The PCs may now be riding high in the polls, but its leader is just one gaffe away from throwing the party’s support away in the same way John Tory did with faith based schools, or Tim Hudak did with his one million jobs gimmick. What is predictable about the coming 4 weeks are polls that will turn out to be way off reality. Nothing can really forecast how strategic voting will factor on election day, not to mention, the no shows: declining participation of the electorate, which has been dropping with each ballot, and was below 50% in 2014.  There’s no predicting the outcome of this election. It really is anyone’s game. 

1995 – 2014 Election retrospective

2014
2014
2014
2014
2014
2014
January 15, 2014
January 15, 2014
2014
2014
2011
2011
2011
2011
2011
2011
2007
2007
2007
2007
2007
2007
2003
2003
2003
2003
2003
2003
2003
2003
1999
1999
1999
1999
1995
1995

 

2014 Ontario Election (Click Here)
SaveSave

SaveSave

SaveSave

SaveSave

SaveSave

SaveSaveSaveSave

SaveSave

Posted in: Ontario Tagged: 2018, Andrea Horwath, commentary, Dalton McGuinty, Doug Ford, election, gallery, John Tory, Kathleen Wynne, Ontario, retrospective, Tim Hudak

Click on dates to expand

Please note…

This website contains satirical commentaries of current events going back several decades. Some readers may not share this sense of humour nor the opinions expressed by the artist. To understand editorial cartoons it is important to understand their effectiveness as a counterweight to power. It is presumed readers approach satire with a broad minded foundation and healthy knowledge of objective facts of the subjects depicted.

Social Media Connections

Link to our Facebook Page
Link to our Flickr Page
Link to our Pinterest Page
Link to our Twitter Page
Link to our Website Page
  • HOME
  • Sharing
  • The Boutique
  • The Hamilton Spectator
  • Artizans Syndicate
  • Association of Canadian Cartoonists
  • Wes Tyrell
  • Martin Rowson
  • Guy Bado’s Blog
  • You Might be From Hamilton if…
  • MacKay’s Most Viral Cartoon
  • Intellectual Property Thief Donkeys
  • National Newswatch
  • Young Doug Ford

Your one-stop-MacKay-shop…

T-shirts, hoodies, clocks, duvet covers, mugs, stickers, notebooks, smart phone cases and scarfs

Brand New Designs!

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets
Follow Graeme's board My Own Cartoon Favourites on Pinterest.

MacKay’s Virtual Gallery

Archives

Copyright © 2016 mackaycartoons.net

Powered by Wordpess and Alpha.

 

Loading Comments...