Wynne should consider gas-plant inquiry: Horwath

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said Tuesday her demand for a public inquiry into the cancellation of two gas plants that cost taxpayers at least $230 million should not prevent her from working productively with incoming premier Kathleen Wynne in the minority government.

She said she had a great meeting with Wynne on Monday, and her proposal for a public inquiry was an option Wynne should consider.

"I don’t think it's necessarily productive to have that highly charged, quite ugly political conversation gumming up the legislature. I think that putting it off to a third-party process, where there's open public hearings … is actually a good option," Horwath told CBC Radio's Metro Morning.

"The people of the province deserve some answers on this issue. We either get at those answers through the legislative process, or we get at those answers through a different process that opens up space in the legislature for us to deal with some of the other pressing issues that Ontarians are facing," she said.

Horwath said it will be up to Wynne to decide which is the better way to deal with the issue, but she hoped Wynne understands that people deserve answers.

"We need to know who made those decisions, how they were made and exactly what the price tag was," she said.

On other issues, such as jobs, health care, home care and long-term care, Horwath said there is a lot of room for collaboration with Wynne, and she is prepared to work with her on it.

"I'll be bringing her some specifics within the next couple of days. I hope she'll work with me to achieve them," she said.

"If there are things that she brings to the table as premier that I am not supportive of, then I am not going to be supporting those things."