I'm not against night hunting for predators in Ontario, I just think it would be a very hard, very difficult uphill battle with our left-leaning population.
The best bet, would be as suggested, to get OFAH on board. Love them or hate them they are really the only "organized lobby for hunters" in Ontario that has even a bit of influence on government here.
If they could 1) identify predators as an issue to be dealt with - and this would have to be hard, scientific data collected over quite a few years 2) wrap it up in their "contributing to the hunting heritage" somehow 3) show the government that they could pull in some licence or tourist hunter dollars (or both) and 4) go in with a plan like they did with Turkey's initially or Elk (although I don't think OFAH had a great deal to do with the Elk, at least intially).
Show the government that they (OFAH) are ready, willing and able to run "night time hunter safety training" (like the turkey course) that would be mandatory (again like the turkey course, so you would have a little "N" on your licence beside your "T" for turkey) and write up a pile of (suggested) regulations - times, areas, animals, limits, caliber sizes etc.
And then maybe get some rural MPP's to push it as well - those who have farmers that are losing calves or sheep to Yotes.
If you could do all that then "maybe" two or three governments down the road from now (since even regulation changes such as this often take years - the 2015 moose changes were proposed by the MNR grand poobah's some 8 years before they came into effect - so even when "insiders" propose, it grinds slowly forward - the Moose Policy as adopted in 2015 was "published" in 2009) you might see a pilot season in a few select WMU's.
So yes, I'm all for increased hunting opportunities, I just don't know if I would live long enough to see it.
Jaded yes, but supportive of the idea 100%.
You just can't go in with feet stomping about right to hunt or it should be allowed because Bubba in North Dakota can do it. There would need to be a "non-hunting" reason and some economic benefit (even if that is the government saving money on predator control by letting you do it) so that they could sell it to the masses who already would rather live with Rabid Coons in Hamilton then have them shot.